Shohei Ohtani homers as Angels shut down Royals
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Angels’ Shohei Ohtani fanned on three pitches during his first at-bat against the Royals on Tuesday night.
His next at-bat set the tone for the rest of the game.
The do-everything All-Star sent the third pitch of that at-bat 420 feet to straightaway center field, giving Los Angeles the early lead. The Angels piled on from there, getting a bases-loaded double from Luis Rengifo and a late home run from Max Stassi, while Jose Suarez and their bullpen dominated Kansas City in a 6-0 victory.
“We lean on him a lot,” Angels interim manager Phil Nevin said of Ohtani, who showed no lingering effects from a foul ball he took off his thigh Monday night. “He hit that ball 110 miles an hour and it barely got out. This is a big park.”
Suarez (2-4) scattered three hits and a walk over 5 1/3 innings before the Angels bullpen, which was hammered by Kansas City in a series-opening loss, rolled through the same bunch to clinch the victory.
They also kept Kansas City from winning four consecutive games for the first time this season.
“I came to battle today because my last outing wasn’t too good,” said Suarez, who had given up 10 earned runs in his last two starts combined. “I set a goal to keep battling and do better in the second half.”
The Royals’ Angel Zerpa (2-1) gave up two runs, one earned, on four hits and a walk before departing with a right knee injury in the fifth. His own bullpen didn’t do him any favors, in particular Wyatt Mills, who hit a batter with the bases loaded to push across a run and wound up yielding three runs on three hits, two walks and two hit batters.
“We had a lot of good at-bats,” Nevin said. “Really, a lot of good at-bats.”
Zerpa had mostly kept the Angels in check in his recall from double-A Northwest Arkansas, the only damage on Ohtani’s 420-foot shot to center field in the third inning. It was his sixth homer in 17 career games against Kansas City.
The state court of appeal dismissed a case filed by the citizens’ group that had sued the city of Anaheim because it had not deposited the proper fees with the court.
Then in the fifth, Zerpa was attempting to run down a grounder down the line when he reached to glove the ball and flip to first. Zerpa wound up making an awkward movement that caused him some knee pain and, after trying to make a couple of warmup pitches, departed with runners on the corners and nobody out.
“He was great. You just love watching him pitch, his style,” Royals manager Mike Matheny said. “He just felt something in his knee. They’re going to take a look at it, but it didn’t feel good.”
It looked as though the Angels might squander a good scoring chance, especially when Michael A. Taylor ran down a shallow fly off Ohtani’s bat. But then Amir Garrett unloaded a wild pitch that allowed Phil Gosselin to score for a 2-0 lead, and the Angels proceeded to score three times in the seventh before Stassi’s 422-foot homer in the ninth.
The Royals’ best scoring chance came in the sixth, when Nicky Lopez was hit by a pitch and they loaded the bases. Jose Quijada entered and got a forceout at home before getting Vinnie Pasquantino on an inning-ending fly out.
“Our bullpen did a heck of a job,” Nevin said. “Quijada was phenomenal.”
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