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Kurt Suzuki, Brandon Marsh help Angels to win over Houston Astros

Angels' Kurt Suzuki tosses his bat after hitting a two-run double during the fifth inning against the Houston Astros.
Angels’ Kurt Suzuki tosses his bat after hitting a two-run double during the fifth inning against the Houston Astros on Tuesday in Houston.
(David J. Phillip / Associated Press)
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The Angels have relied on home runs to power their offense early this season and are tied with Atlanta for most in the majors with 16.

But on Tuesday night they put together a decisive win over the Houston Astros without putting any balls out of the park.

Jo Adell tied a career-high with three hits, and Kurt Suzuki and Brandon Marsh drove in two runs each as the Angels used a big fifth inning to break open the game and cruise to the 7-2 victory.

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“We passed the torch up and down the lineup,“ manager Joe Maddon said. “Good at-bats everywhere and ran the bases hard again. Again, another team victory as I saw it.“

Both teams were missing stars. Los Angeles center fielder Mike Trout was sidelined for a second game with a bruised left hand and Houston second baseman Jose Altuve out after straining his left hamstring Monday.

But the Angels got third baseman Anthony Rendon back after he sat out of Monday’s game because of a stomach bug. He had two hits to help Los Angeles rebound after an 8-3 loss in the series opener.

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The team tied a season-high with 13 hits Tuesday.

Dealing with a bruised left hand, Angels slugger Mike Trout sat out of the team’s 8-3 loss to the Houston Astros. Trout is considered day to day.

“Our offense is really strong,“ Adell said. “I think guys are understanding their game and how they can help and we’re taking team at-bats and that’s pretty much what it comes down to.“

The Angels led by one run when Taylor Ward and Rendon singled with one out in the fifth, and Ward took third on right fielder Kyle Tucker’s fielding error.

Matt Duffy singled into shallow right field to score Ward and extend the lead to 3-1. An RBI single by Jack Mayfield on a grounder to left made it 4-1 and chased starter Framber Valdez (1-1).

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Bryan Abreu took over and was greeted by a two-run double from Suzuki. Marsh’s two-out single sent another run home to extend it to 7-1.

Los Angeles starter Patrick Sandoval allowed four hits with an unearned run in four innings. Oliver Ortega (1-1) walked one in two scoreless innings for the win.

Houston Astros' Chas McCormick is tagged out by Angels second baseman Jack Mayfield while trying to steal second base.
Houston Astros’ Chas McCormick is tagged out by Angels second baseman Jack Mayfield while trying to steal second base during the third inning on Tuesday in Houston.
(David J. Phillip / Associated Press)

Valdez was tagged for six runs, eight hits and four walks in 4 1/3 innings after pitching 6 2/3 scoreless innings against the Angels for a win on opening day.

“He wasn’t as sharp and he was getting two strikes on guys and wasn’t putting them away tonight,“ manager Dusty Baker said. “In that one inning, they hit some flares in there. It’s not like they were hitting him all over the ball park. We were hoping for a couple of ground-ball double plays which we got the ground ball but it found the holes.“

Rookie Jeremy Pena hit a solo homer for the Astros in the seventh and Chas McCormick had two hits on a night Houston was 1 for 6 with runners in scoring position.

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Suzuki walked with one out in the second before a double by Adell. The Angels took a 1-0 lead when Suzuki scored on a sacrifice fly by Marsh.

Ryan Tepera is from the Houston area, but he isn’t a local favorite ever since he accused the Astros of possibly stealing signs in last fall’s ALDS.

There were two outs in the third when Pena reached on catcher’s interference. Michael Brantley walked before Pena scored on a double by Alex Bregman to tie it at 1-all.

There was a runner on first with no outs in the fourth when Mayfield singled on a ball hit near the corner of right field. But Tucker snagged the ball after it bounced off the wall, and his throw to second beat Mayfield as he was trying to stretch the hit into a double.

Suzuki walked after that to leave runners at first and third before an RBI single by Adell put the Angels up 2-1.

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