Advertisement

Mike Trout homers for his 1,500th career hit in Angels’ loss to Rays

Angels' Mike Trout follows through on a home run.
Angels’ Mike Trout follows through on a home run against the Tampa Bay Rays during the sixth inning Tuesday in St. Petersburg, Fla.
(Mike Carlson / Associated Press)
Share via

Christian Bethancourt had two run-scoring hits in the same inning and later moved from behind the plate to the mound to pitch a scoreless ninth as the surging Tampa Bay Rays beat the Angels 11-1 on Tuesday night.

The Rays own the top AL wild-card spot. They have won four straight and 10 of 12, and they moved a season-best 12 games over .500 at 67-55.

Bethancourt homered and hit a two-run single in a six-run seventh that gave the Rays a 9-1 lead. He has homered in a career-high three straight games after going deep just once over a 31-game stretch.

Advertisement

With Tampa Bay ahead by 10 in the ninth, manager Kevin Cash sent his catcher to the mound.

“Makes for an interesting dynamic in the month of September with rosters not being totally able to expand,” Cash said. “Right there, just the strike-throwing alone should give us some confidence he can go out there and pick an inning here and there.”

Arte Moreno has started exploring the option of selling the Angels, the team announced Tuesday. Here’s some of what our staff has written about Moreno and the current state of the Angels.

Bethancourt was no ordinary position player pitching. His fastball topped out at 95 mph as he gae up two hits and struck out Luis Rengifo on a 94.4-mph pitch.

“Now I know what it feels like to be [Shohei] Ohtani,” Bethancourt said, referring to the two-way Angels star. “I was trying to get up to 100, but I’ve got some work to do.”

Advertisement

By contrast, Angels infielder Phil Gosselin got three straight outs in the ninth on five pitches that ranged from 48 to 51 mph.

“Process of elimination there, the game where it was,” Angels interim manager Phil Nevin said. “Phil threw all strikes at 50 and got three outs.”

Mike Trout homered in the sixth for his 1,500th career hit. It gave him 1,023 runs scored, which is one short of Garret Anderson’s franchise record.

Advertisement

Corey Kluber (8-7) gave up one run on five hits in six innings.

Ohtani singled in three at-bats as the Angels’ designated hitter. The AL MVP left his pitching start at Detroit on Sunday after four innings with a stomach virus, and he pinch-hit in Monday’s 2-1 loss to the Rays.

Angels' Shohei Ohtani congratulates Mike Trout on his home run in front of Tampa Bay Rays catcher Christian Bethancourt.
Angels’ Shohei Ohtani (17) congratulates Mike Trout on his home run in front of Tampa Bay Rays catcher Christian Bethancourt during the sixth inning on Tuesday in St. Petersburg, Fla.
(Mike Carlson / Associated Press)

The Angels (52-71) have lost seven of eight and have totaled six runs over their last five games. They fell 19 games under .500 for the first time since Sept. 22, 2016.

Manuel Margot and Harold Ramirez had run-scoring singles in the third off Jose Suarez (4-6) as the Rays took a 2-0 lead.

Suarez struck out five in a row after Ramirez’s hit. The lefty gave up three runs and eight hits in 5 1/3 innings.

Trout made it 2-1 on his 25th homer off Kluber, a shot that struck an overhanging left-field catwalk. Ohtani hit a drive later in the inning that was caught near the warning track in left.

Advertisement

Tampa Bay went up 3-1 in the sixth on Isaac Paredes’ homer.

Taylor Walls had a two-run single in Tampa Bay’s big seventh inning. Yandy Diaz, Margot and Randy Arozarena had RBI doubles.

Advertisement