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Angels’ woes at the plate continue in sweeping loss to Mariners

Angels shortstop Zach Neto mishandles the ball and is charged with an error against the Mariners.
Angels shortstop Zach Neto mishandles the ball and is charged with an error during the eighth inning of a 5-1 loss to the Seattle Mariners on Sunday.
(Jason Redmond / Associated Press)
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Luis Castillo threw seven shutout innings, Mitch Garver hit a three-run double and the Seattle Mariners beat the Angels 5-1 on Sunday for a sweep of their weekend series.

Castillo was brilliant in his first win since May 12. The right-hander struck out six and walked three — all on 3-2 pitches.

“The value of that guy in a starting rotation — all our guys are really good, super talented, but he’s the rock. He’s the anchor,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said.

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Castillo (5-6) surrendered two hits on Taylor Ward‘s double in the first and Kyren Paris’ broken-bat single in the third. It was his third occasion this season when he threw at least seven shutout innings while allowing three hits or less.

Reid Detmers gives up a grand slam home run to Seattle’s J.P. Crawford and Bryce Miller dominates on the mound for the Mariners in the Angels’ 9-0 loss.

Castillo wasn’t sharp early. But he slowed his delivery after a suggestion from pitching coach Pete Woodworth and retired nine of his final 10 batters.

“He told me I was going a little fast and to kind of find a pace and maintain a rhythm. That’s what I did and those last three innings I was just trying to maintain that same rhythm,” Castillo said through an interpreter.

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The Mariners had shut out the Angels for 19 straight innings before shortstop J.P. Crawford’s first error of the season led to a run in the ninth on Zach Neto‘s two-out single. Before that, the Angels’ only runs in the three games had come on Jo Adell’s grand slam in the seventh on Friday.

Seattle closed out a stretch of 17 straight days without a day off — its longest such stretch of the season — with a 10-7 record during the span. The Mariners also improved to 21-11 at home, tied for the second-best home mark through 32 games in franchise history. Only the 2001 team that won 116 games had a better start at home at 25-7.

Angels starting pitcher Griffin Canning, right, walks to the mound.
Angels starting pitcher Griffin Canning walks back to the mound after giving up a home run to Seattle’s Luke Raley in the fourth inning Sunday.
(Jason Redmond / Associated Press)
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“It’s a marathon. It is not a sprint. You look at that and every day when I come to the ballpark I feel we’re going to win,” said Servais, who noted that Seattle has 13 straight games after Monday’s day off. “Our starting pitching is going to give us a chance, they’re going to keep us in the game.”

Angels starter Griffin Canning had his best performance of the season and nearly matched Castillo. Canning (2-5) struck out four and walked one while pitching into the seventh inning for the first time this season.

Canning’s lone mistake was a 1-2 sinker to Luke Raley in the fourth inning that stayed in the middle of the plate. Raley connected for a solo drive that barely cleared the wall in right field for his sixth homer of the season.

“He’s continuing to show progress from his start. He stood out there and was in command. Just in the seventh inning he looked like he lost his energy,” Angels manager Ron Washington said of Canning.

Jo Adell ties the game on a grand slam in the seventh inning before Ty France hits a home run in the eighth to give the Mariners a 5-4 win over the Angels.

Raley added a second RBI after he was hit by Luis García’s pitch with two outs in the eighth, and Garver cleared the bases with a shot into the left-field corner.

Roster move: The Angels recalled right-hander Ben Joyce from Double-A Rocket City, following the move to send starter Reid Detmers to the minors after Saturday’s game.

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Up next for the Angels: Open a three-game series with San Diego at home on Monday. Tyler Anderson (5-5, 2.47 ERA) starts the opener for the Angels.

Up next for the Mariners: Following its first off day since May 16, Seattle will open a series on Tuesday in Oakland. Right-hander George Kirby (4-5, 4.08 ERA) starts the opener for the Mariners.

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