Los Angeles Times

Weaver falters in latest Angels loss

Right-hander’s ERA balloons to 5.71 after he gives up six runs in six innings.

- By Pedro Moura pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura

The Angels made the worst team in the American League look like the best again. A poor start from Jered Weaver and insufficie­nt offense led to another loss, this time by a score of 9-4 against the Minnesota Twins at Angel Stadium.

The loss, coupled with an Oakland A’s victory, dropped the Angels into sole control of last place in the American League West.

It started badly. Weaver gave up a leadoff single and stolen base to Eduardo Nunez, balked him over to third and yielded a run-scoring single on a chuted fastball to Joe Mauer.

Johnny Giavotella threw a potential double-play ball away in the third. It could conceivabl­y have ended the inning but instead put runners on the corners with one out. Weaver then left a changeup up to Trevor Plouffe, who hit it over the fence for a three-run home run. With runners again on the corners and no out in the fifth, Weaver induced a double play, which scored the fifth run as a byproduct. In the sixth, he served up a home run to Byron Buxton — the major league-leading 18th homer hit against Weaver this season.

Weaver gave up six runs in six innings. Al Alburquerq­ue, in his Angels debut, gave up three more in the seventh inning.

In the lineup as the designated hitter after he exited Sunday’s game early because of a bruised right wrist, Mike Trout singled sharply in the first inning but did not reach base thereafter, although he drove a ball 407 feet in the eighth inning. The Angels scored once in the second when Shane Robinson singled to shortstop. Todd Cunningham came home and Gregorio Petit took third when he alertly turned into a Twin when caught in a rundown, causing interferen­ce to be called.

Cunningham helped push across the Angels’ next runs in the fourth, doubling against Twins starter Ricky Nolasco amid an abbreviate­d rally. In the sixth, he walked, putting two men on for Petit, who promptly hit into a double play.

“We tried to put pressure on them offensivel­y,” Manager Mike Scioscia said. “We did, but we just got too far behind to get where we needed to be.”

The Angels put only one other runner on base and their defensive play worsened. In the seventh, Petit mishandled two balls for errors and third baseman Yunel Escobar handled another one oddly, eliciting boos from the remaining fans at Angel Stadium.

The Angels said that they sold more than 36,000 tickets for the game. There appeared to be fewer than 5,000 fans still sitting in their seats come the ninth inning, when Giavotella excited them with a home run. It was his fourth hit of the night; no other Angel had mor than one.

In the ninth, the Angels also debuted Jefry Marte in left field. The power-hitting infielder had been training there before games for one week and, earlier in the day, Scioscia said that Marte had demonstrat­ed an aptitude for the position.

Weaver, his earned-run average at an unsightly 5.71 and his peripheral marks even worse, has been the Angels’ worst starting pitcher.

They will incorporat­e a new starter, Tim Lincecum, into their rotation this weekend. Someone will need to depart, and another man will likely give way to Nick Tropeano when he returns to the rotation this month. Will it be Weaver? Could it be Weaver? The Angels are not going to relegate Matt Shoemaker to the bullpen or back to the minors, not with him pitching well.

One option would be to demote 2015 All-Star Hector Santiago to the minor leagues. Another would seem to be to put Weaver in the bullpen. Scioscia would not address Weaver’s status in the rotation or the rotation’s future,,other than to say that he was excited to put it “in order” this weekend.

“That’s what we need,” he said. “I think it’s pretty evident.”

Scioscia insisted he remained confident the team would improve. Weaver said the same of himself, although he has not exhibited the velocity gain he predicted for himself at the season’s start.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? ANGELS PITCHER Jared Weaver looks on as Byron Buxton of the Twins, right, is congratula­ted by third base coach Gene Glynn after hitting a solo home run.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ANGELS PITCHER Jared Weaver looks on as Byron Buxton of the Twins, right, is congratula­ted by third base coach Gene Glynn after hitting a solo home run.

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