Los Angeles Times

Angels fall flat in their home opener

Anaheim drops its 12th straight to the Indians, tying club’s record for losses to one team.

- By Jeff Miller

They were two games over .500, having won three of four in Oakland.

They were riding a wave of internatio­nal euphoria provided by their Japanese wonder.

They were saluting one their past fan favorites, Jered Weaver, asked to toss out the ceremonial first pitch.

The Angels were all set for their home opener Monday night except for one thing: They were playing the wrong team.

There should have been no opponent less welcomed in Anaheim for this occasion than the Cleveland Indians, who recently have been resurrecte­d in part because of their overwhelmi­ng success against the Angels.

This one ended up 6-0 in Cleveland’s favor, the Angels now having fallen to the Indians 12 straight times, a streak that ties the club record for losses to one team and goes back to when no one around here even knew

the name Shohei Ohtani.

The latest defeat unraveled early and oddly, the Indians scoring their first run when the Angels stopped playing and their second on consecutiv­e defensive miscues by a player who, during this homestand, will be recognized for winning a 2017 Gold Glove.

The weirdness commenced with one out in the second, when Edwin Encarnacio­n hit a JC Ramirez fastball toward the base of the foul pole in left.

Justin Upton retreated and as he, the wall and the ball converged, so too did the outstretch­ed glove of a fan.

The ball, however, hit nothing until striking the wide yellow line painted on the wall to differenti­ate fair from foul.

Upton reached for it as it descended and then, thinking the ball had landed foul, didn’t pursue it.

“I ran after the ball and braced myself on the wall,” he said. “Had no clue the ball was fair. Couldn’t hear anything… so it was an insidethe-park home run.”

As Encarnacio­n kept circling toward the plate, Upton realized the play was live but had no time to recover.

An inning later, the Angels’ defensive lapse was even more bizarre because of the man who authored it.

Martin Maldonado is acknowledg­ed as one of the finest catchers in baseball, one who last season had a fielding percentage of .998. He helped win one of the games in Oakland by picking off a runner from first.

But here, he was charged with a passed ball and throwing error on the same play, allowing Bradley Zimmer to advance to third and then home as the Indians assumed control on a night when the Angels’ offense went flat.

So what’s left? Just this: The winning pitcher Monday was Mike Clevinger, a former Angels’ fourth-round pick who, in 2014, was traded to Cleveland for reliever Vinnie Pestano.

“It’s good fun,” Clevinger said of the victory. “I always want to leave a good impression.”

This home opener could have gone better. Or at least had a less cruel guest list.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? BRADLEY ZIMMER beats Angels pitcher JC Ramirez to first base in Anaheim’s 6-0 loss at home Monday.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times BRADLEY ZIMMER beats Angels pitcher JC Ramirez to first base in Anaheim’s 6-0 loss at home Monday.

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