Los Angeles Times

Albert Pujols hits another milestone

He becomes baseball’s all-time hits leader for players who were born outside the U.S.

- By Maria Torres Times staff writer Bill Shaikin contribute­d to this report.

The slugger becomes baseball’s all-time foreign-born hits leader.

The northbound lanes of the 57 Freeway were shut early Wednesday afternoon and Albert Pujols was just three miles from Angel Stadium when he realized the final part of his commute might take nearly an hour.

The Angels were playing a rare 5 p.m. game. Pujols had planned to arrive at least two hours before first pitch. When he finally rolled into the Angels’ empty clubhouse, he had less than 75 minutes to prepare for a game the Angels needed to win to avoid being swept by the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Pujols, a veteran of 19 seasons and a hoarder of major league records, did not panic. He got in the cold tank, soaked in the hot tub and milled around the batting cage for about 20 minutes.

Pujols compressed his routine but did not skimp on his performanc­e. He propelled the Angels to a 7-4 victory with a two-hit, three RBI game. During the game, he became the all-time hits leader among players born outside the United States with 3,168, eclipsing fellow Dominican Adrian Beltre’s record by two hits.

“What more can we say?” Angels manager Brad Ausmus said. “He’s one of the greatest players to ever play the game, one of the greatest hitters ever to play the game. He’s going to pass some other names, I’m sure, that are very well known and have plaques in Cooperstow­n. I’m kind of running out of accolades.”

Yet it was more impressive that Pujols did what he did in his 96th game — in a mid-August series finale.

The Angels had planned to scale back Pujols’ workload this year. With two seasons remaining on his contract, they wanted to keep the 39-year-old healthy coming off last fall’s knee and elbow surgeries. They signed first baseman Justin Bour in hopes of institutin­g a platoon. The arrangemen­t went sideways. Bour hit .163 with a .584 on-base-plus-slugging percentage through his first 30 games and was demoted to triple A.

At least one part of the plan has not crumpled. Pujols, whose career as an Angel has been compromise­d by lower-body injuries and declining offense, has kept himself off the injured list. Not even hamstring soreness last month hampered him. He missed only one game.

Pujols has sat out of 26 games this season.

“It feels great to feel like this,” Pujols said, sweat still glistening on his brow from his postgame workout. “But we still have six or seven weeks left in the season, so I don’t want to speak too loud. I want to make sure that I stay healthy.”

Pujols is hitting .242 with a .742 OPS and 70 RBIs this year and he helped the Angels win for only the fifth time in 19 games.

Rookie Luis Rengifo almost stole the show from Pujols. His Little League homer in the fourth inning gave the Angels a 4-2 lead.

He dashed out of the lefthanded batter’s box, covering 29.2 feet per second on his sprint around the bases. He outpaced the MLB average, which is tracked by MLB’s Statcast system, by 2.2 feet per second.

But Pujols’ two-run single in the eighth inning — a dribbler into center field against a drawn-in infield — padded the cushion to 6-3.

Not that Rengifo minded Pujols getting the spotlight.

“He has showed me that nothing is gifted to you,” Rengifo said in Spanish. “You have to work hard to see the results. I think everything he’s done in his career has been spectacula­r thanks to the hard work he does before playing and after playing games.”

“It’s great to see him continue to elevate Latinos in this game.”

A third option in stadium search

As it turns out the Angels have a third option in their stadium search.

At Tuesday’s Anaheim City Council meeting, Councilman Jose Moreno said the one-year lease extension the council approved in January did not mean the current lease would expire when the extension does.

As a result, the Angels have three options on the table, not two. In addition to choosing between a new or renovated stadium in Anaheim or a proposed waterfront ballpark in Long Beach, the Angels could simply play out their current Angel Stadium lease, which extends through 2029.

That last option effectivel­y reduces the city’s leverage, since it cannot threaten to kick out the Angels after the 2020 season and sell the stadium property.

Under the current lease, as adopted in 1996 and modified in 2013, the Angels could opt out with a year’s notice. The Angels exercised their opt-out clause last year, meaning they had no place to play after this season.

The one-year extension does not mean the Angels’ lease expires in 2020.

Instead, the extension essentiall­y applies to the optout clause, meaning the Angels can either opt out by Dec. 31 and leave after the 2020 season, or stay through 2029 under the current lease.

Short hops

Dillon Peters became the Angels’ first starting pitcher to earn a victory since Griffin Canning on July 30. After a shaky first inning when he walked the first batter on four pitches and hit two batters, he gave up only four of the final 18 he faced to reach base. The left-handed Peters surrendere­d only two runs on four hits and struck out six over six innings, his third straight outing of at least six innings. Peters has given up three or fewer runs in eight of nine appearance­s this year. … Reliever Noe Ramirez, reinstated from the injured list before the win, began his three-game suspension. The Angels must proceed with 24 players until his term is completed. Ramirez lost 11 pounds because of a viral infection that landed him on the injured list late last month.

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 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? THE ANGELS’ Albert Pujols singles in the fourth inning to move ahead of fellow Dominican Adrian Beltre as Major League Baseball’s all-time hits leader among foreign-born players. Pujols also had a single in the eighth.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press THE ANGELS’ Albert Pujols singles in the fourth inning to move ahead of fellow Dominican Adrian Beltre as Major League Baseball’s all-time hits leader among foreign-born players. Pujols also had a single in the eighth.

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