Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Drury homers twice, Angels end skid at 6

- By Jeff Fletcher jfletcher@scng.com

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. » Brandon Drury has done exactly what the Angels hoped when they signed him last winter.

If he were batting sixth or seventh, as they'd planned, then they might really have something.

Instead, Drury has been elevated to the No. 3 spot in the injury-ravaged batting order.

He hit a pair of home runs and drove in five runs to help the Angels snap a six-game losing streak with an 8-3 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday night.

Drury, who hit a threerun homer in the second and a two-run shot in the sixth, has hit 23 homers this season. He has a .791 OPS, which is comparable production to his 28 homers and .812 OPS last year considerin­g that he played most of the season in hitterfrie­ndly Cincinnati.

“It's been very up and down, a lot of hot and cold streaks,” Drury said. “We've still got 10 games left so I'm looking to finish strong, but I'd say it's been very inconsiste­nt.”

Defensivel­y, the 31-yearold has played well at second base and occasional­ly at first. He's fourth on the team with 115 games. He was batting seventh on Opening Day, behind players like Taylor Ward, Mike Trout, Shohei Ohtani, Anthony Rendon, Hunter Renfroe and Luis Rengifo.

All of them are now injured except for Renfroe, who was placed on waivers last month.

“He can hit,” manager Phil Nevin said. “He can really hit. The thing with him right now is, you're kind of being asked to carry the load with everybody gone. It's not really the way he runs. You put some good hitters around him, he's gonna put up big and bigger numbers. Not in a bad way, he's such a great complement­ary player to some really big names we have here that are supposed to be in here. He's putting up

THE SCORE ANGELS 8, RAYS 3

Up next: Angels at Rays, today, 10:10a.m., BSW

some huge numbers without that and it's pretty impressive.”

Drury has another year left on his two-year, $17 million contract, but it remains to be seen how they will use him in 2024. He is best at second, but he can play first and third, so he could be insurance behind Rendon at third or in case Nolan Schanuel isn't ready to be an everyday first baseman.

The Angels also could have the DH spot open next season, allowing all sorts of lineup permutatio­ns.

Next season the Angels will also hope for a full year of what they've seen lately from left-hander Reid Detmers, who now has a 2.65 ERA over his last six starts.

Detmers didn't qualify for the victory in this one — even though the Angels gave him a 6-0 lead in the second inning — because of his pitch count.

He threw 96 pitches in four innings and was done. Detmers could have been more efficient, but he also had to throw an extra 11 pitches because of errors in the third and fourth innings. The third-inning error by third baseman Eduardo Escobar also led to the only run that Detmers allowed.

Detmers continued the increased changeup use he started a couple of weeks ago. He threw the pitch 23% of the time, his secondhigh­est percentage of the season. Three of his seven strikeouts were on changeups.

“It's become one of my favorite pitches,” Detmers said. “Gets me back in the counts. Gets me out of some jams. I feel like I can throw it pretty much whenever I want and that's a good feeling to have.”

 ?? MIKE EHRMANN — GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? The Angels' Brandon Drury watches his three-run home run in the second inning during Wednesday's win over Tampa Bay.
MIKE EHRMANN — GETTY IMAGES/TNS The Angels' Brandon Drury watches his three-run home run in the second inning during Wednesday's win over Tampa Bay.

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