Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Ohtani whiffs nine in seven innings for win

The ace and Herget combine on a two-hit shutout and Velazquez slams another homer.

- By Ian Harrison Harrison writes for the Associated Press.

ANGELS 2, TORONTO 0

TORONTO — Shohei Ohtani struck out nine in seven innings and Andrew Velazquez homered, helping the Angels beat the Toronto Blue Jays 2-0 on Saturday.

Ohtani (11-8) gave up two hits — a single by George Springer in the first and a two-out double by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in the third — in his career-best 11th win.

“He put the foot down about the second or third inning, and you could just kind of see it change in how he was going about it,” interim Angels manager Phil Nevin said.

David Fletcher had three hits and scored the winning run on Luis Rengifo’s single in the sixth.

Jimmy Herget finished the two-hitter as the Angels won consecutiv­e games after losing the previous six, blanking the Blue Jays for the second day in a row.

The Angels, who won 12-0 on Friday, lead the American League with 16 shutouts. It’s the fourth time this season the Angels have recorded back-to-back shutouts.

Toronto wasted a strong performanc­e by All-Star right-hander Alek Manoah (12-7), who struck out eight in seven innings.

“It doesn’t matter if Ohtani was on the mound over there or Roger Clemens,” Manoah said. “My job was to come out and compete, give the team my all and do everything I can to try and get us a win.”

Speaking through an interprete­r, Ohtani said he enjoyed going up against Manoah in an “electric” atmosphere before a sold-out crowd of 45,311.

“I was expecting a pitcher’s duel and didn’t want to give up that first run,” Ohtani said. “I’m sure it was the same for him.”

Velazquez hit his eighth homer against Anthony Bass in the ninth. He also went deep Friday.

Ohtani threw a seasonhigh 109 pitches, 72 for strikes, in his first win since Aug. 9. He lowered his earned-run average to 2.67.

“He kind of flipped the script a little bit and went to his heater a little bit more,” Blue Jays interim manager John Schneider said. “When you’ve got 100 [mph] in your back pocket, it’s a pretty good weapon to have.”

Herget retired all six batters he faced for his third save in four chances.

At the plate, Ohtani walked in the first, struck out in the fourth and reached on a fielder’s choice in the sixth.

While awaiting a 3-and-2 pitch from right-hander Yimi Garcia in the eighth, Ohtani asked for time and backed out of the box. Umpire Shane Livensparg­er didn’t grant the request but Garcia’s pitch missed high, giving Ohtani his second walk.

“Either manager was going to be upset,” Nevin said. “The inning before, [Livensparg­er] gave a pretty late timeout to [Toronto’s Raimel] Tapia with Shohei.”

Already angry about Ohtani’s walk, Schneider was ejected for arguing with Livensparg­er after Garcia walked the next batter, Mike Ford, on five pitches. The ejection was Schneider’s first.

Manoah cruised through five innings before running into trouble in the sixth.

Fletcher led off with a single and Mike Trout walked before Ohtani beat out a potential double-play grounder, with the call at first base overturned on replay. Rengifo drove in Fletcher with a first-pitch single to left.

Toronto recognizes 1992 championsh­ip

The Blue Jays honored their 1992 World Series championsh­ip team during a pregame ceremony. Among the former players, staff and executives on hand were Dave Winfield, Dave Stieb, Todd Stottlemyr­e, Duane Ward, Candy Maldonado, Juan Guzman, World Series most valuable player Pat Borders and manager Cito Gaston.

In lieu of a ceremonial first pitch, slugger Joe Carter and pitcher Mike Timlin recreated the final out of Toronto’s extra-inning Game 6 win in Atlanta, which came when Timlin fielded Otis Nixon’s bunt to the mound and tossed to Carter at first.

Short-lived success

Angels outfielder Ryan Aguilar got his first career hit in the fifth, a double to right, but Blue Jays outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr. threw Aguilar out at third base by a wide margin.

“We’ll chain him to second base next time,” Nevin joked.

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