Los Angeles Times

Calhoun booms and then busts

- By Mike DiGiovanna mike.digiovanna@latimes.com Twitter: @MikeDiGiov­anna

The game began with much promise for Kole Calhoun and the Angels on Tuesday night, the right fielder leading off the bottom of the first inning with a home run to right field off Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw, Calhoun’s 23rd of the season.

A little more than three hours later, it ended in frustratio­n for Calhoun and the Angels. With a runner at third, Calhoun swung through a Kenley Jansen fastball for strike three to end the Angels’ 6-4 loss to the Dodgers, dropping the Angels 41⁄2 games behind Texas for the second American League wild-card spot.

Calhoun screamed to no one in particular after the final pitch landed in catcher A.J. Ellis’ mitt, and he slammed his bat to the ground before heading back to the dugout.

“It’s a hittable pitch, and the game is over,” Calhoun said in a quiet clubhouse. “You don’t ever want to be the last out. You want to compete. I’m fighting to get on base there. I have [Mike] Trout, [Albert] Pujols behind me, guys who can do something. It was a tough at-bat. That’s the competitor in all of us.”

It was one of three strikeouts in the game for Calhoun, but it probably wasn’t even his most frustratin­g. The Angels loaded the bases in the seventh on two Corey Seager errors and a David Freese single and scored on a Kershaw balk to pull to within 6-2.

Kershaw walked .165-hitting Taylor Feathersto­n, and up stepped Calhoun, representi­ng the tying run. Kershaw got ahead with two straight strikes and threw a fastball down and away. Calhoun checked his swing, but third-base umpire Tripp Gibson said Calhoun went around for strike three.

“If you look at the replay, I think it was pretty obvious he checked his swing,” said Manager Mike Scioscia, who was ejected for arguing the call. “The umpire had a different opinion, and that’s it.”Said Calhoun: “I didn’t think I went around. It was close. The call could have gone either way. I can’t do anything about it. It’s not going to change anything.”

Not in the Cards

The Angels will open next season at home April 5 against the Chicago Cubs, who are managed by former Angels coach Joe Maddon.

Besides four games against the Dodgers on May 16-19, the Angels will face the National League Central in interleagu­e play, with home series against St. Louis and Cincinnati, and series at Milwaukee, Pittsburgh and Chicago.

But for the second consecutiv­e round of play against the NL Central, the Angels won’t travel to St. Louis, denying Pujols the chance to play in the city where he starred from 2001 to 2011. The Angels hosted the Cardinals in 2013.

“I don’t look at the schedule and say, ‘Man, I can’t wait to go back to St. Louis,’ ” Pujols said. “When it comes, it will come at the right time.”

Told it won’t come until 2019, Pujols, who will be in the eighth year of his 10-year deal that season, said, “I may be retired by then.”

Short hops

Pujols said an MRI test on his right foot revealed an inflammati­on. He is feeling better after taking medication and said it’s possible he could play some first base this weekend. Asked whether the injury affects his hitting, Pujols said, “Yes, but I’m not going to use that as an excuse.” … The nine pitchers the Angels used Monday set a franchise record for a nine-inning game. … The Angels recalled infielder Kyle Kubitza and outfielder Daniel Robertson from triple A.

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