Los Angeles Times

Calhoun has been more efficient at plate

- By Pedro Moura pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura

— Kole Calhoun went six weeks without hitting a home run until Tuesday at Wrigley Field, but he has maintained an onbase percentage far higher than his mark from a year ago and considers that a certain success.

His on-base percentage of .353 is 45 points higher than his .308 mark from last season and 34 points better than his career average entering the season.

“That was a goal coming into the season: Get on base more, and set the offense up,” Calhoun said. “I really wanted to cut down on strikeouts. Strikeouts went down, walk rate went up, and that’s where you want to be.”

After striking out in 23.9% of his plate appearance­s last season, Calhoun has lowered that number to 16.8%, one of the larger shifts in baseball from 2015 to 2016.

The 28-year-old right fielder’s other offensive numbers are similar to his previous play.

And because he is hitting second, ahead of Mike Trout, Calhoun’s improvemen­t (in addition to Yunel Escobar’s .317 hitting atop the order) has meant nearly 100 more opportunit­ies for Trout to drive in runs.

Trout is on pace to bat with 440 runners on base this season, as compared to 341 last year.

Oberholtze­r joins club

Brett Oberholtze­r joined the Angels on Thursday.

They claimed him off waivers Tuesday from the Philadelph­ia Phillies, who acquired the lefthander in the multi-player Ken Giles trade last December.

For the Houston Astros, his pre-CLEVELAND vious team, the 27-year-old Oberholtze­r had been a serviceabl­e starting pitcher, logging a 3.94 earned-run average in 1½ seasons’ worth of starts. He could figure into the Angels’ 2017 starting-rotation plans.

“This is a guy who has made 42 starts and thrown 250 innings with a sub-4.00 ERA in his major league career while pitching in a hitters’ park,” Phillies General Manager Matt Klentak, a former Angels assistant general manager, said after acquiring Oberholtze­r last winter. “We’re very happy to have him.”

Oberholtze­r said his hometown Phillies told him that he could compete for a starting spot when they acquired him but did not give him the shot they promised. In 501⁄3 innings as a reliever for the Phillies, he had a 4.83 ERA.

“I feel like I’m a quality left-handed starter,” he said. “I can fill a job. Eventually, I’d love the opportunit­y to start.”

Short hops

To make room for Oberholtze­r, the Angels optioned right-hander A.J. Achter to triple-A Salt Lake for the fourth time this season. Achter also has been designated for assignment once. … Righthande­r Alex Meyer, acquired from the Minnesota Twins for Hector Santiago at the trade deadline, is scheduled to throw a second live batting-practice session or pitch in an Arizona League game in the upcoming days. The Angels say they remain hopeful that the 26-yearold will pitch for them in September. He has been sidelined for most of the season because of shoulder fatigue.

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