Los Angeles Times

Pennington is the rally capper

His first grand slam turns it around after Angels give up eight runs in the fourth.

- By Pedro Moura

This month marked nine years since Cliff Pennington made his major league debut. Never in all that time had the reserve infielder managed a grand slam, in more than 3,000 plate appearance­s.

Until Wednesday night at Angel Stadium, when his inconceiva­ble seventh- inning blast completed an improbable Angels victory.

Once down five runs after their worst half- inning of the season, the Angels came back to beat Oakland, 10- 8, and sweep the hapless Athletics in three games.

When Parker Bridwell took the mound for his fourth inning, he was en route to another sterling start in his surprise rookie campaign. His team had afforded him a three- run lead, and now he had to be only a good steward.

Through three innings, the right- hander had scat-

tered a couple of hits and a hit batsman. Through 87 innings in his unexpected­ly successful season, he had held opponents to a 2.79 ERA, the f ifth- best mark among American League pitchers who had thrown as many innings.

Not 20 minutes later, Bridwell walked off the mound, his night forcibly halted. He had faced seven batters, and all of them had scored. First came two walks, and then a double, a single, and a three- run home run by Matt Olson.

Quickly, the Athletics vaulted ahead, 5- 3. Then there was another walk and another home run, this time by Bruce Maxwell. Then Bridwell exited the game. He did not record an out in the inning. His replacemen­t, right- hander Blake Wood, let in another run before finishing the fourth.

Oakland’s eight- run inning was its biggest of the season, and the largest the Angels had surrendere­d, but it represente­d all of its offense for the night. After Wood, four Angels relievers fired scoreless relief, including right- hander Blake Parker, who earned the fourout save.

Mike Trout returned to the Angels’ lineup after two missed games because of a stiff neck. Between the injury and a slump, it had been eight days since his last hit. He watched the f irst two pitches Kendall Graveman threw him, then swung at the third.

The baseball traveled 444 feet to center, Trout’s second- longest home run of this season. He added a walk in the third inning, a triple in the fifth and two singles. Albert Pujols twice drove him in with home runs, first to right field, then to center.

The two made his career total 612, tied with Jim Thome for the seventh- most all- time, and his 2017 total 21. Pujols has homered at least 20 times in 16 seasons.

The rest of the Angels’ lineup was silent until the seventh inning, when Trout started a rally by singling to left with one out. Pujols then took a pitch off his arm and Kole Calhoun singled to score Trout. Ex- Dodgers reliever Chris Hatcher entered the game, struck out C. J. Cron and walked Luis Valbuena on four pitches.

Up came Pennington, who ripped a 1- and- 2 pitch down the right- field line, just foul, then got a fastball down the middle, and slammed it to right.

Trout stepped to the plate the next inning with one opportunit­y to complete the cycle with a double. He had done it once before, on May 21, 2013. On two other occasions, he came up a double short.

On Wednesday, he singled in his lone chance to do it, capping a fruitful night of reaching base f ive times in five tries.

Richards pitches

On Wednesday, Angels righthande­r Garrett Richards pitched for the f irst time since April 5. His fastball sitting at 96 mph, he threw two innings for triple- A Salt Lake in Tacoma, Wash., striking out two and walking none. He gave up f ive hits and no runs.

Richards threw 40 pitches, about what the Angels planned, but they had hoped he would get through three innings with that allotment. Richards went four months without picking up a baseball because of nerve irritation in his biceps, developed during his 2017 debut in the Angels’ third game of the season.

In May, he told The Times he believed he could return in September, and he is on track to do so.

Short hops

Third baseman Yunel Escobar, on the disabled list with an oblique injury, played f ive innings to complete his scheduled rehab assignment with Class- A Inland Empire on Wednesday. He will rejoin the Angels on Friday in Texas, when expanded rosters will not require the team to make a correspond­ing move. … Shortstop Andrelton Simmons received the day off Wednesday, his first time out of the lineup since June 29.

 ?? Jae C. Hong Associated Press ?? CLIFF PENNINGTON WATCHES the f light of his f irst grand slam, which turned a two- run deficit into a two- run lead.
Jae C. Hong Associated Press CLIFF PENNINGTON WATCHES the f light of his f irst grand slam, which turned a two- run deficit into a two- run lead.

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