Los Angeles Times

Heaney pitches a gem as game goes right for Angels

He gives up three hits and strikes out six over seven innings to spoil the Padres debut of Clevinger.

- By Mike DiGiovanna

It was a rare game when almost everything went right for the Angels, who rode the durable arm of Andrew Heaney, a few clutch hits and some air-tight defense to a 2-0 victory over the San Diego Padres in Angel Stadium on Thursday.

Heaney, pitching more aggressive­ly with a four-seam fastball that averaged 92.3 mph and touched 94.6 mph, gave up three hits, struck out six and walked two in seven scoreless innings against one of baseball’s best offenses, taking advantage of manager Joe Maddon’s long leash to throw a career-high 117 pitches, 77 of them fastballs.

“I don’t go into any game intimidate­d,” said Heaney, who improved to 3-2 with a 3.89 ERA. “They have a really good lineup — I’m not naive to what they’ve been doing all year — but they also have a lot of guys who haven’t faced me. When I’ve got guys who haven’t faced me, I’m going to go right at them.”

Jared Walsh doubled and scored on Andrelton Simmons’ two-out single to left field in the third, and Anthony Rendon tripled and scored on Justin Upton’s single to center in the fourth. Mike Mayers retired the side in order in the eighth and Felix Pena threw a onetwo-three ninth.

The Angels also spoiled the Padres debut of Mike Clevinger, the hard-throwing, scraggly haired right-hander who allowed two runs and seven hits in six innings, striking out two and walking one, after being acquired from Cleveland in Monday’s blockbuste­r seven-player trade.

It was the kind of all-around effort that would usually give a struggling team something to build on, but the Angels have been incapable of sustaining any kind of momentum. They’re 13-25 and haven’t won more than three games in a row.

“It seems like one game we play really well, and another game it’s a grind,” center fielder Mike Trout said. “Trying to find that consistenc­y has been tough this year. It’s been a challenge.”

Trout, who turned 29 in August, is not getting any younger, and his team hasn’t gotten any better, a sobering combinatio­n for fans who fear the Angels are wasting the prime years of the three-time American League MVP’s career.

Despite the signing of 2019 World Series star Rendon to a seven-year, $245-million deal, the addition of several rotation and bullpen arms, a new manager and an expanded playoff field, the Angels are on course for their fifth straight losing season and sixth without a playoff berth.

“You come into spring training, you have a great team, you add some big free agents with Rendon, some guys who can help this team win …” Trout said. “Then we get shut down [by the pandemic], we come back, they expand the playoffs … to see where we’re at now, it’s definitely frustratin­g because we have a great team.”

Well, Trout thought they had a great team. Then Shohei Ohtani went down with another elbow injury, and most of the rotation, with the exception of Dylan Bundy, got off to a sluggish start. The bullpen isn’t nearly as deep as the Angels hoped. And the struggles of Upton, Albert Pujols and Ohtani left gaping holes in the middle of the order.

When Trout signed his 12-year, $426.5-million deal in 2019, he cited his confidence in Eppler to build a World Series-contending team among the reasons he agreed to what amounts to a lifetime contract with the Angels. Does he still believe the team is moving in that direction?

“It’s been a tough year, obviously,” Trout said. “We definitely had higher expectatio­ns. But I got 10 more years on this contract, so we have to move forward. There’s 20-something games left. We have to try to finish strong, get some positives for next year . ... ”

Short hops

Trout was named the team’s 2020 nominee for the Roberto Clemente Award, which recognizes the player who best represents the game through character, community involvemen­t, philanthro­py and positive contributi­ons on and off the field. … The Angels placed infielder David Fletcher on the 10day injured list, retroactiv­e to Monday, because of a left-ankle sprain, and recalled outfielder Taylor Ward from their alternate training site.

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