Los Angeles Times

Bases-loaded Angels get picked off to end game

Wild pitch turns into opportunit­y for Royals catcher Perez, who is able to throw out a leading Fletcher off third base.

- By Jack Harris

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — David Fletcher was in no man’s land.

Representi­ng the Angels’ tying run with the bases loaded and two outs in the ninth inning Tuesday night, the player who has made a career out of doing the small things right watched one big play go horribly wrong.

In an 0-2 count to Jared Walsh, Royals pitcher Greg Holland spiked a slider in the dirt. The ball ricocheted off catcher Salvador Perez. And Fletcher, anticipati­ng a wild pitch the whole at-bat, immediatel­y broke for home.

There was only one problem: The ball bounced off Walsh in the batter’s box and redirected right back in front of Perez. Fletcher tried to reverse course, hitting the brakes some 20 feet down the line and sliding desperatel­y back for third. But Perez’s throw was too good. Fletcher reached the bag too late. Game over. Royals 3, Angels 2. “Sometimes, the ball bounces your way,” manager Joe Maddon said. “It literally did not bounce our way tonight.”

Indeed, it was a fitting end to a game of near-misses for the Angels, who outhit the Royals 12-5 but left 11 men on base, went one for nine with runners in scoring position, and permitted what proved to be the decisive run to score in the fifth after catcher Kurt Suzuki dropped a popup in foul ground.

Still, they had a chance to extend the game in the ninth.

Fletcher began the rally with a one-out single and advanced to second after Shohei Ohtani roped his third hit of the game — he also had a home run in the fifth inning — into right. Mike Trout whiffed on a two-strike slider next, suffering his fourth strikeout on the night. But then Albert Pujols loaded the bases, drawing a full-count to bring Walsh to the plate.

Walsh quickly fell behind with two quick strikes.

But 90 feet away, Fletcher was waiting for anything near the dirt, taking aggressive secondary leads knowing the Angels were down to their final out.

It finally came on the third pitch, a slider from Holland that seemed to skip off the plate and into Perez’s chest protector.

“I was gonna score pretty easy,” Fletcher said. “And then it hit Walsh.”

The Angels challenged the play to no avail, exiting the field in defeat after a day full of player losses on the roster.

Earlier Tuesday, the Angels put catcher Max Stassi and outfielder Juan Lagares on the 10-day injured list. Stassi has a left thumb sprain after getting hit by a foul tip Monday night. Lagares is down with a left calf strain.

Then, an hour before first pitch, left fielder Justin Upton was scratched with back stiffness.

Coupled with the absence of third baseman Anthony Rendon, who was placed on the IL on Monday, the Angels were forced to use an unfamiliar lineup. Jon Jay played left field and batted eighth. Jack Mayfield manned third base and batted ninth.

It was each player’s first start with the Angels. And they came up empty in several key moments, Mayfield striking out with the bases loaded in the sixth and Jay looking at a borderline called third strike to end a one-run rally in the eighth.

Maddon, however, remained optimistic postgame.

He liked how starter Dylan Bundy gave up only three runs (two earned) in seven innings even without his best stuff. He liked how his team responded after suffering another wave of injuries. And he liked that they still have a chance to clinch a winning road trip on Wednesday.

“We’ve had a lot of adversity the last couple days,” Maddon said. “And against a really good team, we’re right there with them in their home ballpark. There’s nothing to lament.”

Except, maybe, for a bad-luck bounce at the end.

 ?? Orlin Wagner Associated Press ?? ANGELS starting pitcher Dylan Bundy delivers in the first inning at Kauffman Stadium. Bundy went seven innings, surrenderi­ng two earned runs on five hits and two walks. He struck out six.
Orlin Wagner Associated Press ANGELS starting pitcher Dylan Bundy delivers in the first inning at Kauffman Stadium. Bundy went seven innings, surrenderi­ng two earned runs on five hits and two walks. He struck out six.

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