Los Angeles Times

Brutal end to painful trip

Losing streak hits 11 after Harper’s slam in eighth, Stott’s walk-off in ninth for Phillies.

- By Mike DiGiovanna

PHILADELPH­IA — The Angels don’t need another no-hitter or a dramatic walkoff hit or some breathtaki­ng two-way feat from Shohei Ohtani when they return to Anaheim for a seven-game homestand that begins Monday night.

They need a tourniquet to stop the bleeding.

A solid start from Patrick Sandoval and some clutch hits during a rare five-run, fourth-inning outburst Sunday provided a salve and some hope for a club that hadn’t won a game since May 24.

Then the Angels found a new and even more soulcrushi­ng way to lose, blowing a four-run lead in the eighth inning and a one-run lead in the ninth to an underachie­ving Philadelph­ia Phillies team that fired manager Joe Girardi on Friday.

Closer Raisel Iglesias gave up a tying grand slam in the eighth, and Jimmy Herget gave up a three-run homer to No. 9 hitter Bryson Stott in the ninth, as the Phillies stormed back for a 9-7, walk-off win in front of a crowd of 34,801 at Citizens

Bank Park.

“That was a tough one,” Angels manager Joe Maddon said. “We’ve lost a lot of tough ones. It really makes no sense. We got the right guys out there at the right time, and again, we gave it up late. … It’s gutwrenchi­ng at times, no question.”

The Angels have lost 11 straight games, going 0-6 against the Phillies and New York Yankees on this trip, and 15 of their last 18. The 11 losses match their secondlong­est streak in franchise history. The last such streak was from Aug. 4-15, 2016.

The Angels were 24-13 and tied for first place with Houston in the American League West on May 15. They are now 27-28 and 8½ games behind the Astros.

“We’re a really good team,” Herget said. “We’re the same team that was, what, [11] games over .500? So, I think we’ll be all right.”

This has been a familiar refrain in the clubhouse for the past week, but the Angels don’t sound very convincing. Nor do they look it.

They broke out for five runs in the fourth inning Sunday, equaling their offensive output in the first five games of the trip, with Matt Duffy (single), Ohtani (double) and Mike Trout (walk) setting the table and Jared Walsh (two-run single), Jo Adell and Kurt Suzuki (RBI singles) and Tyler Wade (RBI fielder’s choice) cleaning up.

They tacked on an insurance run in the eighth on Brandon Marsh’s two-out RBI single for a 6-2 lead.

Ryan Tepera threw a clean seventh. Left-hander Aaron Loup took over in the eighth, which began with Odubel Herrera’s single and Johan Camargo’s grounder to the left of Duffy at third. Duffy fielded the ball cleanly but threw it into right field for an error, putting runners on first and third.

“Just trying to be too quick,” Duffy said. “Trying to turn a double play on a grounder that wasn’t a double-play ball.”

Stott grounded into a fielder’s choice, but Loup walked Kyle Schwarber to load the bases. Maddon summoned Iglesias, who hadn’t pitched since May 27.

The right-hander struck out Rhys Hoskins with a 90mph changeup and battled Harper during a seven-pitch at-bat in which he threw five changeups, the slugger falling behind 0-and-2 before working the count full.

Iglesias left an 89.5-mph changeup over the middle. Harper, the reigning National League most valuable player, had Iglesias timed and crushed a 426-foot shot to right for his sixth career grand slam and a 6-6 tie.

“Just a bad spot,” Maddon said of the home run pitch. “Just bounce it. Throw the pitch where he can’t hit it, but we didn’t.”

The Angels did not fold. Suzuki walked to open the top of the ninth, then Wade bunted into a fielder’s choice, stole second and took third on pinch-hitter Luis Rengifo’s groundout to shortstop.

Duffy then shot an opposite-field grounder that sneaked under the glove of the sliding Hoskins at first base for an RBI single and a 7-6 Angels lead.

But Iglesias gave up a one-out single to Alec Bohm and a two-out single to Didi Gregorious in the ninth before yielding to Herget, who threw three straight balls to Stott. Herget came back with two strikes but left a 75mph curve over the middle that Stott crushed for his game-winner.

“It was a pitch I had conviction in, a pitch I’ve been throwing all year and striking guys out with,” said Herget, who entered with a 2.77 earned-run average in 18 appearance­s. “I threw it. He hit it. It’s unfortunat­e. Obviously, I let the team down.”

The clubhouse was as silent after the game as Trout’s bat has been for a week. The Angels center fielder went 0 for 3 with a walk Sunday, extending his career-worst hitless streak to 26 at-bats.

There was no need for a team meeting. The Angels already had two on this trip, Duffy said, one player-driven, one coach-driven.

“We’re past meetings at this point,” Duffy said. “We’re all profession­als. We know what we’re supposed to do to win ballgames.”

The key, Duffy said, is to relax, not put so much pressure on yourself, the way they did too often on this trip.

“In a stretch like this, the tendency is to try to do too much, which I may have done on that [eighth-inning] ground ball,” Duffy said.

“That ninth inning almost felt like Game 7 of the World Series, and it’s not. We have to stay within ourselves, play our best game and nothing more.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Derik Hamilton BRYSON STOTT is all smiles after his winning homer in the ninth.
Associated Press Derik Hamilton BRYSON STOTT is all smiles after his winning homer in the ninth.
 ?? Derik Hamilton Associated Press ?? BRYCE HARPER hardly can contain himself after belting an eighth-inning grand slam off Raisel Iglesias into the upper deck in right field to tie the score.
Derik Hamilton Associated Press BRYCE HARPER hardly can contain himself after belting an eighth-inning grand slam off Raisel Iglesias into the upper deck in right field to tie the score.

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