The Bakersfield Californian

Alcantara dominates as Marlins beat Angels 2-1

-

MIAMI — Sandy Alcantara pitched eight dominant innings in his second straight win, and the Miami Marlins beat the Los Angeles Angels 2-1 on Tuesday night for their sixth straight victory.

Alcantara (9-3) allowed two hits — singles by Luis Rengifo in the fifth and Mike Trout in the seventh — in his 11th consecutiv­e outing of at least seven innings. The righthande­r struck out 10 and lowered his ERA to 1.82.

“I just try to stay consistent, go out there every fifth day and fight for my team,” Alcantara said. “Every time I can pitch seven, eight innings I feel satisfied. It’s a long career and you have to stay healthy.”

Tanner Scott earned his 10th save, surrenderi­ng Taylor Ward’s sacrifice fly before retiring Jared Walsh on a liner to center for the final out.

Garrett Cooper and Bryan De La Cruz homered for Miami. Joey Wendle had two hits.

Marlins manager Don Mattingly considered giving Alcantara the opportunit­y for consecutiv­e complete games. But with a prolonged bottom of the eighth, which included a pitching change, Alcantara was done after 107 pitches.

“It’s hard because Sandy is your best guy no matter where you are,” Mattingly said.

Trout snapped an 0-for-16 skid with his infield single leading off the seventh. The three-time AL MVP struck out in his first two at-bats against Alcantara.

Reigning AL MVP Shohei Ohtani went 0 for 3 with a walk. Ohtani, who turned 28 on Tuesday, reached on a fielder’s choice in the seventh and stole his ninth base of the season.

“We came back, we fought, we’ve been doing everything we can,” Angels interim manager Bill Haselman said.

Alcantara retired his first 14 batters before Rengifo’s soft line drive to right.

Cooper connected against Noah Syndergaar­d (5-7) in the third, driving a 3-2 pitch over the wall in left-center for his sixth homer.

De La Cruz went deep in the fifth. It was his sixth of the year.

Syndergaar­d allowed five hits, struck out eight and walked none in five innings.

“Some of my stuff didn’t have swing and miss action,” Syndergaar­d said. “Got away with some pitches and made it through five.”

Umpire Lance Barrett ejected Miami right-fielder Avisaíl García for arguing balls and strikes in the fourth.

The Angels had two scoring opportunit­ies against Alcantara. After his two-out single in the fifth, Rengifo stole second and advanced to third on catcher Jacob Stallings’ throwing error. But Alcantara struck out Max Stassi to end the threat. Ohtani advanced to third on Ward’s fly ball to deep center before Alcantara struck out Walsh for the final out in the seventh.

“I’ve said it before, I don’t worry when I have men on base,” Alcantara said. “I trust my stuff and have to use it to my advantage.”

UNLIKELY BASE STEALER

Include Jesús Aguilar among the Marlins who have contribute­d to the club’s NL-leading 65 stolen bases.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY / AP ?? Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani swings at a pitch during the seventh inning of the team’s baseball game against the Miami Marlins on Tuesday in Miami.
LYNNE SLADKY / AP Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani swings at a pitch during the seventh inning of the team’s baseball game against the Miami Marlins on Tuesday in Miami.
 ?? LYNNE SLADKY / AP ?? Los Angeles Angels’ Michael Stefanic scores past Miami Marlins catcher Jacob Stallings on a sacrifice fly by Taylor Ward during the ninth inning of a baseball game on Tuesday in Miami.
LYNNE SLADKY / AP Los Angeles Angels’ Michael Stefanic scores past Miami Marlins catcher Jacob Stallings on a sacrifice fly by Taylor Ward during the ninth inning of a baseball game on Tuesday in Miami.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States