Top of the fourth Los Angeles Angles catcher Logan O’Hoppe gets the home run Golden State Warriors hat in the Angels dugout after hitting a three run homer in the top of the fourth inning against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Apr 2, 2023 (@Angels photo)
Los Angeles. 003 300 000. – 6. 11. 0
Oakland. 000 000 000 – 0. 5. 1
Time: 2:32
Attendance: 14,638
Sun April 2, 2023
By Lewis Rubman
OAKLAND–In three short days, the Oakland Athletics (1-2) have transformed themselves from gritty, come from behind, and victorious underdogs into just plain underdogs. The biggest disappointment in Saturday’s thrashing by the Los Angeles Angels (2-1) was Shintaro Fujinami, the once a week worker around whose schedule the A’s were willing to distort the rest of the rotation’s scheduled starts.
On the bright side, two of the relief pitchers Oakland used, Jeurys Familia and Sam Moll, were effective, and the other one, Adam Oller, was, came to come back from from a disastrous first two-thirds of an inning to reach an acceptable level of functioning. The bullpen also was the only ray of hope in Sunday’s 6-0 drubbing.
It was up to Ken Waldichuck, who had a pre-season record of 0-4, 10.54, with 12 walks and 13 strike outs. 0-4, 10.54, to hold the Angels off long enough to give the weak hitting Oakland bats and the possibly successful bullpen a chance of taking the rubber game of the season’s opening series. One cause for optimism was Waldichuck’s strong five start against Kansas City in one of the team’s last Arizona warm-ups on March 16.
He pitched four scoreless frames that afternoon before giving up two runs on a single and a home run in the remaining third of an inning of his start. Another positive factor is the one regular season game in which Waldichuck faced the Anaheim crew. Last October 5, he pitched seven scoreless frames against the Angels, holding them to three hits and a walk and getting credit for Oakland’s 3-2 victory.
This afternoon, the 25 year old southpaw from San Diego faced a couple of difficult situations in the early going, but he overcame them. With Mike Trout on second and one down in the top of the first, he retired Shohei Ohtani on a liner to center and Hunter Renfroe on a grounder to short. Two frames later, he fanned Ohtani runners on second and third and two men away.
The water the Oakland starter was in got hotter in the third. Hunter Renfroe led off with a squibbler in front of the plate, and Shea Langeliers’ throw almost hit him as Jesús Aguilar was jumping out of the way of the charging Renfroe. It went as a hit for Renfroe and a throwing error by Langeliers to allow him to advance. It looked as though Waldichuk then hit Luis Rengifo with a pitch. But Renfroe had advanced to third on what he thought was a wild pitch.
A video review showed he was right, so Rengifo returrned to the batter’s box,k and Renfoe remained 90 feet from home. Waldichuck proceeded to strike Gio Urshela out, but then Logan O’Hoppe jumped all over a 91 mph four s eamer and launched 391 feet into the left center field seats for his first career home run and 3-0 Halos lead. Those were hard luck runs, but they were earned.
Alternating on the mound with him was another portsider, Tyler Anderson, making his first regular season start for the Angels since coming to them from the team that correctly describes itself as being from Los Angeles. Before that, Anderson had labored for the Rockies, Giants,, Pirates, and Mariners.
The peripatetic pitcher was a valuable member of the Dodgers’ rotation last year, in which he was named to the NL All Star team. He led the team in innings pitched, with 178-2/3, which resulted in a record of 15-5, 2.57 started against the Padres in the fourth game of the NLDS and shut San Diego out on two hits over five innings.
He impressed his present employers by no hitting them for 8-1/3 frames on June 15, although a post game scorer’s decision changed an error committed in the seventh to an infield single. The 33 year old veteran’s arsenal consists, in descending order of frequency, of a four seam fast ball, which he throws 38% of the time, a change up (31.6%), a cutter, a sinker, and an occasional curve (1.2%). He came to Oakland a 2-0, 1.08 record against the Athletics.
Anderson held the Athletics at bay for six innings, although they had runners in scoring position in the first and fourth, the latter owing to Laureano’s two out leg double. In his stint on the mound, the lefty allowed four hits and struck out four. He issued a pair of passports and plunked one batter. He threw 93 pitches, 59 of them strikes. His successor was Andrew Wantz. Carlos Estevez handled the A’s in the ninth
Taylor Ward led off the fifth with a single to left center, and then Trout blasted his first rounder tripper of the year, a 434 foot shot to dead center, and Ohtani, not to be outdone, whacked Waldichuk’s next offering, an 80 mph sweeper, 447 feet into the second deck in right center field.
Bingo! In 6-0 in favor of Phil Nevin’s band of angels. Waldichuk lasted three batters into. the top of the sixth, David Fletcher’s two out fly to right was ruled, on review, to be a fair ball that resulted in a single. Zach Jackson came in to pitch and promptly gave up a single, a walk, and a wild pitch before getting Ohtani to swing and miss at an inning ending third strike.
Waldichuk had gone 5–2/3 innings and surrendered six runs, all earned, on nine hits, three of them out of the park, a walk, a wild pitch, and a hit batter. He had three Ks to hi credit. 59 of hiw 96 pitches went into the record as strikes.
Jackson didn’t come out for the visitors’ seventh; that job fell to Adrián Martínez, recently recalled from Las Vegas. He had looked good in the early innings of his few starts in the Coliseum last year but always managed to fall apart as the game progressed. Using him in middle relief seemed a good idea, and it was. The righty from Mexicali allowed just one hit in three innings and fielded his position well, with two assists and a put out.
The win went to Anderson; the loss, to Waldichuk. There was no save.
The Cleveland Guardians come to town tomorrow. Monday’s game is a 6:40 start with the A’s James Kaprielian scheduled to start against fellow righty Zach Plesac for the Guardians.