Angels Push Past A's With Winning Ninth-Inning Home Run
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- The Los Angeles Angels rallied against Oakland's improved bullpen to beat the Athletics 5-4.
Geovany Soto spent the final month of the 2014 season with Oakland, and he caught Sean Doolittle during that stretch.
Still, that didn't make standing in against the Athletics' closer much easier Tuesday night.
Soto hit a go-ahead two-run homer with one out in the ninth.
Albert Pujols hit a two-run double in the eighth off Ryan Madson to get the Angels back in the game.
"It shows a lot of character. It shows that's what we're all about, we never stop, we're always going to keep coming after you," Soto said. "You have to beat us 27 outs. It's a good quality to have and it's a good model that we're trying to establish."
Marcus Semien homered twice and Josh Reddick drove in two runs for the A's, who will try to avoid a sweep Wednesday afternoon.
Pujols and Mike Trout, along with reliever Joe Smith and infielder Cliff Pennington, spent the morning at Golden State Warriors practice and shooting around with the defending NBA champions. Trout even beat Draymond Green at PIG before going 0 for 4 with a strikeout in his game that mattered.
Doolittle (1-2) and Madson couldn't get it done after Kendall Graveman's strong start and Oakland lost its third one-run game while playing its sixth such contest.
"I'll be here for a while tonight looking to see if there's a pattern. I'm going watch some video and see what adjustments I can make," Doolittle said. "I've been a little inconsistent."
Mike Morin retired one batter in the eighth for the win before Huston Street finished for his third save in as many days.
"Tonight's game was a micro example of who we are as a team and who we will continue to be," he said. "I was impressed with this team when we started the season 1-4. I didn't see anybody drop their heads."
Semien homered in the third and again in the seventh. It was his second career two-homer game and first since May 10 last year at Seattle.
A's designated hitter Billy Butler was back in the starting lineup for the first time in six games after sitting the past five against right-handed starters. He went 0 for 4 with a strikeout and grounded into a double play.
Pennington, who entered to run for Pujols in the eighth and stayed in the game, played first base for the first time in his nine-year career.
Graveman allowed one run on four hits with three strikeouts and two walks over six innings. He held Trout and Pujols hitless in their initial five at-bats with a strikeout and walk to cleanup hitter Pujols.
Angels starter Hector Santiago allowed four earned runs on seven hits in 7 2/3 innings, struck out three and walked one.
Smith did the unthinkable earlier in the day: He topped reigning NBA MVP Stephen Curry in a game of PIG.
The reliever made a blind, backward, over-the-head free throw that Stephen Curry couldn't match. Then, the Angels pitcher stymied Curry on a left-handed 3-pointer and had suddenly beaten arguably the world's best basketball player at a good-natured game of PIG.
"That was fun. I loved it," a giddy Smith said. "I'm not that bad. I ain't that good either. Sometimes a little bit of luck, a lot bit of luck."