advertisement

Trout caps Angels’ comeback with go-ahead homer

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Rookie sensation Mike Trout hit a go-ahead homer and scored from first base on a single as the Los Angeles Angels rallied from an early five-run deficit against Chad Billingsley to beat the Dodgers 8-5 Friday night in the opener of the season’s second Freeway Series.

Dan Haren (5-7) allowed five runs, nine hits and three walks over five innings with five strikeouts. Ernesto Frieri, the fifth Angels pitcher, worked a hitless ninth for his eighth save in eight chances.

Bobby Abreu hit a three-run homer on the first pitch he saw in his return to Angel Stadium with the Dodgers. But it wasn’t enough for Billingsley (4-6), who gave up six runs and 10 hits in five innings.

The right-hander is 1-5 with a 5.36 ERA in seven career starts against the Angels, who had hit only two homers off him in 42 1-3 career innings prior to Trout’s clout. This was the fourth time in the last five regular-season meetings between the Dodgers and Angels that the game turned on a tiebreaking home run.

The Dodgers totaled four runs over their previous four games, including a three-game sweep by Oakland. But Abreu gave Billingsley a great head start in the first inning with a towering drive far back into the elevated seats in right field after singles by Jerry Hairston Jr. and Andre Ethier.

The Dodgers extended the margin to 5-0 in the second with RBI singles from Hairston and Rivera. But Billingsley couldn’t hold it, and the Angels fought back with three runs in the bottom half on Alberto Callaspo’s RBI double, Howie Kendrick’s sacrifice fly and Erick Aybar’s RBI groundout.

Callaspo led off the fourth with a single and scored on Aybar’s triple. Bobby Wilson followed with a suicide squeeze that eventually scored Aybar, who slid past the plate while catcher A.J. Ellis missed the tag. Umpire Dale Scott remained an interested spectator until Aybar casually walked back and stepped on the dish, then gave the “safe” sign.

Trout, who entered second in the AL with a .338 average, drove Billingsley’s next pitch to left-center for his seventh homer and a 6-5 Angels lead.

It could have been worse for Billingsley, but Ethier displayed his Gold Glove form in the fifth by robbing Kendrick of a two-run double with a leaping catch against the 18-foot wall for the third out. Torii Hunter drove in the Angels’ final two runs against Jamey Wright, with Trout winging it all the way from first behind Wilson after Hunter singled to right field on a 3-2 pitch with two outs.

NOTES: Billingsley hasn’t gone longer than seven innings since his season debut, when he allowed three hits over 8 1-3 innings in a 6-0 win at San Diego. He has completed seven innings in only three of his 14 starts since then. ... The emergence of Trout, Mark Trumbo and Peter Bourjos made the Angels’ outfield too crowded for the 38-year-old Abreu to play a regular role, despite Vernon Wells’ long-term thumb injury. He was released on April 30, and the Dodgers signed him as a free agent four days later. ... Haren walked more than two batters for only the second time in his last 39 starts — including May 14 against Oakland, when he issued four and hit his only batter of the season in a 5-0 loss. Last year, he finished with fewer walks (33) than starts (34). ... Only two of Abreu’s last 28 home runs have come with more than one runner on base. The other was a tying three-run shot off Clayton Kershaw in the Angels’ 6-3 win over the Dodgers on June 22, 2010, at Anaheim.

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.