Santana Picks Up First Win Of Season
Updated 9:45 AM PST, Sat, Jun 6, 2009
Ervin Santana knew he had to be patient as he recovered from an elbow injury that cost him the first six weeks of the season.
Friday, that patience paid off.
Santana didn't allow a run until the ninth inning and posted his first win of the season as the Los Angeles Angels beat the slumping Detroit Tigers 2-1.
"Ervin answered a lot of questions with a resounding 'yes' tonight," said Angels manager Mike Scioscia. "He's been through a lot this year, so this was big for him."
Santana (1-2) picked up his first win since Sept. 22, after allowing 15 runs in his previous two outings. He improved to 4-0 against Detroit since the start of 2008 by allowing six hits and two walks in 8 2-3 innings, striking out seven.
"I wasn't worried, because I knew things weren't going to be perfect coming back from injury," he said. "I'm always happy to be out there, but today was even better than usual."
The game was scoreless after eight innings, but Torii Hunter and Kendry Morales started the ninth with singles off Fernando Rodney (0-1). Juan Rivera fouled off six pitches before poking a single to right through the drawn-in infield for the game's first run.
"I just wanted to get the ball up in the air and over the infield," Rivera said through an interpreter. "He was throwing me changeups and high fastballs, and I just kept fouling them off until I got one I could hit."
After Erick Aybar's sacrifice bunt, Howie Kendrick's groundout made it 2-0.
Magglio Ordonez hit an RBI single in the ninth, but Angels closer Brian Fuentes replaced Santana and got Curtis Granderson to hit a foul pop behind third that Chone Figgins caught before tumbling into the stands. It was Fuentes' 15th save in 18 tries.
"Everyone in the dugout was trying to suck that back into play," Scioscia said. "Luckily, Figgy got to it and made a great play."
Justin Verlander nearly matched him, throwing eight shutout innings one day after becoming the AL Pitcher of the Month for May. Verlander is 6-0 with a 1.12 ERA in his last eight starts.
Verlander, though, didn't come out for the ninth after throwing 119 pitches.
Santana and Verlander dominated the early innings, with the teams combining for just three singles in the first four innings.
In the eighth, Kendrick led off with an infield single and took second when Inge's throw sailed past Larish at first for an error. Figgins moved Kendrick to third with a sacrifice bunt, Verlander intentionally walked Abreu, and the unusual move paid off when Guerrero hit into an inning-ending double play.
"In the past week, we've faced Verlander and (Roy) Halladay, and those might be the two best pitchers in baseball right now," Scioscia said. "We made him throw some pitches, but we didn't get much off him. He made the pitches he needed when we had him in a little trouble."
Copyright Associated Press
First Published: Jun 6, 2009 9:28 AM PST
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