Angels buoy Saunders, beat Orioles
ANGELS 6, ORIOLES 5
Angels' home runs and defense, and Baltimore baserunning gaffes, allow pitcher to improve his record to 6-0 despite giving up 12 hits in five innings.
Joe Saunders had no business winning Sunday, not when the Angels left-hander gave up a career-high 12 hits in five innings and, by his own admission, had a subpar fastball, a sporadic curve and a changeup that was just "OK at times."
But his teammates -- and the Baltimore Orioles, to a degree -- wouldn't let him lose.
Saunders survived his worst start of the season; Gary Matthews Jr., Torii Hunter and Robb Quinlan clubbed home runs; the Orioles committed a pair of baserunning gaffes to thwart two rallies; and the Angels' bullpen held on for a 6-5 victory in Angel Stadium.
"It was a battle out there from the get-go," said the unbeaten Saunders, who became the third pitcher in club history to open a season 6-0 or better. "I was fortunate to get through five innings."
It looked as if he might not get through one. Brian Roberts led off the game with a double, and after Nick Markakis flied out, Roberts was thrown out trying to steal third by catcher Jeff Mathis.
Melvin Mora, Aubrey Huff, Kevin Millar and Ramon Hernandez strung four consecutive hard-hit singles together for two runs, Hernandez's hit coming on Saunders' 26th pitch of the inning.
Problem was, Hernandez thought his liner off the left-field wall was a home run, so much so that he gave first base coach John Shelby a high-five as he trotted around the bag.
Left fielder Garret Anderson caught the carom off the wall on the fly and fired to shortstop Erick Aybar, who threw to second to nail Hernandez, who didn't step on the accelerator in time.
"I really thought when I hit it, it was out," Hernandez said. "Shelby said, 'You got it!' Then I saw Aybar with the ball and thought, 'What the . . .?' "
Matthews, who replaced the injured Chone Figgins (right hamstring strain) at the top of the order, led off the bottom of the first with a home run to center against Steve Trachsel.
Vladimir Guerrero ended an 0-for-15 skid with a single to center, Casey Kotchman doubled to left, and Hunter drove a three-run home run to left, his fifth homer of the season but first since his walk-off grand slam beat Cleveland on April 7.
"Sometimes when you're hitting .300, you want to maintain it, so you cut down on your swing a bit," said Hunter, who is batting .314. "I'm trying to have better at-bats, but . . . forget that! I'm swinging from my booty from now on."
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