Angels' Saunders beats Dodgers, 4-2
ANGELS 4, DODGERS 2
He raises his record to 7-1, Rodriguez gets his 17th save, and Dodgers errors end up costly as they have a tough time at Angel Stadium again.
Maybe it's the slow-and-go traffic on the 5 Freeway or that passage through the Orange Curtain, but somewhere between Los Angeles and Anaheim, the Dodgers have been turning into mush.
In their last 10 games since 2005 in Angel Stadium, the Dodgers have come away losers nine times, including a 4-2 interleague defeat at the hands of the Angels on Friday night.
Joe Saunders allowed two runs and five hits in 7 1/3 innings to improve to 7-1, beating a Dodgers team that went 10-3 in its first 13 games against left-handed starters this season.
Setup man Scot Shields retired the two batters he faced in the eighth, and closer Francisco Rodriguez, pitching for the fourth consecutive night, struck out two of three in the ninth for his major league-leading 17th save.
The Dodgers committed two errors, one that led to an unearned run in the fourth inning, and a mistake that cost them a baserunner in the fourth. A bad throw helped the Angels score their final run in the seventh.
"They cracked the door open a little bit," Angels Manager Mike Scioscia said, "and that helped us."
In the Dodgers' last 10 games in Anaheim, they have committed 15 errors.
No. 14 came in the fourth inning Friday night, when catcher Gary Bennett, after blocking a ball in the dirt on Erick Aybar's two-out strikeout, sailed a throw at least five feet over the head of first baseman James Loney's head, allowing Casey Kotchman, who had doubled, to score for a 1-0 lead.
No. 15 came in the sixth inning, when catcher-turned-third-baseman Russell Martin's off-balance throw on Robb Quinlan's grounder got by Loney.
That miscue didn't cost the Dodgers a run, but another bad throw by Martin, who one-hopped Bennett in an attempt to cut down Maicer Izturis at the plate in the seventh, probably did.
And then there was Andruw Jones. As if the Dodgers outfielder wasn't struggling enough -- he's hitting .176 with two homers and seven runs batted in -- his season took another bizarre twist in the fourth, when he led off with a grounder to Aybar.
The Angels shortstop overthrew Kotchman at first for an error. When Jones was about 10 feet past the bag, he turned his shoulder toward second before heading back to the first.
Kotchman retrieved the ball quickly and tagged Jones, who was initially ruled safe, umpire Sam Holbrook calling the play dead. But Scioscia came out to argue that because Jones gave an impression he was going to second, the play was still live.
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