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MLB : ATS Matchup
Tuesday 5/19/2015Line$ LineOU LineScore
LA ANGELS  SANTIAGO )
 
TORONTO  SANCHEZ )
+1.5  -190

-1.5  +165
+110

-120

9.5ov
 
3
Final
2

LA ANGELS (19 - 19) at TORONTO (18 - 22)
View Previous GameView Next Game
Tuesday, 5/19/2015 7:05 PM
HECTOR SANTIAGO (L) vs. AARON SANCHEZ (R)
Board OpeningLatest
 LineTotalLineTotal
961LA ANGELS+105Ov 9,-110+105Ov 9,-120
962TORONTO-115Un 9,-110-115Un 9,+100
ADVANCED TEAM STATS
LA ANGELS - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games19-19-216-203.70.2340.2850.3570.6413.70.2350.2900.3670.657
Road Games9-10-18-93.70.2320.2780.3570.6353.80.2390.2920.3900.682
vs Right-handed Starters12-16-5.713-143.40.2280.2760.3370.6134.00.2510.3040.3880.691
Past 7 Games5-2+31-63.60.2570.2820.3840.6662.70.2100.2490.2880.537
Turf Games0-1-11-06.00.3080.3250.6150.94010.00.4470.5120.6581.170
Night Games15-11+310-143.80.2360.2880.3590.6473.30.2210.2710.3430.614
LA ANGELS - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games3.70.2340.285381245291502330.357132892741221328192127
Road Games3.70.2320.27819633147231180.3576740143710512101113
Righty Starters3.40.2280.27628915209341210.33791601971015220121723
LA ANGELS - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games3.491.164105.743419010331036-512763.2%
Road Games3.971.30245.3212041718492-27370%

TORONTO - Current Season Performance
 Team RecordsTeamOpponent
 W-LUnitsO-URunsAvgOBPSLGOPSRunsAvgOBPSLGOPS
All Games18-22-4.821-175.20.2600.3260.4290.7554.90.2600.3310.4400.771
Home Games10-7+17-95.50.2890.3590.4840.8434.10.2320.3070.3820.689
vs Left-handed Starters7-3+46-46.00.3010.3510.4880.8394.70.2670.3240.4780.802
Past 7 Games2-5-2.85-25.10.2670.3290.4280.7575.40.2590.3160.5090.825
Turf Games10-7+17-95.50.2890.3590.4840.8434.10.2320.3070.3820.689
Night Games11-17-715-124.70.2470.3090.4160.7254.90.2590.3310.4380.769
TORONTO - Team Hitting and Fielding Statistics
Team BattingTeam BattingTeam Fielding
 RunsAVGOBPGABH2B3BHRSLGRBIBBSOSBLOBGIDPERRDPOSB
All Games5.20.2600.326401346350846440.4291961313102325238223216
Home Games5.50.2890.35917568164393220.48492621071111819101510
Lefty Starters6.00.3010.35110342103193130.48859266955314370
TORONTO - Bullpen Pitching Statistics
 ERAWHIPIPRERHHRBBSOW-LSVBSVPct.
All Games3.971.228127625610817481285-86650%
Home Games2.781.14958.3211848719562-23175%
SCHEDULE AND RESULTS
LA ANGELS - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
5/5/2015RICHARDS(R)SEATTLEPAXTON(L)5-4W-1408 unO860980
5/6/2015WILSON(L)SEATTLEELIAS(L)4-3W-1458 ovU741970
5/7/2015SANTIAGO(L)HOUSTONMCHUGH(R)2-3L+1007.5 unU741680
5/8/2015WEAVER(R)HOUSTONHERNANDEZ(R)2-0W-1258.5 unU641652
5/9/2015SHOEMAKER(R)HOUSTONKEUCHEL(L)5-6L-1057 evO1070640
5/10/2015RICHARDS(R)HOUSTONFELDMAN(R)3-1W-1607.5 ovU640151
5/12/2015WILSON(L)COLORADOKENDRICK(R)5-2W-1758 unU1070540
5/13/2015SANTIAGO(L)COLORADOLYLES(R)2-1W-1658 unU8601080
5/15/2015WEAVER(R)@ BALTIMORECHEN(L)3-1W1008.5 evU741551
5/16/2015SHOEMAKER(R)@ BALTIMOREJIMENEZ(R)6-1W1209 unU1260321
5/17/2015RICHARDS(R)@ BALTIMOREWRIGHT(R)0-3L-1258.5 unU650740
5/18/2015WILSON(L)@ TORONTOREDMOND(R)6-10L1009.5 evO127017100
5/19/2015SANTIAGO(L)@ TORONTOSANCHEZ(R) 
5/20/2015WEAVER(R)@ TORONTODICKEY(R) 
5/21/2015SHOEMAKER(R)@ TORONTOESTRADA(R) 
5/22/2015RICHARDS(R)@ BOSTONPORCELLO(R) 
5/23/2015WILSON(L)@ BOSTONWRIGHT(R) 
5/24/2015 @ BOSTON  
5/25/2015 SAN DIEGO  
5/26/2015 SAN DIEGO  

TORONTO - Schedule
 Team StatsOpp Stats
DateTeam StarterOpponentOpp StarterScoreW/LLineTot.O/UHLOBEHLOBE
5/5/2015ESTRADA(R)NY YANKEESPINEDA(R)3-6L+1058 unO8711160
5/6/2015BUEHRLE(L)NY YANKEESSABATHIA(L)5-1W-1358.5 ovU1270780
5/8/2015SANCHEZ(R)BOSTONMILEY(L)7-0W-1359 ovU1251270
5/9/2015HUTCHISON(R)BOSTONKELLY(R)7-1W-1159 unU9111892
5/10/2015DICKEY(R)BOSTONBUCHHOLZ(R)3-6L+1009 unP860740
5/11/2015ESTRADA(R)@ BALTIMOREJIMENEZ(R)2-5L1158.5 ovU861860
5/12/2015BUEHRLE(L)@ BALTIMORETILLMAN(R)10-2W1209.5 unO1371533
5/13/2015SANCHEZ(R)@ BALTIMOREGONZALEZ(R)1-6L1158.5 ovU4619100
5/14/2015HUTCHISON(R)@ HOUSTONHERNANDEZ(R)4-6L-1059 unO731870
5/15/2015DICKEY(R)@ HOUSTONKEUCHEL(L)4-8L1058.5 unO8601140
5/16/2015ESTRADA(R)@ HOUSTONFELDMAN(R)5-6L1059 unO660861
5/17/2015BUEHRLE(L)@ HOUSTONMCHUGH(R)2-4L1308.5 unU880641
5/18/2015REDMOND(R)LA ANGELSWILSON(L)10-6W-1109.5 evO171001270
5/19/2015SANCHEZ(R)LA ANGELSSANTIAGO(L) 
5/20/2015DICKEY(R)LA ANGELSWEAVER(R) 
5/21/2015ESTRADA(R)LA ANGELSSHOEMAKER(R) 
5/22/2015BUEHRLE(L)SEATTLEHERNANDEZ(R) 
5/23/2015SANCHEZ(R)SEATTLEPAXTON(L) 
5/24/2015 SEATTLE  
5/25/2015 CHI WHITE SOX  
5/26/2015 CHI WHITE SOX  
KEY GAME INFORMATION
LA ANGELS: ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - The Los Angeles Angels had the majors' best record last year, and they return this season with baseball's best player at the center of largely the same roster.
Yet the Angels accomplished none of their biggest goals last year when they were swept out of the division series, and their sky-high payroll makes those unmet expectations even more painful.
So are the Angels a legitimate power or an unbalanced, aging team with a rapidly closing window? Mike Trout, Albert Pujols and manager Mike Scioscia can only figure it out by going back to work to find the right combination to contend again.
The Angels are difficult to evaluate because everything depends on the window from which they're viewed.
They have an enormous payroll topped by some of baseball's highest-paid players at their positions - Pujols, Josh Hamilton, C.J. Wilson and Trout, the reigning AL MVP. For all that money, consistent winning and championship contention is expected, which means the Angels' inability to win a single playoff game in five seasons is a disaster.
Yet the Angels still won 98 games last season despite losing budding ace Garrett Richards to a knee injury in August, and general manager Jerry Dipoto has restocked his roster while breathing life into what was considered the majors' worst farm system in recent years. From the bullpen to the heart of the order, Los Angeles has an undeniably solid complement of talent around Trout, the best player in baseball at 23 years old.
But just when the Angels look sharp, new worries arise. The biggest problem in 2015 is the fate of Hamilton, who is likely to be hit by a lengthy suspension for an apparent drug relapse before opening day. His recovery from shoulder surgery would have kept him out anyway.
Hamilton still has three years left on his $125 million contract, but at least his absence is cushioned by the grim fact that he has made no significant, consistent impact on the Angels' offense in two expensive seasons. Los Angeles acquired veteran Matt Joyce from Tampa Bay in the offseason, and returning outfielder Collin Cowgill also can fill in capably.
Some other things to watch when the Angels embark on their 55th season:
WHAT'S ON SECOND: The Angels' biggest problem is at second base, where Howie Kendrick leaves a gaping hole after nearly a decade entrenched in the job. With just a year left on Kendrick's contract, Dipoto traded him to the Dodgers to get promising young starter Andrew Heaney. But the lineup that led the AL in runs has lost its top hit producer - yes, Kendrick had even more than Trout - with no real plan to replace him. Josh Rutledge, Grant Green and Johnny Giavotella are among the light-hitting infielders getting a look in the spring, but none is likely to replace Kendrick's big bat.
RICH MAN: After leading the AL in RBIs and runs last season while winning the MVP trophy, Trout already has accomplished more than pretty much any 23-year-old in baseball history - and he's about to get paid for it. The outfielder's six-year, $144.5 million contract begins this year, albeit at a modest $5.25 million salary for 2015 before the deal skyrockets. Yet Trout hasn't shown any signs of complacency in the offseason, and he is working aggressively with hitting coach Don Baylor on limiting his strikeouts, which jumped to an AL-worst 184 last year.
WEAKNESS TO STRENGTH: After years of ineptitude, the Angels are confident their bullpen will again be among the majors' tops this season. Closer Huston Street and setup man Joe Smith are among the best in the business, while Mike Morin is expected to move into a bigger role with Kevin Jepsen's departure. Fernando Salas, Vinny Pestano and newcomer Cesar Ramos - Jered Weaver's college teammate - all are angling for innings, likely making the bullpen into a source of comfort for Scioscia.
GOTTA PITCH: The Angels' rotation has a high ceiling and a low floor - just like the rest of this team. Weaver and Wilson are on top of the rotation, but many believe both 30-something veterans took a step backward last season. Richards faces an uncertain mid-April return from a long rehabilitation, while Matt Shoemaker must prove he can replicate his shocking 16-victory performance that made him second on AL Rookie of the Year voting. Scioscia also must pick a fifth starter among Heaney, Hector Santiago and Nick Tropeano.
TORONTO: TORONTO (AP) - The upcoming season for the Toronto Blue Jays seems destined to be defined by the one young pitcher who'll miss it and the two even younger guys who'll try to replace him.
Toronto's plans for ending baseball's longest active playoff drought took a serious hit when Marcus Stroman suffered a season-ending knee injury in spring training.
The second-year right-hander tore a ligament when his knee buckled as he backed off a bunt during a pregame fielding drill. He's out for the year after undergoing surgery.
''It's tough,'' Stroman said. ''I just feel like I let my team down. I've worked harder than I ever had this offseason.''
The injury changed Toronto's thinking about 22-year-old right-hander Aaron Sanchez, who might have been closing games rather than starting them if Stroman was still healthy, and 21-year-old lefty Daniel Norris, the van-dwelling surfer dude.
The two pitchers now look likely to get their shot in Toronto's rotation, slotting in behind 200-inning workhorses R.A Dickey and Mark Buehrle, and 24-year-old right-hander Drew Hutchison.
How successful they are could well determine what happens to the Blue Jays, out of the postseason since winning their second straight World Series in 1993 and the only team that hasn't reached the playoffs this century.
''We may have to rely on a young guy who may not be proven,'' manager John Gibbons said. ''Stro was a baby, too, but a special guy.''
Sanchez has already shown signs that he could also be special. He excelled out of the bullpen in 24 games last season, posting three saves and a 1.09 ERA in 33 innings, striking out 27 while walking nine and holding opponents to a .128 average.
With the increased demands of a starting role lying ahead, the hard-throwing Sanchez has spent this spring refining his slider.
''With the way he throws, it could turn into a big strikeout pitch for him,'' Gibbons said.
The Blue Jays are also high on Norris, currently better known for spending his winters searching for prime surfing spots while living out of a 1978 Volkswagen camper van nicknamed ''Shaggy.''
''He's a different bird,'' Gibbons said. ''Anytime you live in a van, I wouldn't say that's normal.''
Norris had an abnormal 2014 season, rising from Class A to the majors after going 12-2 with a 2.53 ERA at three minor league stops. He underwent elbow surgery last October to remove bone spurs, and expects to be better this year than the pitcher who made five appearances for the Blue Jays in September.
''He's a student of the game,'' Gibbons said. ''He's a very smart kid and he's grounded. He's got the most important thing: He's got a great arm.''
After Jose Reyes and the Blue Jays went 83-79, here's what else to watch as they try to move up:
MIGHTY MIGUEL: Sanchez and Norris aren't the only impressive young arms expected to break camp with the Blue Jays. Right-hander Miguel Castro, 20, didn't allow a run in his first five spring appearances, striking out eight and walking none while allowing three hits over nine innings. A hard thrower who stands an imposing 6-foot-5, Castro has put himself in position to jump from Class A, where he went 8-3 with a 2.68 ERA last season, all the way to the majors. ''He looks like a seasoned vet out there, under control, very relaxed,'' Gibbons said.
NEW GUYS, NEW FOCUS: Toronto strengthened its lineup over the winter by signing free agent catcher Russell Martin to a five-year, $82 million contract and acquiring All-Star third baseman Josh Donaldson from Oakland. Slugger Jose Bautista has praised the newcomers for making a difference in the clubhouse with their winning pedigree and intense focus. ''We need something along those lines here every now and then,'' Bautista said. ''It's good to have guys to whom winning matters.''
BLOCKING THE PLATE: Adding Martin gave the Blue Jays a logjam at catcher, where incumbent Dioner Navarro is signed through 2015 and Josh Thole is Dickey's knuckleball specialist. Martin has worked hard this spring to prove he can handle Dickey's floater, which could mean Thole is ticketed for Triple-A. Or, Toronto may yet trade the switch-hitting Navarro to open room at DH for Edwin Encarnacion, who has been slowed this spring by a balky back and may not be able to handle regular duty at first base.
PREVIEW
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PA SPORTSTICKER AL PREVIEW (LA ANGELS-TORONTO) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*Angels-Blue Jays Preview* ==========================

By JORDAN GARRETSON STATS Writer

Los Angeles (19-18) at Toronto (17-22), 7:07 p.m. EDT

The Toronto Blue Jays ended their longest losing streak with a breakout performance.

The Los Angeles Angels will look to Hector Santiago to prevent another big number Tuesday night at Rogers Centre.

Toronto (18-22) had lost five in a row and seven of eight before Monday's 10-6 victory, matching a season high with 17 hits. The Blue Jays were 7 for 20 with runners in scoring position after going 6 for 38 during the losing streak.

Six players drove in a run, led by three RBIs from Jose Bautista, who was a triple short of a cycle with his seventh home run. He has 11 RBIs in his last nine against the Angels (19-19).

"We really needed that game," manager John Gibbons said. "We'd been scuffling big time."

Russell Martin improved to 24 for 56 over his last 14 games with a 3-for-5 performance that was matched by Josh Donaldson, who is batting .433 with 14 RBIs over his last 16 at home. Donaldson was also caught on camera yelling expletives from the dugout at Angels pitching coach Mike Butcher, seemingly bothered by the fact that Los Angeles argued the strike zone during his at-bat.

"A lot of guys in our dugout took exception to (Donaldson) yelling," manager Mike Scioscia said. "We weren't even talking to him. We were talking to the umpire."

That compounded a frustrating day for the Angels, who have dropped two in a row following a five-game winning streak. They became the last AL team to allow double-digit runs.

The bullpen was responsible for much of the damage as Mike Morin, Vinnie Pestano and Cesar Ramos gave up six runs over two innings, a surprise for a unit that had surrendered one over 18 1-3 innings in the previous seven games.

"On the pitching side this is probably our worst game of the year," Scioscia said.

Mike Trout was 0 for 5, falling to 4 for 25 over his last six and 6 for 41 in his last 10 against Toronto.

Santiago (2-2, 2.41 ERA) is winless in his last four starts while receiving two runs of support, and he gave up one run over 12 1-3 innings in the last two. The left-hander didn't issue a walk in six innings of a 2-1 win over Colorado in 11 on Wednesday after walking 18 in his first six outings.

"He can be effectively wild at times, but he got back into counts and pitched six strong innings," Scioscia told MLB's official website.

Santiago has never started versus Toronto and owns a 2.25 ERA over five appearances. Donaldson is 1 for 13 against him.

The Angels have backed Santiago with one or no runs five times.

Aaron Sanchez (3-3, 4.26) will try to move on for the Blue Jays after yielding a career-high five runs over 5 2-3 innings in Wednesday's 6-1 defeat at Baltimore. Sanchez walked four to bring his total to 29, and his 6.87 per nine innings marks baseball's second-highest rate among pitchers with at least five starts. He was at 2.45 as a rookie last season.

Sanchez has a 2.02 ERA in 14 home appearances, going 2-1 there in three starts this year. This marks his first matchup with Los Angeles.


Last Updated: 6/30/2024 4:12:45 PM EST.


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