Angels’ Comeback Bid Halted When Orioles Catch Would-Be Base-Stealer

Angels’ Comeback Bid Halted When Orioles Catch Would-Be Base-Stealer
Gunnar Henderson of the Baltimore Orioles rounds the bases after hitting a home run against the Los Angeles Angels in Anaheim, Calif., on April 24, 2024. (Ashley Landis/AP Photo)
The Associated Press
4/24/2024
Updated:
4/25/2024
0:00

ANAHEIM, Calif.—Gunnar Henderson of the Baltimore Orioles continued his hot streak at the plate Wednesday, April 24, against the Los Angeles Angels.

The shortstop’s biggest play, though, was defensively when he tagged out Jo Adell at second base after a great throw from catcher James McCann for the final out as the Orioles held on for a 6–5 victory.

Adell drew a walk with two outs, but was caught stealing as he tried to get into scoring position as the potential tying run after the Angels had trailed 6–0 going into the bottom of the sixth.

Mike Trout started Los Angeles’ rally by becoming the first player in the major leagues to reach 10 home runs this season.

“I felt like I got a good tag on him. It was really close,” said Henderson, who had three hits and drove in three runs. “We’re very fortunate that they called it out on the field.”

The call stood after a lengthy replay review. Major League Baseball said in a statement the replay official could not definitively determine that Adell touched second base before Henderson applied the tag

Angels Manager Ron Washington and Adell both thought it should have been overturned.

“The guy on the mound [Craig Kimbrell] was slow [to the plate]. The opportunity was there, and we took it,“ Mr. Washington said. ”From all replays we saw, it looked like he was safe, but we don’t make the call.”

Adell said he felt like his foot reached the bag before the tag.

“A little disappointing to end the game that way. But hopefully we can get those right moving forward,” he said.

Kimbrell gave up a run in the ninth but held on to pick up his seventh save of the season. It was also the 424th of his career, tying him with John Franco for sixth on the all-time list.

Henderson is 9 of 20 in the past five games. Last year’s unanimous choice for American League Rookie of the Year, Henderson homered for the second straight game when he led off the third with a drive off Tyler Anderson (2–3). It was Henderson’s eighth of the season, which is second in the American League.

“He’s done everything. He’s playing great defense, homers, steals, running the bases, hits. It’s been awesome,” Baltimore Manager Brandon Hyde said of Henderson.

Adley Rutschman had his 12th multi-hit game of the year with two hits and an RBI for the Orioles.

Batting leadoff for the second straight day, Trout got the Angels on the board with a solo shot down the left-field line off Dean Kremer (1–2) in the sixth inning. It’s the third time in the past seven seasons that Trout has been the first in the majors to reach double digits in homers.

Orioles pitcher Dean Kremer throws against the Angels in Anaheim, Calif., on April 24, 2024. (Ashley Landis/AP Photo)
Orioles pitcher Dean Kremer throws against the Angels in Anaheim, Calif., on April 24, 2024. (Ashley Landis/AP Photo)

Taylor Ward and Zach Neto also homered for the Angels, who have dropped five of their past six games.

“We were going to keep fighting until the final out,“ Trout said. ”We had a chance at the end and didn’t come through.”

Kremer didn’t allow a hit until Adell’s single with two outs in the fifth. The right-hander struck out 10 in 5 2/3 innings, with two runs allowed on three hits.

After Henderson connected on Anderson’s cutter for his third homer this season against the Angels, he led off the fifth with a double and scored on Rutschman’s base hit.

Baltimore broke it open with four runs in the sixth as the first five hitters got aboard against José Suarez. After Jorge Mateo’s run-scoring, ground-rule double, Henderson had the key hit with a liner up the middle to plate two more.

Anderson allowed two runs and four hits, with four walks and seven strikeouts. The left-hander threw 105 pitches, the second-most he has tossed in the first five innings in his nine-year career.

After Nolan Schanuel’s base hit chased Kremer in the sixth, Ward hit Jacob Webb’s first pitch just over the wall in right-center to get the Angels within 6–3.

Neto led off the eighth with a first-pitch solo shot to left for his first this season.

Pitching coach Barry Enright (84) of the Los Angeles Angels talks with starting pitcher Tyler Anderson (31) on the mound as Logan O'Hoppe (14), Nolan Schanuel (18), Luis Rengifo (2), Miguel Sanó (22) and Zach Neto (9) look on in the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Anaheim, Calif., on April 24, 2024. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)
Pitching coach Barry Enright (84) of the Los Angeles Angels talks with starting pitcher Tyler Anderson (31) on the mound as Logan O'Hoppe (14), Nolan Schanuel (18), Luis Rengifo (2), Miguel Sanó (22) and Zach Neto (9) look on in the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Anaheim, Calif., on April 24, 2024. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Getty Images)

Trainer’s Room

Orioles: Mr. Hyde said left-hander John Means (left forearm strain) will start Sunday’s game against Oakland or get another rehab start for Triple-A Norfolk, Va.
Angels: Third baseman Miguel Sanó left in the sixth inning due to left-knee soreness.

Up Next

Orioles: Return home for three games against Oakland. Right-hander Corbin Burnes (3–0, 2.76 earned-run average) gets the call Friday night.

Angels: Left-hander Patrick Sandoval (1–3, 6.75 gets Friday night’s weekend series opener against Minnesota.

By Joe Reedy