Angels, Reds struggling to score ahead of series opener
Angels, Reds struggling to score ahead of series opener
Angels, Reds struggling to score ahead of series opener
The Los Angeles Angels and host Cincinnati Reds will look for a spark to ignite their offenses on Friday night when the teams open a three-game interleague series.
The Angels answered a season-high three-game winning streak by mustering just two runs in each of their past two contests -- both losses.
"I mean, it's no mystery. They know they have to have better at-bats," Los Angeles manager Kurt Suzuki said. "... I say it all the time, and I know it, but the game can change in one swing. Right now we're scuffling, but we have to put at-bats together instead of a good at-bat and some bad ones."
Like the Angels, Cincinnati followed a season-best winning streak, five games, by totaling just five runs in its last two contests -- both losses.
"We want our guys to be aggressive, especially with fastballs," Reds manager Terry Francona said after the team's 8-1 shellacking by the Miami Marlins on Thursday. "And then they started spinning it down below the bat, and that's when it got a little tough for us."
Cincinnati's Sal Stewart, however, has made life tough on opposing pitchers this season. The rookie has homered in consecutive games and is 5-for-14 with five RBIs during a four-game hitting streak.
Spencer Steer and Matt McLain each recorded two of the seven hits on Thursday for the Reds, who went 0-for-10 with runners in scoring position and left 11 men on base. Cincinnati is batting a paltry .168 with runners in scoring position this season and has a majors-worst 39 runs in 13 games.
As a result, the Reds have relied heavily on their pitching.
On Friday, Cincinnati will turn to Chase Burns (1-0, 0.82 ERA) against fellow right-hander Jack Kochanowicz (1-0, 4.66).
Burns has been brilliant in both of his starts this season. He allowed one hit and struck out seven over five scoreless innings in a 2-0 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on March 30 before yielding one run and fanning nine in six frames of a no-decision vs. the Texas Rangers on Sunday. Cincinnati won 2-1.
Burns, 23, and Kochanowicz, 25, have yet to face Friday's opponents during their careers.
Kochanowicz rebounded from a dismal season-opening start to scatter four hits and strike out seven over 5 2/3 scoreless innings in a 1-0 win over the Seattle Mariners on Saturday. That game likely will be best remembered for Jo Adell's three home-run-robbing catches, but Kochanowicz certainly did his part.
On Wednesday, Adell collected three hits in the Angels' 8-2 setback to the Atlanta Braves. He is 9-for-20 during a five-game hitting streak.
Adell aside, other members of the team are struggling mightily. Mike Trout is mired in a 2-for-29 slump with 12 strikeouts in his past eight games, while Yoan Moncada is 1-for-19 with 13 strikeouts this month.
"It's tough because everything is so stockpiled into a small sample size right now," catcher Logan O'Hoppe said, per the Los Angeles Daily News. "One thing I've learned going on Year No. 4 now is that how long of a year it is. In the moment, it feels like it's forever, but it's not the case. We have a road trip coming up here, and we'll have a good trip."
--Field Level Media
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