The game flipped almost immediately in the bottom of the first, and it unraveled fast for us. After issuing multiple walks to load the bases, the Cubs capitalized without needing much contact. A two run single from Carson Kelly opened the scoring, and Nico Hoerner followed with a sacrifice fly to make it 3–0. All coming off just one hit in the inning.
It was a rough start defined more by control issues than hard contact, as we kinda essentially handed Chicago early momentum.
After a single and continued traffic put pressure back on the Angels’ pitching, the Cubs broke the game open in a big way. A two run single from Ballesteros brought in both Crow-Armstrong and Hoerner and moments later, Ian Happ crushed a three run homer to left-center, blowing the game wide open. What had been a manageable deficit quickly turned into a multi-run hole, with the Cubs stacking hits and finally delivering the big swing that the Angels had avoided early.
Our offense, meanwhile, never found much of a rhythm against Chicago’s pitching. Outside of scattered baserunners, the lineup struggled to string together quality at-bats, with multiple quick innings and limited hard contact through the middle frames.
Even when opportunities appeared, they couldn’t sustain any real pressure.
The Cubs continued to add on late, taking advantage of another opportunity in the seventh. Dansby Swanson delivered an RBI single to center, bringing home Hoerner and extending the lead even further. By that point, the game had fully shifted into Chicago’s control.
We did show some life late, finally breaking through with a swing that cut into the deficit. Moncada launched a two run homer to right, scoring Jorge and putting us on the board in a more meaningful way. It was one of the few moments of real offensive impact for Los Angeles in a game that had otherwise been dictated by the Cubs. 2-7 Cubs.
Let’s get back to .500 with Soriano going tomorrow.
Meanwhile, my “study abroad” team is 0-for-4, though their AAA team is 3-for-3. As promised, the West Sacto A’s have some wobbly pitching, but their prospect pipeline is impressive, and they seem on target for Vegas contention more than this-year success.
I’ve been toggling between A’s, Aviators, Angels and Bees games. Three out of four have been pretty brutal in week one. College ball feels more nourishing.
The strike out totals by the offense in one or two of the A’s games must have felt like déjà vu all over again 😉
Jays pitching was not kind – Gausman in particular was filthy, and Lauer was strong. That team picked off right where they left off in last year’s WS.
The Athletics played them hard in the first two games, both decided by walkoffs, but the third time around, Morales was just bested outright. The bats looked in a funk against the Braves today as well.
Not the easiest of schedules to play four of your five first series on the road against the Jays, Braves, Yanks and Mets. They already look tired.
Yes, current trending is no surprise.
Good writeup of a crummy game
Picking up where they left off last season.
When the team’s results align to the level of talent on roster, it’s way too easy to wail and gnash teeth. As an alternative, just embrace reality and whistle the tune that sustains Perry:
“…it means no worries in Perry’s last days…” “It’s a talent free, reality, Hakuna pathetic!”
Angels Development 101:
– Draft a pitcher
– Call him up with no professional or minor league experience.
-Let him get shelled opening weekend and destroy his confidence.
– Send him down to A ball for the rest of the year
-Call him back up the next year
– Surprise start him since you don’t have 5 starters on the roster
– Get Shelled Again
– ???
= profit?
Get ready for Bremner before June 1st. 😂
Ironically, Johnson showed excellent control in Tri-City last season, and excellent control in Spring Training. Tonight’s outing was pretty atypical.
He is too slow in-between pitches and his stuff looks like the players have zero issue tracking them, that’s what my fan eyes see.
His velocity was also down a couple ticks from spring. He was working 89-93 with his sinker and cutter, and commanding nothing well. That’s not going to get it done against a good team like the Cubs.
All good. The losing streak ends tomorrow with Soriano pitching. 3 – 3 is cool with me.
And if it doesn’t happen you’ll be the first one we come looking for !!
are we missing that Wash 15 WAR yet?
Wow, poobot has already appeared in the first week.
Two steps (wins) forward, three steps (loses) back.
It’s the Angels way.
Yes padawan.