Weaver’s 4-hitter leads Angels past A’s 4-0
Topics: From the Wires
Los Angeles Angels' Jered Weaver works against the Oakland Athletics in the first inning of a baseball game Monday, Aug. 6, 2012, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)(Credit: AP)OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Jered Weaver pitched a four-hitter for his major-league leading 15th victory, and the Los Angeles Angels beat the Oakland Athletics 4-0 on Monday night to overtake the final spot in the crowded AL wild card standings.
Weaver (15-1) struck out nine, walked none and faced the minimum through 4 1-3 innings. The Angels ace has won a career-best 10 straight starts, matching Chuck Finley’s franchise record set in 1997.
Erick Aybar singled three times and scored twice in his first game back from the disabled list to move Los Angeles (59-51) ahead of Oakland (58-51) and Baltimore (58-51) by one victory. Detroit (59-50) is in line for the other wild card spot.
Jarrod Parker (7-6) allowed four runs and nine hits in 6 2-3 innings. He struck out six and walked one in Oakland’s third straight loss.
All the offense Weaver wanted came in typical Angels fashion.
Kendrys Morales doubled leading off the second and scored on a two-out single by Aybar, who had been on the disabled list since July 22 with a broken big toe on his right foot. Mike Trout singled home Aybar two batters later to give the Angels a 2-0 lead.
Trout also stole second in the first, second and eighth innings to extend his franchise record to 27 straight steals without being caught. He leads the majors with 36 stolen bases.
The Angels center fielder also singled to open the fifth but was called out sliding head-first into second on right fielder Josh Reddick’s 13th assists. Trout immediately hopped up, furiously waving his hands and screaming at second base umpire Bill Miller in protest. Trout had to be restrained by both base coaches and manager Mike Scioscia.
In the end, the only motions that mattered came on the mound.
Weaver worked his way through the A’s lineup with relative ease, facing the minimum through 4 1-3 innings. The right-hander erased the only base runner during that time — a single by Brandon Inge leading off the bottom of the third — when he got Eric Sogard to ground into an inning-ending double play.
The Angels ace struck out the side in the fifth despite allowing a one-out single to Brandon Moss and didn’t allow a runner on second until the sixth, when Eric Sogard reached on a groundout to second and advanced on Coco Crisp’s ground out. Jemile Weeks popped up too short to end the inning.


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