Advertisement

Angels Go to Cellar With 5-2 Loss : Baseball: California fails to beat Mariners even after loading the bases in the ninth and 11th innings.

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Last place was staring at the Angels Sunday, but so were the basepaths scattered with teammates. What could been a fine day for a turnaround turned into a dark afternoon for the Angels.

They fell into dead last in the American League West by thwarting their own rallies inning after inning until the Seattle Mariners finally gave up and won, 5-2, on Jay Buhner’s three-run homer in the 12th inning before 27,393 at Anaheim Stadium.

Swept by the Mariners for the first time in franchise history, the Angels lost for the fifth consecutive time and for the 19th time in 27 games since July 3, barely a month ago, when they looked down on the division from first place for a single day.

Advertisement

Now they look up at it, from 10 games behind Minnesota, which arrives in Anaheim for a critical three-game series tonight. A victory by Kansas City Sunday sent sis.

The Angels neglected to take what lay before their eyes, and finally the Mariners did it themselves, on Buhner’s three-run homer off Mike Fetters with two outs in the 12th inning. It was Buhner’s fourth homer in four games.

The Angels went quietly in the 12th, three up, three down.

Mike Jackson (6-4) pitched a third of an inning and took the victory, and Mike Schooler pitched the 12th for his third save.

Fetters (0-3) took the loss. Starter Mark Langston held the Mariners in check for 6 2/3 innings, battling to hold a 2-0 lead and finally leaving with the score tied, 2-2, after allowing two runs on three his, walking five and striking out five.

“Mark pitched great, there’s no question about it,” Rader said.

The Angels had every opportunity to win, even without extra innings.

They loaded the bases with one out in the ninth inning, with the help of reliever Calvin Jones, who looked at second too long and had no play on Venable’s bunt, putting runners on first and second. The runners moved to second and third on Donnie Hill’s sacrifice, and the Mariners walked Dick Schofield intentionally to get to left-hander Luis Polonia, even though he typically thrives in pressure situations.

This time he didn’t, hitting a grounder to third that the Mariners turned into an inning-ending double play, getting Dave Gallagher at home and going to first to catch Polonia, in spite of his speed. The play inspired an uneventful bench clearing after catcher Dave Valle accused Gallagher of trying to hurt him on the play, which Gallagher denied.

Advertisement

While the Mariners mostly went quietly, the Angels kept threatening.

Wally Joyner got to second in the 10th, only to see pinch-hitter Mike Marshall ground to second to end the inning.

In the 11th, the Angels loaded the bases once again. Gallagher led off the 11th with a walk, and Venable sacrificed him to second. He took third on a wild pitch, only to watch Lance Parrish strike out swinging, lowering his average to .214.

Schofield walked, and after he stole second, Polonia was walked intentionally, loading the bases. This time, Luis Sojo flied to center to end the threat.

“The depressing part is sitting back and watching Hall of Fame types like (Dave) Parker, Dave (Winfield) and Lance (Parrish) and the young guys coming up, and watching them struggle,” catcher Ron Tingley said.

Advertisement