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Shohei Ohtani extends his strikeout streak but Angels shut out by Rangers

Angels pitcher Shohei Ohtani throws to a Texas Rangers batter.
Angels pitcher Shohei Ohtani throws to a Texas Rangers batter during the first inning at Angel Stadium on Thursday.
(Alex Gallardo / Associated Press)
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Shohei Ohtani’s outing against the Texas Rangers wasn’t his strongest compared to what he’s been able to accomplish thus far in his career. It was still a quality start, but because of the lack of run support, it ended with another loss attached to his record on the season.

Through six innings on Thursday at Angel Stadium, Ohtani gave up eight hits and two earned runs, including a home run, but also struck out 11 en route to his team’s 2-0 loss to a division rival. It was his sixth-straight start with 10 or more strikeouts, his ninth such start this season.

Ohtani has previously said that he wants to win. After yet another loss, he was asked whether he wanted to stay in Anaheim in the short-term and the long-term.

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To which he replied in Japanese: “The question isn’t whether I want to stay. I have to do what I’m supposed to do. Regardless of where I am, what I do doesn’t change. Of course, there’s the part of me that feels grateful of how the team has taken care of me. I like the fans too of course.

“Right now, as long as I’m with the Angels — and it was like that today too — I want to do my best to win each and every game. There’s tomorrow to think about too and I have to turn the page.”

Ohtani struggled with his first three batters of the game, giving up three straight hits to load the bases.

Marcus Semien, his first batter of the game, reached first base on a single hit to the newly returned David Fletcher. Fletcher dove to smother the grounder as it crossed into the outfield grass behind second base, but as he rose to his knees to try to make the throw at first, he accidentally flicked the ball away from him.

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Corey Seager and Jonah Heim, his next two batters, both reached on line drives into the outfield.

Then it started to click. Ohtani needed five pitches each to get rid of Nathaniel Lowe and Adolis Garcia.

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“Shohei” chants broke out from a group of children sitting in the Lexus Diamond Club as his next batter, Leody Taveras, stepped into the box. And three pitches were all he needed to end the inning without letting a single Ranger score.

He flexed his arm and pumped his fist to the sky in celebration of his victory in the short battle.

“They were all on two-strike counts,” Ohtani said. “I left the ball over the plate and got hit. But I think it was big that I was able to hold them to zero.”

But Ohtani needed to grind through the rest of his night and received no run support from the Angels’ offense.

He pitched a 1-2-3 second inning and a mostly clean third inning, then got tagged with a solo home run in the fourth.

Angels' Shohei Ohtani flies out next to Texas Rangers catcher Jonah Heim.
Angels’ Shohei Ohtani flies out next to Texas Rangers catcher Jonah Heim during the sixth inning at Angel Stadium on Thursday.
(Alex Gallardo / Associated Press)
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Lowe, the first Ranger to bat in the fourth, stared down Ohtani’s 1-1 slider and hit it deep over the center-most digital billboard along the center-field wall. Ohtani stared in the direction of the center-field wall, turning the replacement ball in his hand.

He then struck out his next three batters.

In the fifth inning, two hits, a single by Josh H. Smith and a double by Seager, would give the Rangers another run. Ohtani capped his night after Lowe tripled off of him, but no additional runs scored as Ohtani struck out his next two batters, Garcia and Taveras, then got Kole Calhoun to fly out.

“Ultimately, it turned out to be a fatal inning for us,” Ohtani said of the home run in the fourth. “It was hard to get that run back. Personally, I was more displeased with the second run.”

The Angels’ offense all game was able to get some exciting extra base hits, but none equated to a run tallied on the scoreboard.

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Luis Rengifo got the crowd pumped with a triple that rolled along the left corner of the outfield wall in the first inning. His hit, which came off Rangers starter Spencer Howard, at first looked as if it would just be a double. When Smith was still bumbling around that corner, still not in control of the ball, Rengifo rounded second and made a break for third.

He was left stranded, and then again in the sixth — when he hit a double to center field — as were Fletcher, in the third, and Brandon Marsh, in the fifth.

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Fletcher’s double came on his first at-bat and was his first big league hit since May 6 — two days before he landed on the injured list.

Rengifo also singled in the ninth inning, coming just a home run shy of hitting for the cycle.

“That streak that he went on for quite a long time up until the last inning of his last start,” Nevin said of Ohtani, “knowing every pitch he gets is a small margin for error because of what our offense has been, makes it even more impressive what he does.”

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