Angels score five runs in 9th against Rangers, keep playoff hopes alive

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Sunday, October 4, 2015

ARLINGTON, Texas -- After their biggest rally this season, the Los Angeles Angels are going into the final day of the regular season with a chance to reach the playoffs.



"It's almost surreal to come back in that situation," said Johnny Giavotella, whose tiebreaking RBI single capped a five-run ninth inning for the Angels in an 11-10 victory over the playoff-bound Texas Rangers on Saturday. "We never lost faith."



Erick Aybar and Kole Calhoun started the ninth with consecutive homers off Shawn Tolleson, the Rangers closer appearing in his fifth consecutive game. The Angels then strung together four consecutive two-out singles off Ross Ohlendorf (3-1).



"It's probably the craziest game I've been a part of, with everything we've got on the line," Mike Trout said. "We lose that game, we're in trouble."



The Angels, who won the AL West last season, entered Saturday one game behind Houston for the AL's second wild card.



A loss by Houston at Arizona on Saturday night would give Texas its first AL West title since 2011 and would drop the Astros into a tie with the Angels for the wild card going into Sunday, the last scheduled day of the regular season.



"That is a great comeback. You're not going to get that many hits strung out in the ninth against back-end-of-the-bullpen guys, but we did it," manager Mike Scioscia said. "What I really like is win or lose, the dugout's loose, the guys were playing aggressive."



It was the Angels' first win when trailing by four runs or more in the ninth inning since July 6, 2013, when they won 9-7 in 11 innings at Boston, according to STATS.



"We've got one left. The only thing we can do is win it. We can't control what Houston does," Trout said. "We're just giving ourselves a chance to make the postseason. This group of guys just never quit."



C.J. Cron, David Freese, Carlos Perez and Giavotella had consecutive two-out singles, with Cron, Perez and Giavotella driving in runs. Before Perez singled on a 2-2 pitch, Texas was one strike from clinching the division.



Giavotella finished with three hits and three RBIs.



Elvis Andrus singled off Joe Smith (fifth save) with two outs in the bottom of the ninth, then was caught stealing second by Perez when he overslid the base and Aybar applied the tag, a call upheld on video review.



Andrus remained on the ground with his face in the dirt with the Rangers denied a chance to clinch the division title for the second straight day. They were guaranteed no worse than a wild card after winning the series opener 5-3 on Thursday.



"It's not over. We still have tomorrow and tonight really. It's thoroughly disappointing what just transpired," Rangers starter Colby Lewis said. "We've come this far. We're not going to let anything else get us down."



Jo-Jo Reyes (1-0) threw one pitch in his first major league outing since Sept. 20, 2011, for Baltimore, retiring Prince Fielder on a liner to end the eighth.



Texas built a 10-6 lead in the seventh when former Angel Josh Hamilton hit his second homer of the game and Rougned Odor homered two batters later.



Tolleson, who has all 35 of his saves since May 20, had thrown 63 pitches in the previous four games; in the ninth inning on Friday night he gave up a leadoff triple to Trout and Pujols' go-ahead single in the Angels' 2-1 win.



Tolleson was the first Texas reliever used five days in a row since Tanner Scheppers from Sept. 26-30, 2013.



"I thought we had a four-run lead and a guy in the game that had been so good for us," Rangers manager Jeff Banister said. "You could tell early on it was going to be a challenge for him so we decided to make the move and get Ohlendorf in there."



UP NEXT



Angels: Garrett Richards (15-11) will pitch on three days' rest in place of Nick Tropeano.



Rangers: Texas has won the last nine starts by Cole Hamels, the left-hander acquired at the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline. Hamels is 6-0 with a 3.39 in those starts.



LOT OF PITCHERS



The 18 pitchers set an AL record for a nine-inning game and matched the big league mark set Sept. 30, 2007, by St. Louis (10) and Pittsburgh (eight).



STUMBLED STARTERS



Both starting pitchers gave up five runs and left in the fifth without recording an out. Angels lefty-hander Hector Santiago had gone 3-0 with a 1.85 ERA in five previous starts against Texas this season, and the All-Star lefty was 7-1 with a 2.02 ERA in 16 previous starts vs. AL West teams. Lewis has a career-high 17 wins this season, and is the Rangers' most successful postseason pitcher (4-1, 2.34 ERA in eight such starts).



TRAINER'S ROOM



Angels: Giavotella went down briefly, but stayed in the game after Odor's hard late slide on which his foot went into the second baseman's shin in the fifth inning.



Rangers: Texas is still being careful with reliever Keone Kela (tender right elbow). Over his last 18 appearances, he has 21 strikeouts and hasn't allowed a run in 16 1/3 innings.



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