The Angels’ weekend took a sharp turn on Friday when GM Perry Minasian was fired, but by the time the series wrapped, there was at least one encouraging development on the field: Sam Aldegheri gave them exactly the kind of rebound start he needed.
Aldegheri had been scuffling badly, allowing 11 runs over 7-2/3 innings in his previous two outings against the Arizona Diamondbacks and Baltimore Orioles. Against the Athletics yesterday, though, he steadied things and worked five innings of one-run ball in the Angels’ 4-1 win.
“I was working on some stuff on my mechanics during the last week,” Aldegheri said after the game. “And today I need a start to redeem myself after the last two, and I did it.”
The left-hander is still very much in the mix for a rotation job, and the Angels have innings available. He’s competing with right-hander Ryan Johnson for a spot while the club waits for starter Grayson Rodriguez to finish his rehab stint after dealing with low back tightness. For the Angels, the competition is real, and the encouraging part is that both young starters have flashed enough to keep the conversation going.
“I thought he pitched well today,” Suzuki said when he was asked about Aldegheri in a report written by Rhett Bollinger of MLB.com. “He really moved the fastball around and got fastballs in to righties, which obviously made the changeup better. I think he dropped some curveballs in early for strikes and executed with two strikes, so I thought he pitched well.”
The win also came with two notable firsts. Josh Lowe hit the first grand slam of his career, and Samy Natera picked up the first save of his big-league career. Natera handled the final four outs across the eighth and ninth to finish it off.
Lowe’s season has been a grind. He got off to a rough start, was sent to Triple-A Salt Lake, and then came back up after centerfielder Mike Trout went down with a hamstring strain. His swing finally showed some damage against the Athletics.
“I’m just continuing to do what I was working on in Salt Lake,” Lowe said. “And for the most part, it's just swinging at better pitches and being ready to hit.”
Natera’s night mattered just as much for the Angels’ bullpen picture. They’ve been looking for reliable relief help, and he’s answered with a 0.96 ERA and 12 strikeouts in 9-1/3 innings while continuing to get trusted in high-leverage spots.
“Just super grateful for the opportunity to be out there and close it out,” Natera said. “I was trusting what I got. Never been in that spot before, so new for me, but learned from and got comfortable later on.”
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One name being tied to that future fit is Jorge Soler, whose profile matches the kind of extra punch a contender can never quite get enough of. There is also a sense that if the Brewers do decide to shop in that lane, they would not be limited to just one path, with Isaac Paredes mentioned as another bat who could slide into the mix if he were ever available. For now, though, Milwaukees interest is really about identifying the right kind of impact hitter before the market gets crowded and the stakes get even higher. [Read more 🡒]
