Landon Roupp had understood everyone, but Mike Trout on Saturday evening and it turned out to be enough for the Giants in a victory on the 3-2 route against the Los Angeles Angels.
Roupp succeeded in seven rounds, a career in career and the deepest that he left this season by improving his record at 2-1. He abandoned two points on the solo circuits per trout and nothing else. He walked only one, withdrew nine years and launched 96 throws, 62 of which strike.
“It is a new territory for him, with nine punchies and only one walk,” said Giants manager Bob Melvin, to journalists. “He somehow divides the plate with his lead with his breakup in the other direction. He launched some changes to keep them unbalanced and he made it in less than 100 throws, so it’s quite impressive.”
Tyler Rogers launched an eighth aimless and Ryan Walker the ninth for his fifth stop. Walker’s first trade order? Trout withdrawal, which threw a fear in the giants with a deep left will which was followed by Heliot Ramos.
Walker then abandoned a single to Jorge Soler before Matt Chapman slipped while lining up a ball on the ground by Logan O’Hoppe on a 3-0 account and managed to throw him from his knees. Chapman caught a peak in dirt and landed on his hand, which is wrapped because of a laceration but drink in his position but ended the match.
“It could have been bad,” Chapman told NBC Sports Bay Area. “There was a piece of dirt, I went to repair it and Walker got very quickly.
The final came on a fly ball in the center of Nolan Schaunel with the pinch runner Tim Anderson in the second row.
The Giants, 14-7, can win their fifth series of the season with a victory on Sunday against the Angels and are 5-4 on a 10 games on a 10-game road trip. Los Angeles fell to 10-10. The giants return home for seven games against Milwaukee and Texas from Monday.
Chapman hit a two-point home run in the first, his fourth of the season, against the start of the Angels and the loser Kyle Hendricks (0-2).
Hendricks surmounts about 86 miles per hour, but compensates with good change and good control.
“He may not have the most overwhelming things, but he has the ability to launch (inside), hit the corners and keep you out of balance,” said Chapman. “It’s sneaky and he was someone who caused me problems in the past.
Trout, which withdrew three times the previous night against Logan Webb and the first time against Roupp, unloaded the fourth for its seventh circuit. It was not a wall wall either, traveling at 435 feet and leaving the bat to 115.2 miles per hour on a hanging curve.
The trout was not over. He struck another solo circuit on the line of the left field against Roupp in the sixth.
Roupp, however, said that his curve was as good as it has never been, and its lead, or a quick ball with two seams, offered land that can either break on the plate or run on your hands.
“Lead was probably the best, it’s the whole season,” I said (pitch coach) JP (Martinez) when I pass my lead on the glove side, that’s when I am the launcher I know I can be. “”
As for abandoning trout circuits, Roupp was philosophical.
“As competitors, you know that I don’t want to do this, and it’s the guy I want to go out the most,” said Roupp. “But you just have to learn and move on.”
After being closed the previous night, Chapman obtained the giants on the board at the top of the first with a two -point home run on the left field. He came on a 0-1 throw on a change above the belt that Hendricks probably regretted when he left his hand.
The giants led 3-0 in the third when Willy Adames chose to change his change Hendricks to drive in Mike Yastrzemski, who struck a double to eight to eight. Adames, who had 6 for 32 during the trip on the road, was thrown up as Yastrzemski scored.
Notes
– Melvin left Wade to strike against the Gaucher Detmers and the first base player struck a line at the Zach Neto stop for an outing. Wade, Melvin said, would give way to David Villar to the first goal against the left-hander Yusei Kikuchi (0-3, 4.13) on Sunday. Justin Verlander (0-1, 6.75) will present for the giants.
Villar was called from Triple-A Sacramento to replace Casey Schmitt, who made the list of wounded with a tense oblique for the first movement of the alignment of the Giants.
Originally published:
California Daily Newspapers