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One and counting

By Korea Herald
Published : April 5, 2013 - 19:58
CINCINNATI (AP) ― Joey Votto? One single in 10 at-bats. Jay Bruce? One double in 13 at-bats with seven strikeouts.

Cincinnati’s top run producers barely got the bat on the ball, yet the Reds managed to win the major leagues’ first interleague series to open a season. Credit those other guys who don’t normally do the heavy lifting.

Choo Shin-soo homered on Joe Blanton’s first pitch of the game Thursday, the first of Cincinnati’s three homers off the right-hander, and the Reds won 5-4 over the Los Angeles Angels.

Not too bad considering the big hitters’ struggles.

Cincinnati Reds outfielder Choo Shin-soo hits a home run in the first inning on Thursday. (AFP-Yonhap News)


“It means somebody else picked us up,” manager Dusty Baker said.

“We had excellent pitching. Some of their players didn’t get uncaged, either. That was an exciting series. Every game was a great game that could have gone either way.”

Todd Frazier also had a solo homer off Blanton (0-1), and Chris Heisey’s two-run shot put Cincinnati up 5-3 in the fifth. Blanton gave up five runs and seven hits in five innings during his Angels debut.

Blanton, who signed a two-year, $15 million deal in December, didn’t make many bad pitches. He didn’t have much luck, either.

“Two of them were off mistakes, and I felt I made maybe a handful of them all day,” Blanton said. “That happens sometimes in baseball. One of those things that just happened out of the gate.”

Heisey’s homer was his first as the full-time left fielder. He’s replacing Ryan Ludwick, who had surgery on Wednesday to repair torn cartilage in his right shoulder, an injury that will sideline him for at least the first half of the season.

“I’ve proven I can play off the bench,” Heisey said. “I’m not feeling any pressure.”

Bronson Arroyo (1-0) gave up three runs in six innings, including Josh Hamilton’s two-run single that was his first hit for the Angels. Albert Pujols drove in a pair of runs with a sacrifice fly and a groundout.

Nobody enjoyed Choo’s homer more than Arroyo. Choo has four career homers off Arroyo, his highest total off any pitcher. The Reds got him from Cleveland in the offseason.

“Every time he goes deep for me, it’s like a holiday,” Arroyo said.

Left-hander Aroldis Chapman pitched the ninth, converting his first save opportunity. Mike Trout led off with a single and was sacrificed to second, but Pujols flied out and Hamilton struck out.

The teams combined for seven homers and 63 strikeouts during the series. The Reds fanned 36 overall, a club record for the first three games of a season. The 36 strikeouts were an Angels record for a three-game series.

Their biggest hitters also have had a tough time getting started.

Pujols and Hamilton were a combined 0 for 17 with six strikeouts before they finally put something together in the third inning. Pujols doubled for his first hit, and Hamilton followed with a two-run single; Pujols slid into home safely while catcher Ryan Hanigan missed his leg while attempting the tag.

Chicago Cubs 3, Pittsburgh 2

Minnesota 8, Detroit 2

San Diego 2, NY Mets 1

Kansas City 3, Chicago White Sox 1

Baltimore 6, Tampa Bay 3

Oakland 8, Seattle 2

Washington 6, Miami 1

NY Yankees 4, Boston 2

Toronto 10, Cleveland 8

Philadelphia 2, Atlanta 0

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