Deadspin | With heavy hearts, Angels clash with Padres again
Apr 17, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; A patch honoring former Los Angeles Angels player Garret Anderson is seen on the sleeve of center fielder Mike Trout (27) during the first inning against the San Diego Padres at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images Veteran right-hander German Marquez will vie to win his third consecutive start on Saturday night when his San Diego Padres try to even their three-game series against an “emotional” Los Angeles Angels team in Anaheim, Calif.
Marquez (2-1, 5.54 ERA) enters off of back-to-back wins over the Pittsburgh Pirates and Colorado Rockies, allowing a total of four runs on 10 hits over 10 innings while striking out nine.
Left-hander Yusei Kikuchi (0-2, 7.50 ERA) will take the mound for Los Angeles and try to end what has been a rough April. He has allowed 13 earned runs in just 13 2/3 innings (8.56 ERA) while losing two of his three starts this month.
The Angels, behind ace Jose Soriano, cruised to an 8-0 win in Friday night’s series opener, snapping the Padres’ league-best eight-game winning streak and handing San Diego manager Craig Stammen’s team its first shutout loss of the season.
The victory came after an emotional pregame tribute for Angels Hall of Fame member and 2002 World Series hero Garret Anderson, who died Thursday at age 53 of a heart attack at his home in Southern California.
Anderson, the franchise record-holder in games (2,013), hits (2,368), doubles (489) and RBIs (1,292), was an analyst on some pre- and post-game shows for the team.
“It’s been a pretty emotional day for us,” said first baseman Nolan Schanuel, who went 3-for-5 with an RBI and a run. “I know he’s looking down on us today with a big smile.”
The Padres finished with only three hits, including two singles over 5 2/3 innings against Soriano. But Stammen took the glass is half-full approach afterward, noting San Diego also grinded out four walks and got Soriano out of the game before he could complete six innings.
“Tough to hang your hat on that, but the competition, the competing we are showing in the box is good,” Stammen said. “That will only benefit us going forward the rest of the year.”
The Padres had Soriano in trouble for one of few times this season in the third inning when they loaded the bases on a Ty France single and walks by Luis Campusano and Fernando Tatis Jr. But Soriano got out of the jam by getting Jackson Merrill to ground out.
“We took good at-bats against Soriano,” Stammen said. “He’s just a really good pitcher. We battled him. We got him out of there before (the end of the) sixth inning, which was a goal of ours pre-game.”
Soriano improved to 5-0 while lowering his ERA to major-league-leading 0.28. He has allowed just one run — a homer by Atlanta catcher Drake Baldwin — and 11 hits over 32 2/3 innings.
Besides ERA, Soriano leads the majors in strikeouts (39), WHIP (0.73), opponent batting average (.104) and is tied with Milwaukee’s Aaron Ashby for the MLB lead in wins. Soriano also is the first Angels pitcher to win each of his first five games to start a season since Jared Weaver in 2011.
“To us, it looked like he had to grind tonight,” Angels manager Kurt Suzuki said. “I think that’s the maturity showing up now. He’s learning how to pitch, and I say this lightly, without his best stuff. He learned how to navigate a great lineup over there without his best stuff, and gave us 5 2/3 with no runs on two hits (which) was pretty incredible.”
Marquez is 0-2 with a 3.54 ERA in three career starts against the Angels, while Kikuchi is 1-1 with a 4.95 ERA in four career starts against San Diego,
–Field Level Media
#Deadspin #heavy #hearts #Angels #clash #Padres
Apr 17, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; A patch honoring former Los Angeles Angels player Garret Anderson is seen on the sleeve of center fielder Mike Trout (27) during the first inning against the San Diego Padres at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images Veteran right-hander German Marquez will vie to win his third consecutive start on Saturday night when his San Diego Padres try to even their three-game series against an “emotional” Los Angeles Angels team in Anaheim, Calif.
Marquez (2-1, 5.54 ERA) enters off of back-to-back wins over the Pittsburgh Pirates and Colorado Rockies, allowing a total of four runs on 10 hits over 10 innings while striking out nine.
Left-hander Yusei Kikuchi (0-2, 7.50 ERA) will take the mound for Los Angeles and try to end what has been a rough April. He has allowed 13 earned runs in just 13 2/3 innings (8.56 ERA) while losing two of his three starts this month.
The Angels, behind ace Jose Soriano, cruised to an 8-0 win in Friday night’s series opener, snapping the Padres’ league-best eight-game winning streak and handing San Diego manager Craig Stammen’s team its first shutout loss of the season.
The victory came after an emotional pregame tribute for Angels Hall of Fame member and 2002 World Series hero Garret Anderson, who died Thursday at age 53 of a heart attack at his home in Southern California.
Anderson, the franchise record-holder in games (2,013), hits (2,368), doubles (489) and RBIs (1,292), was an analyst on some pre- and post-game shows for the team.
“It’s been a pretty emotional day for us,” said first baseman Nolan Schanuel, who went 3-for-5 with an RBI and a run. “I know he’s looking down on us today with a big smile.”
The Padres finished with only three hits, including two singles over 5 2/3 innings against Soriano. But Stammen took the glass is half-full approach afterward, noting San Diego also grinded out four walks and got Soriano out of the game before he could complete six innings.
“Tough to hang your hat on that, but the competition, the competing we are showing in the box is good,” Stammen said. “That will only benefit us going forward the rest of the year.”
The Padres had Soriano in trouble for one of few times this season in the third inning when they loaded the bases on a Ty France single and walks by Luis Campusano and Fernando Tatis Jr. But Soriano got out of the jam by getting Jackson Merrill to ground out.
“We took good at-bats against Soriano,” Stammen said. “He’s just a really good pitcher. We battled him. We got him out of there before (the end of the) sixth inning, which was a goal of ours pre-game.”
Soriano improved to 5-0 while lowering his ERA to major-league-leading 0.28. He has allowed just one run — a homer by Atlanta catcher Drake Baldwin — and 11 hits over 32 2/3 innings.
Besides ERA, Soriano leads the majors in strikeouts (39), WHIP (0.73), opponent batting average (.104) and is tied with Milwaukee’s Aaron Ashby for the MLB lead in wins. Soriano also is the first Angels pitcher to win each of his first five games to start a season since Jared Weaver in 2011.
“To us, it looked like he had to grind tonight,” Angels manager Kurt Suzuki said. “I think that’s the maturity showing up now. He’s learning how to pitch, and I say this lightly, without his best stuff. He learned how to navigate a great lineup over there without his best stuff, and gave us 5 2/3 with no runs on two hits (which) was pretty incredible.”
Marquez is 0-2 with a 3.54 ERA in three career starts against the Angels, while Kikuchi is 1-1 with a 4.95 ERA in four career starts against San Diego,
–Field Level Media



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