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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, September 28, 2009

Angels clinch AL West with 11-0 rout of Rangers


By GREG BEACHAM
AP Sports Writer

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Kendry Morales homered and drove in three runs, and the Los Angeles Angels wasted no time clinching their third straight AL West title with an 11-0 victory over the second-place Texas Rangers tonight.

Ervin Santana pitched a seven-hitter for his fourth career shutout, while Maicer Izturis had three hits and two RBIs to wrap up the Angels’ sixth playoff berth in eight seasons. Los Angeles (92-64) will open at home in the best-of-five first round next week — most likely against Boston, a familiar nemesis.
The Red Sox need one win or a Texas loss to earn the AL wild card.
Needing one win in this four-game series to secure their fifth division title in six years, the Angels swiftly eliminated any suspense.
With Morales and Vladimir Guerrero propelling the offense, Los Angeles took a 7-0 lead in the third inning against Texas rookie Tommy Hunter (9-5), who struggled mightily in the shortest start of his promising season. Erick Aybar and Guerrero also drove in two runs apiece, while Bobby Abreu had three hits.
After the final out, the Angels formed a mob on the field around Santana (8-8), slapping his shoulders and rubbing his head. Although the right-hander is likely to be in Los Angeles’ bullpen in the playoffs, Santana made sure manager Mike Scioscia won’t forget him, earning his first win in seven starts and second shutout this season.
About 10 minutes into their beer-and-champagne celebration in the clubhouse, the Angels surrounded and joyously soaked the jersey of Nick Adenhart, the 22-year-old pitcher who died in a car accident in April. The Angels have taken Adenhart’s jersey on every road trip and kept his locker intact in memory.
Hunter yielded seven hits and six earned runs, while the Rangers also made three errors and hit into three double plays while getting just one runner to third base.
Michael Young had two hits in his return from a hamstring injury for the Rangers, who are also on the verge of elimination from the wild-card race after fighting to stay in contention all summer despite several major injuries.
Texas (85-71) trails Boston (91-65), which lost to Toronto, by six games with six to play.
The Angels ended their first four-game losing streak of the season Sunday with a win over Oakland, while Texas blew a five-run lead with four outs to go in a loss to Tampa Bay. That swing left the Angels needing just one win to wrap up the division they’ve led since July 11.
After Guerrero drove home the Angels’ first run for the second straight day with a first-inning double, Morales sent him home with the 33rd homer of his breakout season. Los Angeles scored three more runs in the third, chasing Hunter on Izturis’ two-run single, and another in the fourth when Abreu tripled and scored on Guerrero’s groundout.
The Angels made just three playoff appearances in the franchise’s first 39 seasons before Scioscia took over in 2000. Los Angeles has earned six postseason berths during the former Dodgers catcher’s decade in the dugout, winning the 2002 World Series in the Angels’ only wild-card playoff appearance.
Getting pushed by the Rangers down the stretch could benefit the Angels in October, if last season’s performance is any guide.
Los Angeles clinched the AL West title with 17 games to play on the way to a major league-leading 100 victories in 2008, but that 2›-week stretch with little motivation was seen as a factor in Los Angeles’ listless effort in its division series loss to Boston.
Young was back in the Rangers’ lineup for just the second time since straining his left hamstring Sept. 1. The third baseman aggravated the injury against Oakland in an aborted return two weeks later, and his absence along with Josh Hamilton’s lingering back problems seriously hurt Texas’ playoff hopes.
“We don’t make any excuses ... but you cannot replace those two guys,” manager Ron Washington said before the game. “I would have liked to see what it would have been like with those two guys there. We definitely missed them.”
Young, who began the night batting .322 with 22 homers and 67 RBIs, hit the second pitch he saw down the right-field line for a double.