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Padres score late, survive busy finish to beat Angels

Kevin Acee, The San Diego Union-Tribune on

Published in Baseball

ANAHEIM, Calif. — It took a while for the San Diego Padres to create their first bit of offense in a couple nights.

It got a little scary after that. But the offense they ended up managing was plenty.

Two runs in the top of the eighth, which were answered by the Angels scoring once in a similar manner, were followed by two runs in the top of the ninth.

And then Mason Miller worked his 30th scoreless game and earned his seventh save of the season to lock down a 4-1 victory over the Angels.

Freddy Fermin and Jake Cronenworth, the bottom two hitters in the Padres’ order, drew four-pitch walks to start the eighth.

Then Ramón Laureano singled through the middle after grounding out and striking out twice in his first three at-bats, and Fernando Tatis Jr. squibbed a 58 mph grounder through the right side of the infield after a season full of hard-hit outs.

The Angels’ Nos. 8 and 9 hitters, Logan O’Hoppe and Adam Frazier, singled against Jason Adam to begin the bottom of the eighth before Adam got two outs and appeared to get a third. But an overturned strike three call prolonged a two-out at-bat by Nolan Schanuel long enough for him to drive in a run with a single.

Adam preserved the lead by getting Jo Adell to ground out before Miller extended his scoreless streak to 312/3 innings.

For the first time this season, two batters reached base against Miller, on a leadoff walk and one-out single.

The bustling finish followed an unlikely scoreless first eight innings.

The Padres were not facing major league ERA leader Jose Soriano, as they had in Friday’s 8-0 loss.

Angels starter Yusei Kikuchi entered Saturday’s game having allowed 15 runs in 18 innings this season. The best of his four starts came on March 27, when he allowed the Houston Astros two runs in 41/3 innings. In his past three starts, he made it beyond the fifth inning once and had allowed at least four runs in all of them.

But he can reach back for a 99 mph fastball, and his splitter can be baffling.

 

Both occurred on Saturday, as Kikuchi struck out eight batters and completed six innings for the first time this season.

Padres starter Germán Márquez, who many years ago was one of the better starters in baseball and is now trying to resurrect his career, also had his best start of 2026.

The right-hander allowed just two hits and pitched into the sixth inning for the first time this season.

Neither pitcher was sharp at the start, and both were helped by their defense.

Kikuchi walked a batter and threw eight balls among his 15 pitches in the first inning. Márquez walked two batters and threw 11 balls in 21 pitches.

Both pitchers were helped by their catcher throwing out a runner trying to steal second base for the middle out.

Jackson Merrill’s third home run robbery of the season — this one a leap to get his glove just above the eight-foot wall in left-center field on a drive by Yoan Moncada — helped keep the game scoreless in the second inning.

Kikuchi escaped unscathed after Fermin and Cronenworth began the third inning with singles when Laureano struck out and third baseman Oswald Peraza caught a line drive by Tatis and doubled up Fermin at second.

The Padres would threaten Kikuchi again in the fifth, when Miguel Andujar began the inning with a double. But a groundout and two strikeouts — sandwiched around Kikuchi sending a 97 mph fastball off Cronenworth’s shoulder and then his jaw — ended the inning.

Zach Neto’s two-out double provided the Angels their only hit in the first five innings.

Adrian Morejón replaced Márquez in the sixth after Mike Trout’s two-out double and quickly ended the sixth and worked a scoreless seventh.


©2026 The San Diego Union-Tribune. Visit sandiegouniontribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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