Major League Baseball
LA Dodgers 5, LA Angels 3
When: 4:10 PM ET, Sunday, August 2, 2015
Where: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California
Temperature: 78°
Umpires: Home - Quinn Wolcott, 1B - Tom Hallion, 2B - Alfonso Marquez, 3B - Chris Segal
Attendance: 52116

LOS ANGELES -- Outfielder Andre Ethier watched the first two games of the Freeway Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angeles Angels as an interested observer, on the bench with the Angels starting left-handed pitchers in each game.

On Sunday, however, he proved the decisive blows.

Ethier hit a solo home run in the bottom of the eighth inning and a two-run home run in the 10th as the Los Angeles Dodgers completed a three-game sweep of their home half of the Freeway Series, handing the Los Angeles Angels a 5-3 defeat Sunday afternoon at Dodger Stadium.

Ethier had not hit a home run since June 29, a span of 20 games, before the eighth-inning shot off Angels reliever Joe Smith. And he had not had a multi-homer day in over four years (since July 10, 2011, against the San Diego Padres).

"Not too many times in baseball you get to take the last shot. That was one of them right there," Ethier said of the walk-off.

The Dodgers are winners of six in a row against their southern California neighbors, the longest winning streak for either team in this interleague matchup.

The Angels, meanwhile, will lick their wounds all the way back down the I-5 Freeway after going 0-6 on a six-game road trip to Houston and Los Angeles. The Angels have lost nine of their past 10 overall to fall four games behind the Astros in the AL West.

"We didn't lose today because of yesterday's game. We didn't lose yesterday because of the day before," Angels manager Mike Scioscia said of the slump. "These guys understand. They turn the page well. They come out here and they play hard. We played three games here. If some things had turned out a little differently, we win three. It ends up we lose three.

"There's some things we need to do better on the field. During this stretch, whether some guys are a little tired, we're on our heels a little bit, we're not aggressive like we can be. We'll get back to that. This is just a stretch. We're a good team."

The Dodgers dominated the weekend series with starting pitchers Zack Greinke, Clayton Kershaw and Mat Latos. That trio allowed just three runs on 11 hits over 22 innings in the series.

Making his first start for the Dodgers since being acquired in a trade-deadline deal with the Miami Marlins, Latos went six innings Sunday and allowed just one run on four hits and a walk.

"Mat was really good I believe," Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. "Kind of what we've seen in the past -- he's aggressive. You don't see any fear in him at all. He's attacking guys whether it's (Mike) Trout or (Albert) Pujols or whoever it is. He's still coming after guys and making pitches. He's under control and you can tell he's been there before."

The Angels' lone run came in the sixth inning when right fielder Kole Calhoun doubled to left field and worked his way around to score on a pair of ground outs.

With starters C.J. Wilson (elbow) and Jered Weaver (hip) on the DL, the Angels couldn't offer the same kind of starting pitching. Cory Rasmus came out of the bullpen to start Sunday in what would have been Wilson's spot, and the Angels pieced it together with relievers the rest of the way.

The group effort was a strong one. But Rasmus gave up a two-run home run to second baseman Howie Kendrick in the third inning that proved to be the difference for most of the game.

Traded by the Angels to the Dodgers last December, Kendrick showed off for his former team. He hit a home run in the first game Friday as well, added a double on Sunday and scored a run in each game.

The Angels (Calhoun) and Dodgers (Ethier's first) swapped home runs in the eighth inning, and the Dodgers went into the ninth with a one-run lead -- but no closer to protect it.

Kenley Jansen pitched the previous two nights and is fighting a virus. The Dodgers went to J.P. Howell and Pedro Baez to close it out, but Baez gave up a game-tying RBI double to catcher Chris Iannetta with two outs in the ninth.

That sent the game into extra innings where Ethier's second home run decided it in the 10th.

The win completed a 4-1 homestand for the Dodgers, who moved a season-high 15 games over .500 (60-45) and 2 1/2 games ahead of the San Francisco Giants in the National League West.

"Since the break, I think we've played pretty good baseball. I felt we've been ready to play," Mattingly said. "I think offensively we've had good quality at-bats. Guys are doing the job. We're getting good pitching.

"But obviously, this one, you enjoy it for a little bit. But there's a lot of baseball to be played."

NOTES: Before the game, the Dodgers optioned RHP Yimi Garcia to Triple-A Oklahoma City to clear a roster spot for right-hander Mat Latos, who was obtained from the Miami Marlins on Thursday. ... C A.J. Ellis (knee) has been doing running drills and taking batting practice. The Dodgers are expected to activate him from the DL when he becomes eligible on Tuesday. ... Dodgers RHPs Carlos Frias (back) and Chris Hatcher (oblique) will continue their rehab assignments with Triple-A Oklahoma City this week. Frias is expected to start Wednesday. ... Angels LHP C.J. Wilson said the results of an MRI on his pitching elbow showed bone spurs on "all four sides of my elbow." He is considering surgery, which would likely sideline him for the rest of this season. Wilson said he will seek opinions.
Top Game Performances
Starting Pitchers
LA Angels   LA Dodgers
Cory Rasmus Player Mat Latos
No Decision W/L No Decision
3.0 IP 6.0
3 Strikeouts 1
3 Hits 4
6.00 ERA 1.50
Hitting
LA Angels   LA Dodgers
Kole Calhoun Player Andre Ethier
2 Hits 2
1 RBI 3
1 HR 2
6 TB 8
.500 Avg .400
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Hits HR TB Avg LOB K RBI BB SB Errors
LA Angels 8 1 13 .211 15 5 3 1 2 0
LA Dodgers 9 3 19 .250 12 10 5 3 0 1