Major League Baseball
LA Angels 7, Chi. White Sox 0
When: 10:05 PM ET, Friday, July 15, 2016
Where: Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, California
Temperature: 77°
Umpires: Home - Jim Reynolds, 1B - Manny Gonzalez, 2B - CB Bucknor, 3B - Fieldin Culbreth
Attendance: 42031

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- The way Geovany Soto tells it, playing catcher is easy when a pitcher throws a game like Hector Santiago did on Friday night.

Santiago threw seven scoreless innings to lead the Los Angeles Angels to a 7-0 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Friday night at Angel Stadium.

Santiago (7-4) gave up five hits, struck out seven and did not walk a batter to claim his third victory in his last three starts.

"When a guy has his heater, changeup, curveball, hitting his spots, it's fairly easy for us," Soto said. "He's got to make the pitch, but he had great command and had a great game overall.

"When a pitcher has all his tools, has his 'A' game, it's easy. It takes a great catcher to guide a pitcher when he doesn't have his best stuff. So it's easy when a pitcher has his best stuff and is really commanding the ball. I feel like it was all him today."

Santiago has had his ups and downs this season, but he's definitely on the upswing of late. With his sterling outing on Friday, he has a consecutive scoreless innings streak of 15. And he hasn't given up an earned run in 22 consecutive innings.

"When I realized I was in a zone was that third pitch of the game," Santiago said. "An 0-2 fastball in, located well ... going 0-2 the first part of the game is a big deal for me. The first hitter for me is always the hardest one, trying to figure out the mound, trying to figure out where my arm slot's gonna be, the umpire's zone. So getting the first out of the game, it was like, OK, here we go."

The closest the White Sox came to scoring against Santiago was in the seventh after getting a two-out rally started. Todd Frazier singled and Brett Lawrie followed with a single to left.

When Angels left fielder Daniel Nava was slow to the baseball, Frazier broke for third, drawing a throw from Nava. That allowed Lawrie to take second, putting the potential tying run in scoring position.

But Santiago got Dioner Navarro to pop up his next pitch, getting the third out and escaping the inning with the shutout intact.

"I knew he was going to be aggressive," Santiago said of his approach with Navarro. "I tried to go up and away and get a fly ball to right field. But he swung a little early and popped it up right there. It was exactly what I wanted to do. Just be aggressive and throw a strike."

The Angels broke open a tight game when they batted around in the seventh inning and scored five runs. White Sox starter Miguel Gonzalez (2-5) pitched well through six innings before the Angels knocked him out of the game in the seventh.

"I thought he threw well enough to win a game," White Sox manager Robin Ventura said. "But we didn't swing it very well. Gonzo, coming off the break I thought he was sharp enough. We didn't swing it and I don't think we played that good of defense either. A combination of that, we're not going to have a very good chance at it."

The Angels had nine hits in all, including two each from Yunel Escobar and Soto.

The White Sox have been shut out in back-to-back games, including the last game going into the All-Star break, when they were blanked by Atlanta. Chicago is scoreless in its past 23 innings overall.

"Even coming back from the break, I think you'd expect some guys to swing a little bit better, but it's one day and you come back tomorrow," Ventura said. "You're disappointed, but you tip your hat to Hector."

The Angels took a 2-0 lead in the third against Gonzalez after Ji-Man Choi, getting the start at first base, opened the inning with a single. Choi was on second base two outs later when Escobar singled to left, driving in Choi.

Kole Calhoun followed with a double into the right-field corner, scoring Escobar from first and giving the Angels a 2-0 lead.

It was plenty of run support for the way Santiago was pitching early. He retired nine of the first 10 batters he faced through three innings, striking out six and allowing only a double to Adam Eaton in the first inning.

Eaton also singled in the fourth, but no other White Sox hitter had a hit through five innings.

NOTES: The White Sox activated 1B/DH Justin Morneau from the disabled list after the 2006 American League MVP completed his rehab assignment. Morneau, who had surgery on his left elbow last December, was signed by the White Sox on June 9 but was not in the starting lineup Friday because the Angels were throwing LHP Hector Santiago. ... White Sox RHP Carson Fulmer was called up from Double-A Birmingham. To make room on the roster for Morneau and Fulmer, OF Jason Coats as optioned to Triple-A Charlotte and RHP Scott Carroll was outrighted to Charlotte. ... Angels LHP Tyler Skaggs threw seven scoreless innings for Triple-A Salt Lake on Thursday, walking none, allowing one hit and striking out 14. Skaggs, who hasn't pitched in the majors since July 31, 2014, because of Tommy John surgery, likely will need one more minor league rehab start before joining the big league club. ... Angels SS Andrelton Simmons went 1-for-3 in the game, extending his hitting streak to a career-best 13 games.
Top Game Performances
Starting Pitchers
Chi. White Sox   LA Angels
Miguel Gonzalez Player Hector Santiago
Loss W/L Win
6.0 IP 7.0
6 Strikeouts 7
5 Hits 5
4.50 ERA 0.00
Hitting
Chi. White Sox   LA Angels
Adam Eaton Player Geovany Soto
2 Hits 2
0 RBI 1
0 HR 0
3 TB 3
.500 Avg .667
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Hits HR TB Avg LOB K RBI BB SB Errors
Chi. White Sox 5 0 6 .161 12 7 0 2 0 2
LA Angels 9 0 13 .281 9 7 5 2 0 0