Major League Baseball
LA Angels 4, Toronto 0
When: 3:35 PM ET, Sunday, September 18, 2016
Where: Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, California
Temperature: 84°
Umpires: Home - CB Bucknor, 1B - Jim Reynolds, 2B - Fieldin Culbreth, 3B - Manny Gonzalez
Attendance: 36270

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- The future for rookie Alex Meyer could lie in the past.

Meyer combined with four relievers on a shutout as the Los Angeles Angels defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 4-0 on Sunday at Angel Stadium.

Meyer (1-3) scattered two hits and three walks in five shutout innings while amassing a career-high seven strikeouts and throwing 79 pitches in his first major league win.

"That stuff out there was electric," Los Angeles manager Mike Scioscia said. "He had great angles, great velocity, and he was spinning the ball well."

The right-hander came to the Angels with fellow pitcher Ricky Nolasco from the Minnesota Twins in a four-player transaction at the trading deadline for left-hander Hector Santiago.

"It's something you think about for a long time," Meyer said about his achievement. "I can't really put it into words. It was very special and it was fun."

Meyer, who earned has last victory April 15 for Triple-A Rochester, attributed his success to viewing video footage on YouTube from his days at the University of Kentucky.

"I was going on YouTube about two days ago and I was just watching it," he said. "I could see my arm was a little higher and my stride wasn't quite as long. Just being able to see that and work on it helped out a lot today."

The Angels' pitchers combined to concede just four hits and collect 12 strikeouts as the staff recorded its 11th shutout, the most in the American League.

With the win, Scioscia surpasses Hall of Famer Earl Weaver in career victories. Scioscia moved into 23rd place with his 1,481st win.

The Blue Jays' Devon Travis extended his career-best hitting streak to 15 games. But Toronto fell out of a tie for the first wild-card spot with the Baltimore Orioles, and leads the Detroit Tigers and Seattle Mariners by two games in the race for the second berth.

"The reality in the end is that if we're good enough, we'll get in. If we're not, we won't," said Toronto manager John Gibbons, whose team has lost 11 of 16 games this month and fallen out of first place in the American League East.

"Nobody likes what's happening now," Gibbons said. "Nobody likes to struggle. It's a pressure business. These guys are in the arena. They got here because they're great competitors, talented guys. But sometimes, you run into a road block and you struggle. It's nothing more than that."

Right-hander Marcus Stroman suffered his fourth successive loss. In six innings, Stroman (9-9) allowed two runs, seven hits and two walks while registering three strikeouts and inducing 11 groundouts.

"I don't go back and look at my last four or five starts," Stroman said. "I focus on today. That's pretty much how I game-plan."

Los Angeles took a 1-0 lead in the second inning after loading the bases with one out. Albert Pujols walked, Andrelton Simmons hit into a fielder's choice and Rafael Ortega reached base when home-plate umpire C.B. Bucknor called catcher Dioner Navarro for interference when Ortega tried to bunt.

Juan Graterol, making just his second major league start, earned his second RBI when his grounder to second baseman Devon Travis scored Pujols. Simmons and Ortega advanced into scoring position but Stroman ended the threat by striking out Cliff Pennington.

Toronto put the potential tying run at third base in the top of the third with one out. After Kevin Pillar walked, Travis dumped a hit-and-run single to short right field that sent Pillar to third. But Meyer defused the threat by getting Josh Donaldson to hit into a double play.

The Blue Jays again put the potential tying run in scoring position in the fourth, when Edwin Encarnacion began the inning with a double to left field. But an unusual play proved costly.

Jose Bautista followed with a ground ball that ricocheted off Meyer's glove as Meyer was following through on his delivery. The ball knocked Meyer's glove off his hand and deflected to second baseman Pennington, who threw out Encarnacion as he tried to advance to third.

The Angels added a run in the fifth. Mike Trout doubled down the right-field line and slid home when Pujols lined a single to right field.

Then in the seventh, the hosts turned two singles, two walks and a sacrifice fly into two more runs. Trout scored on C.J. Cron's sacrifice fly and Pujols came home on Ortega's bloop single. Left fielder Michael Saunders tried to make a one-handed catch on Ortega's short fly ball while sliding on his knees but trapped it.

An infestation of bees near first base delayed play for 13 minutes in the bottom of the third inning.

NOTES: Toronto 2B Devon Travis' 15-game hitting streak is the longest on his team and the American League's second-longest active streak. ... Los Angeles CF Mike Trout tied Sandy Alomar Sr. for sixth place on the team's career stolen base list with his 26th steal of the season on Saturday night. Trout and Alomar each have 139 steals. ... The Angels have grounded into 142 double plays, which leads the major leagues.
Top Game Performances
Starting Pitchers
Toronto   LA Angels
Marcus Stroman Player Alex Meyer
Loss W/L Win
6.0 IP 5.0
3 Strikeouts 7
7 Hits 2
3.00 ERA 0.00
Hitting
Toronto   LA Angels
Devon Travis Player Rafael Ortega
1 Hits 2
0 RBI 1
0 HR 0
1 TB 2
.500 Avg 1.000
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Hits HR TB Avg LOB K RBI BB SB Errors
Toronto 4 0 6 .138 20 12 0 5 0 1
LA Angels 10 0 11 .312 24 6 4 4 2 0