



ANAHEIM — That season-long balance delivered by a healthy pitching staff and the offense’s penchant for home runs was unable to tip the scale in the Angels’ favor on Friday.
At the exact midway point of the season, the Angels slipped a game under .500 with a 15-9 loss to the Washington Nationals that was more beer-league softball than interleague duel.
At 40-41 the Angels still have comfortably distanced themselves from a franchise-worst 99-loss season in 2024, but this was not part of the revival. Even an Angels offense that powered its way to nine runs on 11 hits was unable to deliver with no outs and a runner in scoring position in both the sixth and seventh innings.
Angels pitching not only allowed double-digit runs, but the Nationals piled on 19 hits and worked six walks. Right-hander Jose Soriano was tagged for eight runs on nine hits in four innings. He also walked four.
And yet there were moments to savor.
When Soriano opened the game with a 96.6-mph sinker for a strike to CJ Abrams, the staff set a club record by using just five starters through the first half of the schedule for the first time ever.
That stability has allowed the bullpen to fashion a 2.79 ERA since May 19 heading into Friday’s game before five relievers combined to allow seven runs (six earned) over five innings.
Fourth in the major leagues in home runs entering the series, the Angels popped three more, including Jo Adell’s 11th in June alone and Taylor Ward’s 20th on the season.
Adell became the 18th Angels player with at least 11 home runs in a calendar month.
Adell’s 18 total home runs are just two shy of his career best set in 130 games last season.
It was a long day that simply got longer after the team learned Friday afternoon that manager Ron Washington would not be back for the remainder of the season because of an undisclosed medical issue.
Washington has preached resiliency since becoming the Angels manager last season and those lessons will be as relevant as ever now.
The Angels showed that resiliency until they simply ran out of comebacks. They trailed 2-0 in the second inning then led 5-2 after home runs from Adell, Ward and Nolan Schanuel.
The Nationals rallied back to tie it and the Angels led again 7-5 on RBI singles from Luis Rengifo and Mike Trout. The Nationals went back in front 8-7, before the Angels led 9-8 in the fifth by scoring two runs on an error. Then the faucet went dry.
The Nationals managed to score at least one run in each of the final six innings and seven of the nine innings on the night.