Angels: Zach Neto homered, rookie Jack Kochanowicz pitched six shutout innings and the Angels ended a seven-game losing streak with a 3-0 win over the Tigers on Thursday in Detroit. The Angels had lost 12 of 14 and were 1-8 going into the last game of their road trip. The Tigers had won six straight, but left 10 runners on base. Kochanowicz (2-3) was spectacular in his sixth major-league start, allowing five hits in six innings. He struck out four without walking a batter. Three Angels relievers finished, with Ben Joyce getting the final four outs for his third save. Tigers starter Keider Montero (4-6) allowed three runs on five hits and three walks in five innings. The Angels took a 1-0 lead on Mickey Moniak’s RBI double in the fourth, but he was thrown out trying for third. Neto made it 3-0 in the fifth with a two-run homer — his 20th of the season. The Tigers had runners on the corners with one out in the sixth, but Kochanowicz got Jace Jung to hit into a 4-6-3 double play. Tigers reliever Joey Wentz had a tough seventh, getting hit by two hard comebackers in a span of three pitches. With two out, Mike Stefanic hit a 95-mph hopper up the middle that bounced off Wentz’s pitching wrist for an infield single. Wentz stayed in the game after throwing some warmup pitches, but Ward hit a 96-mph grounder off Wentz’s shin that knocked him to the ground. Dillon Dingler fielded the carom and got the out at first — a 1-2-3 putout — and Wentz was able to walk off the field after more attention from the Tigers training staff. Will Vest replaced him for the eighth. The Tigers got runners on the corners again with two out in the seventh, but Roansy Contreras got Dingler to ground into a force at second. The Tigers then loaded the bases with two out against José Quijada in the eighth, but Joyce came out of the bullpen to strike out Spencer Torkelson.

Dodgers: RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto made his first rehab start after more than two months on the injured list, throwing two innings for Triple-A Oklahoma City on Wednesday night. The 26-year-old Japanese pitcher allowed one hit and one earned run while striking out two and walking none. He also threw 10 pitches in the bullpen, according to Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. “Threw well, came out of it good,” Roberts said in Los Angeles. “Hopefully, we can get him to three innings his next outing and then throw another one in the pen after that and then have a real conversation if it makes sense for him to join us.” Yamamoto was 6-2 with a 2.92 ERA in 14 games for the Dodgers before getting hurt. He hasn’t pitched since June 15 after experiencing tightness in his triceps during a start against the Royals. “Overall, I felt good,” Yamamoto said. He signed a 12-year, $325 million deal last offseason.