ANAHEIM, Calif. — Andrew McCutchen hit a towering, three-run homer, Mac Williamson hit a two-run homer in his first big league game this season and Nick Hundley also connected to back Jeff Samardzija in the San Francisco Giants’ 8-1 win against the Los Angeles Angels on Friday night.
The Angels had only five hits, including a homer by Mike Trout, a double by Albert Pujols for his 2,991st career hit and two singles by Shohei Ohtani.
Samardzija (1-0) just made it through five innings to qualify for the win. He walked the bases loaded with two outs before manager Bruce Bochy came out for a mound visit. Justin Upton drove Samardzija’s next pitch to the warning track in left, where Williamson caught it. Samardzija flinched at first, thinking it was gone, and then smiled as he walked toward the dugout. Bochy smiled and clapped his hands.
Samardzija opened the season on the disabled list with a pectoral strain suffered during spring training. He allowed two hits in five innings, struck out four and walked four.
Ohtani had the Angels’ first hit off Samardzija, a single to centre with two outs in the second. Ohtani had gone 0 for 4 with three strikeouts the night before as the Boston Red Sox completed a sweep. The designated hitter singled again in the ninth.
McCutchen, the designated hitter, drove a 1-2 pitch from Andrew Heaney into the Giants’ bullpen beyond the left-field fence with one out in the fifth to chase the left-hander.
Heaney (0-1) allowed the first five batters to reach in the fifth. He allowed Williamson’s homer to right and an RBI single by Austin Jackson.
Hundley hit an opposite-field shot to right in the second, his first. He added an RBI double in the eighth.
Trout homered to left-centre off Pierce Johnson in the eighth, his seventh. Two batters later, Pujols drove a ball to the base of the fence in centre before being replaced by pinch-runner Jefry Marte.
OHTANI’S BLISTER
Angels manager Mike Scioscia isn’t sure if the seams on big league baseballs are what caused the blister on Ohtani’s right middle finger that forced the Japanese two-way sensation out after just two innings Tuesday night against Boston in his third major league pitching start.
"He worked very hard getting used our baseball starting last winter," Scioscia said. "Blisters … come and go with pitchers occasionally at some point. Exactly when they crop up with some guys is a mystery. There are probably a lot of things that came into play for Shohei to have his become significant to where it affected some of his pitches. But I don’t know if there’s any one reason that you could pin down right now. He feels much better. We got him out in time last start where it didn’t get any worse and hopefully he’ll be able to make his next start."
Some pitchers blamed slicker balls for blisters last season.
Scioscia remained noncommittal about when Ohtani’s next start would be, but a six-man rotation would have him Ohtani pitching Monday at Houston.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Giants: Placed OF Hunter Pence on the 10-day disabled list with a sprained right thumb and recalled Williamson from Triple-A Sacramento.
UP NEXT
Giants: LHP Derek Holland (0-2, 4.60) is scheduled to start Saturday night. He has appeared in more games against the Angels than any other team, going 10-8 with a 5.21 ERA in 28 appearances, including 25 starts.
Angels: RHP Garrett Richards (2-0, 3.60) is scheduled to make his first career start against San Francisco on Saturday night.
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