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Rookie Jack Kochanowicz earns his first career win as the Angels beat Nationals

Angels pitcher Davis Daniel, left, embraces pitcher Jack Kochanowicz after he was pulled from Sunday's game against the Nats.
Angels pitcher Davis Daniel, left, embraces starting pitcher Jack Kochanowicz in the dugout after he was pulled from Sunday’s game against the Nationals.
(John McDonnell / Associated Press)
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Jack Kochanowicz pitched 7⅔ innings to earn his first major league win, Kevin Pillar hit a three-run double and the Angels beat the Washington Nationals 6-4 on Sunday.

Los Angeles avoided a three-game sweep in its first visit to Washington since 2017 and went 3-3 on a trip that began in New York against the Yankees.

The Nationals issued 13 walks, matching their most since the franchise moved to Washington in 2005. The Angels turned four of those into runs to help deny the Nationals their fourth series sweep of the season.

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“A lot of good decisions, good choices,” said Los Angeles catcher Matt Thaiss, who reached base five times, including three walks. “Especially in an 11:30 (a.m.) game, a lot of people come out swinging and make some early outs. It showed some grit today by the boys.”

Kochanowicz (1-2) made his third career start and it went considerably better than the two last month, when he gave up a combined 12 runs over seven innings. Recalled from Double-A Rocket City on Saturday, the right-hander retired the first eight Nationals hitters before Nasim Nuñez reached on an infield single.

Zach Neto smashed his 17th home run of the season, but the Angels lost the Nationals on a walk-off play to close back-to-back games.

Aug. 10, 2024

The Nationals opened the fourth with a double and a walk, prompting Angels manager Ron Washington to visit the mound and offer Kochanowicz a breather while imparting a simple message.

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“In this business, you don’t make adjustments until you have to,” Washington said. “What you’re doing is working. Why would you start doing something else? Keep it going. They’ll tell you when you have to adjust. And he did. I was just really impressed with his confidence.”

Kochanowicz breezed through seven innings on 72 pitches before Jacob Young led off the eighth with a homer to left. The rookie was pulled after Luis García Jr.’s two-out RBI single. He allowed two runs, six hits and a walk while striking out two.

“Every time out, I feel more comfortable,” Kochanowicz said. “It’s the same stuff: trusting myself and feeling more comfortable as it goes.”

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The Nationals scored twice in the ninth against Ben Joyce, who got Juan Yepez to ground into a game-ending double play with the bases loaded to end the rally.

The Angels had runners on first and third with none out in the fourth when Jo Adell hit a sharp grounder to third baseman José Tena, who appeared to jam his right hand. After initially holding up, Brandon Drury scampered home on the error, and Tena was forced to leave the game a day after he made his Nationals debut and had the game-winning hit in the 10th inning.

MacKenzie Gore (7-10) then issued a walk before inducing a double-play grounder that scored a run. Gore walked two more batters, and Pillar then ripped a three-run double to left to make it 5-0.

The Angels pushed across another run in the seventh when Michael Stefanic worked the last of the Angels’ four walks against Jordan Weems.

Gore allowed five runs — all unearned — in four innings, but walked a career-high six batters and yielded five hits. The left-hander did not work through the fifth for the fourth time in seven starts since July 6.

Washington also allowed 13 walks as a team on Aug. 10, 2008, in a 13-inning loss at Milwaukee.

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Up next

Right-hander Davis Daniel (1-3, 6.04 ERA) starts Monday as the Angels return home to start a three-game series against Toronto.

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