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Rupe's One-Hitter Not Enough


Ryan Rupe flirted with a no-hitter. Chuck Finley won the game.

The Anaheim Angels, held to one hit in nine innings, scored four runs in the 10th Sunday to shut out the Tampa Bay Devil Rays 4-0 on a combined three-hitter by Finley and Troy Percival.

Rupe, the first Devil Rays draft pick to make it to the majors, faced the minimum of 18 batters before Darin Erstad began the seventh inning with Anaheim's lone hit off him.

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  • But Finley (3-4) kept pace, allowing three hits and striking out seven in nine innings. Percival pitched a perfect 10th after Anaheim took the lead.

    Â"This was real old-fashioned baseball,Â" Angels catcher Charlie O'Brien said. Â"Guys worked the strike zone and really had a great idea of what to do. They hit their spots and kept the ball down. It was just classic baseball.Â"

    Rupe struck out a season-high eight and walked none. Roberto Hernandez (0-3) replaced him at the start of the 10th and allowed four runs on three hits in two-thirds of an inning.

    Garret Anderson's RBI single snapped the scoreless tie, and Hernandez also gave up a run-scoring single to Jeff Huson and Andy Sheets' sacrifice fly.

    The fourth Angels run scored on third baseman Herbert Perry's throwing error.

    Â"Our guy was just as good as their guy,Â" Anaheim's Mo Vaughn said. Â"We caught a break, so we'll take it.Â"

    Major-league home run leader Jose Canseco missed the game because of a stiff back, and the Devil Rays were shut out for the first time since last Sept. 17.

    The streak of 54 consecutive games without a shutout was the longest in the AL.

    The Devil Rays and Angels scored 33 runs and had 51 hits between them in the first two games of the series. There were a total of seven runners left on base Sunday after 23 were stranded during Anaheim's 8-6 victory Saturday night.

    Â"It's a shame,Â" Tampa Bay manager Larry Rothschild said. Â"With all the runs we've been scoring, and the one day Ryan goes out there and pitches like he does we don't get him one, he really deserved a win coming out of that game.Â"

    Rupe made his bi league debut on May 5, allowing four hits all home runs in a no-decision against the Kansas City Royals. He got his first win last Monday, pitching seven innings in a 13-3 victory over Texas.

    The lone baserunner for the Angels in the first six innings was O'Brien, who was hit by a pitch in the third before Rupe got Sheets to ground into an inning-ending double play.

    Finley was sharp, too, allowing just two hits and walking two over the same stretch. Anaheim turned double plays in the first, second and fourth innings to erase three of those baserunners.

    Erstad's single in the seventh was not the hardest ball hit off Rupe. Quinton McCracken made a nice running, one-hand catch in right-center on Randy Velarde's line drive in the fourth and Chris Pritchett lined to right-fielder Dave Martinez in the second.

    Finley retired 12 batters in a row after Perry reached on Velarde error at second base in the fourth inning. The left-hander fanned Perry in the seventh to become the 52nd pitcher to record 2,000 strikeouts.

    The Devil Rays wasted a scoring opportunity in the eighth after Martinez drew a one-out walk. Finley picked Martinez off first base, then benefited from another baserunning mistake after throwing a wild pitch to allow Mike DiFelice to reach first on a strikeout.

    The next batter, Kevin Stocker, doubled into the left field corner for Tampa Bay's third hit. Erstad's throw to home was cut off by third baseman Huson, who tagged out DiFelice when he rounded the bag too far.

    Finley got out of another jam in the ninth when he struck out Perry and retired Fred McGriff on a grounder with a runner at second base.

    Â"That's the way it goes,Â" Rupe said of Finley's ability to escape trouble in the late innings. Â"He pitched a good game also.Â"

    Notes:

  • All seven of Finley's decisions have come on the road this season.
  • Rupe is the third player from the June 1998 draft to reach the majors, joining Detroit's Jeff Weaver and St. Louis' J.D. Drew.
  • Finley is the 17th left-hander to reach 2,000 strikeouts. Nolan Ryan (2,416) is the only other pitcher to record that many in an Angels uniform.
  • The shutout was the third of the season for Anaheim
  • The Devil Rays are 0-2 in extra inning games
  • Rupe threw 87 pitches and faced one batter over the minimum before being replaced by Hernandez. Only one runner reached second base, Erstad on a balk after his seventh-inning single.

    ©1999 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

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