Page 316 - 2020 Angels Media Guide
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ANGELS IN THE POSTSEASON (2005)

       2005 Season
         The Angels clinched second straight A .L . West title with a 4-3
       victory  Sept.  27  at  Oakland,  marking  the  Club’s  fifth  Western
       Division crown and sixth overall trip to the postseason (2002 Wild
       Card entrant). The Halos finished with a 95-67 record, seven games
       ahead of Oakland in the West. The 95 wins marked the second most
       in Club history (99 in 2002) while the seven-game division lead was
       the biggest game differential during a division title.
         SEASON NOTES: The Club was in first place 171 of 183 days of the
       season...Halos went 22-9 to finish regular season (14-2 over final 16
       games)…44 of 95 wins were in comeback fashion, including 16 when
       trailing after six innings (most in MLB)…Halos led MLB batting .296
       with RISP and .279 with RISP and two outs…The Club also led MLB
       with 161 stolen bases…Garret Anderson set or extended the Angels’
       all-time records in hits (1,929), total bases (3,062), extra-base hits (565), doubles (403) and RBI (1,043)…Chone Figgins
       set the club record for base hits by a switch-hitter (186) and led MLB with 62 stolen bases…Despite missed time with a
       shoulder separation, Vlad Guerrero finished third in A.L. in average (.317), tied for 10th in home runs (32) and tied for
       ninth in RBI (108)...Figgins and Bartolo Colon shared team MVP honors...Angels finished with a 3.68 ERA, ranking third in
       A.L., and ranked first in strikeouts (1,126)…Francisco Rodriguez led the bullpen with 45 saves (T1st in A.L.), converting his
       last 18 opportunities…Scot Shields set a club record with 78 appearances…Seven Angel pitchers finished with a record
       above .500, led by Colon’s 21-8 mark, the most wins in the A.L. and paving the way to his first Cy Young Award.…Three
       Angels ranked in the top 10 in ERA in the A.L., including Jarrod Washburn (4th, 3.20), Lackey (6th, 3.44) and Colon (8th,
       3.48)…Halos tied for first in league with Club-record-tying .986 fielding percentage…Orlando Cabrera tied the Club mark
       for fielding percentage by shortstop (.988, also David Eckstein in 2004), which also tied for MLB lead in 2005...Angels
       finished with a home attendance club record of 3,404,686, the second highest mark in the A.L. and third highest in MLB.
       Postseason
       2005 DIVISION SERIES RECAP
         The first round of the Division Series matched the Angels against the New York Yankees, a team they had defeated in
       the 2002 DS. The Halos’ win on the last day of the regular season was crucial as it gave the Club home field advantage
       over New York for the series.
         Game 1 matched Mike Mussina vs. Bartolo Colon at Angel Stadium. A first inning, bases-clearing double by Robinson
       Cano proved to be too much for the Angels to overcome as it lifted the Yankees to a 4-2 win and a 1-0 series lead. It
       marked the fifth consecutive postseason series the Angels dropped Game 1.
         In Game 2, the Halos defeated the Yankees 5-3 rallying from 2-0 deficit. Bengie Molina’s solo HR in the 8th inning
       marked his second postseason HR in as many games. His two-out RBI single in the sixth frame tied the score at 2-2 and
       Orlando Cabrera’s two-run single in the eighth inning proved to be the game-winner.
         As the series shifted to the Bronx for Game 3, a three-run home run by Garret Anderson off Randy Johnson in the first
       inning sparked the Halos’ offense to 11 runs on 19 hits (19 hits established a franchise playoff best). Anderson finished
       with four hits and five RBI and Bengie Molina homered for the third straight game.
         The Halos would have to wait out a day of rain before Game 4. John Lackey, pitching on three days rest for Jarrod
       Washburn (scratched due to throat infection), limited the Yankees to one run on two hits in 5.2 innings of work. New
       York rallied from a 2-0 deficit, scoring one run in the sixth inning and two runs in the seventh frame for a 4-3 win. Both
       clubs totaled just four hits in the game. The series was tied at 2-2 with Game 5 being played the next night, over 3,000
       miles across country in Anaheim.
         The deciding game of the series was a rematch of Game 1 starters in Mussina and Colon.  Colon would leave after just
       1+ IP due to a strained right shoulder. The season came down to 22 year-old Ervin Santana, who was summoned from
       the bullpen. After an early 2-0 lead taken by New York in the top of the second inning, the Halos put up three runs in the
       bottom half of the frame with Adam Kennedy’s two-run triple serving as the key blow. Santana would settle in and work
  club postseason
       5.1 innings, allowing just three runs. A solo HR by Derek Jeter in the 7th inning brought the score to 5-3 but Francisco
       Rodriguez closed the door with the tying runs on base in the 9th. For the second time in four seasons, the Angels bounced
                                    the Yankees from the first round of the playoffs.
                                      Santana  became  the  sixth  rookie  winning  pitcher  in  a  winner-
                                    take-all postseason game and third to do it in last 20 years, along
                                    with  John  Lackey  (2002  World  Series  vs.  Giants)  and  Jaret  Wright
                                    (1997 ALDS vs. Yankees).









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