Angels bedevil K.C.

Los Angeles moves to 9-0 vs. Royals

? Joe Saunders’ uneven day was enough to lead the Los Angeles Angels to another victory over the Kansas City Royals.

Saunders won his third straight start, Bobby Abreu drove in three runs, and Los Angeles beat Kansas City, 7-2, on Sunday.

The Angels improved to 9-0 against the Royals this season and have won 33 of the last 43 games between the two clubs.

Saunders (12-7), who spent some time on the disabled list last month with a sore left shoulder, gave up 10 hits in 51/3 innings, but surrendered only two runs.

“It was just a battle,” Saunders said. “They put some pretty good swings on some pretty good pitches. It’s one of those days where I didn’t have an easy inning and you have to battle through and just fight with whatever you’ve got. As a starting pitcher, it’s always nice to get the lead and get some comfort.”

Saunders has allowed four earned runs in 171/3 innings over three starts since he came off the DL on Aug. 26.

“Joe wasn’t quite as sharp as in his last couple of starts since he came back,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “He was up in the zone a little bit. It seemed like he struggled to get in good counts.

“Give those guys a little bit of credit, too. They got 11 baserunners in five-plus innings off him. Joe was a little bit off, but those guys were doing something right. He had to work hard to get into the sixth inning.”

Luke Hochevar (6-9), the first pick in the 2006 draft, was battered for seven runs and nine hits in 32/3 innings. Hochevar is 0-6 with an 8.12 ERA in eight starts since a July 25 victory over Texas.

“I had problems with my command,” he said. “I’m trying to be aggressive early in the count. It’s not going where I want it. I need to get that figured out. When I’m missing, I’m missing in the zone.”

The Angels sent eight men to the plate in a four-run second. Mike Napoli doubled in Gary Matthews Jr. and scored on Howie Kendrick’s single. Erick Aybar tripled in a run and came home on Abreu’s base hit.

“Too many pitches down in the center of the plate, most of them flat,” Royals manager Trey Hillman said of Hochevar, who retired only 11 of the 21 batters he faced. “He’s got to eliminate the opportunity to put a crooked number up.”