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Jerome Williams pitches Angels past Orioles

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Former Waipahu High standout Jerome Williams earned his first major league victory since 2005 on Sunday. He went seven innings for the Los Angeles Angels in a 7-1 victory over Baltimore.

ANAHEIM, Calif. » It’d been a long time since former Waipahu High star Jerome Williams started a game in the major leagues, even longer since he’d won one.

Williams pitched seven stellar innings to get his first big league victory in almost six years, Peter Bourjos homered for the third straight game and Howie Kendrick also connected, leading the Los Angeles Angels over the Baltimore Orioles 7-1 on Sunday for a three-game sweep.

"I feel like crying," Williams said while his 2-year-old son, Ty, sat perched in a folding chair next to him with the game ball in his hands. "It’s been a long road. I’m just speechless. There was so much emotion out there. Being away from the game for a long time, I dedicated this to my mother and my family."

Williams, a first-round draft pick by San Francisco in 1999, hadn’t started a game in the majors since May 15, 2007, with Washington. He began this season with the Lancaster Barnstormers of the independent Atlantic League before signing a free-agent contract with the Angels on June 16. He spent last season playing in Taiwan after leaving the Oakland Athletics.

"When I was in Taiwan last year, I never thought I would be here right now playing here," said Williams, who uses a pink glove to honor his late mother, who died of breast cancer. "I was thinking about quitting, but I forced myself not to. My family helped me out and told me to just keep on going and never give up. And it paid off.

"The difference was trusting myself and learning everything that I was supposed to learn back in the day," he added. "I was the type of guy that would nitpick everywhere, but now I’m just going after hitters."

Williams (1-0) posted his first victory in the majors since Sept. 25, 2005, with the Chicago Cubs, after losing his previous eight decisions. The 29-year-old righty allowed a run and six hits over seven innings, struck out six and walked none. He also escaped a bases-loaded, none-out jam in the fourth, and was staked to a 7-0 lead before giving up a leadoff homer by Matt Wieters in the seventh.

"Everything was working," Williams said. "I was pounding the strike zone, and that’s what I do. I got some ground balls and some strikeouts and let my defense play. I’m just trying to do everything I can to help this team win and get to the playoffs."

The Angels’ fourth straight victory, coupled with Texas’ 10-0 loss at Chicago, put them within four games of the Rangers in the AL West race.

Torii Hunter’s hitting streak ended at 18 games

(0-for-5) after Baltimore center fielder Adam Jones robbed him of a home run in the fourth — two batters after Bourjos extended the Angels’ lead to 6-0 lead with a two-run shot. Bourjos became the second Angels player to homer in three straight games, along with Mark Trumbo, who did it in the final three before the All-Star break.

Brian Matusz (1-6) threw 84 pitches over four innings, giving up six runs — five earned — and eight hits against an all right-handed lineup that included switch-hitters Maicer Izturis and Erick Aybar.

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