Angels Beat Indians 6-4

As Jason Kipnis ran out of the batter’s box and up the first-base line in the fourth inning Tuesday night, the All-Star second baseman felt like someone punched him in the back. This entire road trip for the Indians has felt like a punch to the gut.

“We’ve got, really, not much going for us,” Kipnis said.

The sharp pain that Kipnis felt turned out to be a right abdominal strain, forcing him to leave an already scuffling offense behind for the trainer’s table. Cleveland fought on, but the club could not avoid a 6-4 loss to the Angels, who dealt the Tribe its fifth straight loss with one game to go in this two-city swing through San Francisco and Anaheim.

Starter Corey Kluber bent too far in a stress-filled outing, shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera made another costly error for Cleveland’s infected defense and the offense could not keep up with Los Angeles. Losing Kipnis as well added injury to insult, making a bad trip even worse for the Tribe.

“Kip’s obviously a huge part of what we do,” Kluber said. “Hopefully it’s not something too serious. Hopefully it’s one of those things where, we had guys go down last year, and we had guys fill in and step up to kind of help out while they were out.”

Kipnis — Cleveland’s offensive sparkplug — felt a jolt in his right side and back on a swing that resulted in a double-play groundout against Angels right-hander Jered Weaver in the fourth inning. The second baseman ran up the line, slowed as he approached first base and could be seen grabbing at his side in obvious discomfort.

“It knocked the wind out of me,” Kipnis said. “I couldn’t really breathe while I was going down to first base. It wasn’t letting go.”

While Mike Aviles took over for Kipnis in the field the following inning, Cleveland’s star second baseman was in the training room receiving treatment. He is hoping to avoid a trip to the 15-day disabled list, but it seems fair to assume he will miss at least a handful of games. For now, the Indians plan on re-evaluating him Wednesday morning.

“The training staff is hopeful that it’s more of a cramping-type thing,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “We’ll know a lot more when he shows up [Wednesday] and he doesn’t have the adrenaline of the game going and he’s had a chance to sleep. We’ll know a lot more then.”

What Cleveland knows right now is it needs to right its ship.

Many of the issues that have plagued the Tribe through its 11-16 start were present again in the latest loss to the Angels.

Kluber lasted on 4 2/3 innings, allowing 15 baserunners in that span, including an uncharacterictic four walks. The right-hander walked a tightrope for much of the night before Howie Kendrick’s two-out, two-run single with the bases loaded in the fifth put Cleveland down, 4-0. Cabrera’s fielding error (the American League-leading 25th of the season) paved the way for one L.A. run in the fourth.

The Angels added two insurance runs off the Indians’ typically sound bullpen.

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