Pepiot (2-2) struck out seven and walked three after having stomach issues before the game. He was acquired in a trade in which Rays ace Tyler Glasnow was dealt to the Dodgers.
“Pretty strong performance,” Tampa Bay manager Kevin Cash said. “I didn’t think he felt that well going into the game. It’s amazing how sometimes people find out they got that extra gear. He certainly pushed it.”
Pepiot felt physically fine on the mound, but a little tired.
“I was going to take the ball no matter what,” he insisted.
Colin Poche, the third Rays reliever, worked out of a jam with two on and two outs in the ninth for his second save in three chances. Struggling closer Pete Fairbanks, who has a 9.00 ERA, pitched in the previous two games.
Rosario extended his hitting streak to 10 games with his RBI triple that made it 1-0 in the Rays’ opening inning against Griffin Canning (0-3). He has nine RBIs over the stretch.
Harold Ramírez’s sacrifice fly to right drove in Rosario to make it 2-0.
The Angels got within 2-1 in the sixth when Mike Trout walked, stole second and third and scored on Miguel Sanó’s sacrifice fly. Trout has five steals after having just a combined six over the previous four seasons. It was his 23rd multisteal game, and first since July 23, 2018.
“That’s what he does,” Angels manager Ron Washington said. “That’s a part of his game. It’s a part of his skill set. It doesn’t always have to be where you hit balls out of the ballpark.”
Canning gave up two runs and four hits over 5 1/3 innings. His ERA decreased to 8.05 from 9.88.
Cash said before the game he is sticking with Fairbanks (0-2, 9.00 ERA) as his closer. The right-hander had five consecutive batters reach base in blowing a save Wednesday night and has given up eight runs — seven earned — in eight games.
“I’m confident he’s going to right himself and we’re going to be appreciating giving him the ball with one-run leads here soon,” Cash said.
Slumping All-Star outfielder Randy Arozarena was out of the Rays’ lineup and popped out as a pinch hitter in the eighth. He hit .127 (seven for 55) with no homers and three RBIs in his previous 14 games.
Up next for the Angels: Left-hander Tyler Anderson (2-1, 1.47 ERA) will start Friday night at Cincinnati.