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Jul 31, 2015 - 11:20 PM After the Los Angeles Dodgers gave Clayton Kershaw some extra rest before he tries to extend his scoreless streak, Zack Greinke gets his chance to move past the end of his.

Greinke takes the hill Friday night in the opener of the Freeway Series with the Los Angeles Angels after the Dodgers bumped Kershaw's turn to Saturday a few hours before first pitch.

Greinke (9-2, 1.37 ERA) had his run of 45 2-3 consecutive scoreless innings halted in Sunday's 3-2 loss to the New York Mets and will now pitch on regular rest.

The right-hander allowed a run in the third on an RBI grounder by Mets starter Jacob deGrom and another in the sixth when rookie Michael Conforto was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded. His scoreless streak was the longest in the majors since Orel Hershiser set the big league record with 59 for the Dodgers in 1988.

"I think everyone appreciates that. Maybe it will get broken. Five years ago or so, I thought that one and (Joe) DiMaggio's (56-game hitting) streak were the two toughest. But it looks like people are getting closer to the Hershiser one now. So maybe eventually it might happen," Greinke said, acknowledging he won't miss all the attention generated by his pursuit of Hershiser's mark.

By failing to get a decision, Greinke's four-start winning streak also ended. He has struggled against the Angels in his career, going 1-5 with a 4.19 ERA in nine starts after dropping his last three decisions against them.

With Kershaw scheduled to pitch Saturday, it's possible Sunday's start could go to Mat Latos. He was acquired Thursday along with fellow starter Alex Wood, relievers Jim Johnson and Luis Avilan, outfielder Michael Morse, injured veteran Bronson Arroyo and infield prospect Jose Peraza as part of a three-team, 13-player trade with Miami and Atlanta.

Morse, however, was designated for assignment.

The Dodgers (57-45) gave up touted infielder prospect Hector Olivera, reliever Paco Rodriguez and a minor leaguer.

"To sit here having addressed the biggest areas of need for us in terms of rotation and bullpen, while adding future pieces and preserving the top guys in our farm system, that's a really good outcome," team president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said.

The Angels (55-46) acquired veteran outfielders Shane Victorino, David DeJesus and David Murphy this week, but that trio is 2 for 15 with its new club. Losers in six of seven, the Angels were limited to eight runs while being swept in a three-game set at Houston, which leads them by two in the AL West.

"We need to regroup and start to build momentum again," manager Mike Scioscia said.

Mike Trout returned after sitting two games with a sore wrist but went 0 for 3 in Thursday's 3-0 defeat. He's 3 for 7 with a double and a triple versus Greinke.

Albert Pujols is 10 for 29 with five doubles during the regular season and playoffs against Greinke. He's batted .375 with four homers and nine RBIs in his last 12 at Dodger Stadium.

All-Star Hector Santiago (7-4, 2.43) is 3-0 with a 1.70 ERA in his last six starts but allowed four runs, five hits and three walks over five innings of a 7-6 loss to Texas on Saturday.

The left-hander gave up four runs over 5 1-3 innings while not factoring into the decision of a 5-4 loss last season in his only start against the Dodgers.

Howie Kendrick, who batted .292 with 501 RBIs while playing his first nine seasons with the Angels before being dealt to the Dodgers in December, takes a .323 home batting average into his first meeting against his former team.