Monday, May 1, 2006

TEAM REPORTS: Angels



LA Angels of Anaheim

LOOKING BACK: The competition’s struggles have allowed Los Angeles’ AL team to remain near the top of the standings in the West, which is a fairly positive remark as Mike Scioscia’s ball club wraps up a rather ho-hum month. Although April was only the third time the Angels have recorded a losing month since their recent playoff run began in 2004, fans of the Halos may find comfort in the knowledge that April has consistently been the team’s weakest overall month since Scioscia took over as skipper before the 2000 season (see graphic).

THUMBS UP: Vlad Guerrero continued to do his thing (.306-6-20), and the starting trio of John Lackey, Kelvim Escobar and Ervin Santana has succeeded (8-3, 3.42 ERA), making the absence of reigning Cy Young-winner Bartolo Colón a bit easier to stomach. Going into the last day of the month, Angels relievers had posted a 2.61ERA, best in the American League. Carrying the load, as usual, are the spectacular Scot Shields (13.2 IP, 0.66 ERA), Brendan Donnelly (12 IP, 2.25 ERA) and Frankie Rodriguez (8-9 in saves, 15 Ks/10.2 IP).

The three-headed monster of Shonneliguez has combined to make late-inning domination the pitching staff’s greatest strength, followed closely by its collective weight – Esteban Yan (255), Colón (250) and Donnelly (240) are easy choices for “Angels Players Who Should Never Be Seated In The Same Row On The Team Airplane.” (It’s a good thing Colon is on the DL right now; I’m not sure if there is enough room on the bullpen bench for all three of these guys to sit down at the same time. No wonder Donnelly seems to pitch in every game…)

THUMBS DOWN: No team has drawn fewer walks than the Halos’ 47, a major reason the team’s on base percentage stands at .302, second-worst in MLB. The Angels have scored just 112 runs so far, a weaker total than every AL team except the Twins (97), Royals (83) and Athletics (110). Simply put, their offense has been offensive. The lack of production from catchers Jose Molina (.180/.212/.220) and Jeff Mathis (.108/.175/.216) may not be much of a surprise, but the performance of the Angels’ corner infielders not named “Chone” has been particularly awful. Between them, Casey Kotchman, Robb Quinlan, Maicer Izturis and Edgardo Alfonzo are 27-for-130 (.208) with a .254 slugging percentage and zero homeruns.

I am pessimistic about how long the Angels can hang around the top of the division if this level of offense remains the norm, and it is difficult to forecast a brighter scenario among this collection of “talent”. Perhaps Orlando Cabrera (.302-4-19) and Adam Kennedy (.324/.363/.459) will continue their early success, and Darin Erstad (.238/.279/.350) will turn back the clock to the year 2000. More likely, one or both of the Angels’ middle infielders will stop playing above his head, and Erstad will play out the season as a ghost of his former overrated self.

THE ROAD AHEAD: The Angels play only 8 games within their division in May, including two against Oakland to open the month. A nine-game road trip to Detroit, Toronto and Chicago, will be a big test for a team that has performed much better at home (.571) than on the road (.499) in the first six seasons of the Mike Scioscia Era. Interleague play rears its head into the May schedule, as the annual Angels-Dodgers Battle of Los Angeles series visits L.A., proper, in the middle of the month. The Angles have not had a losing May under Scioscia, a trend that will reverse itself if the awffense continues to be awful.

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