Tag: Josh Hamilton

Josh Hamilton Injury: Updates on Rangers Star’s Hamstring and Return

Josh Hamilton has settled back in with the Texas Rangers, but the five-time All-Star is currently limited by a hamstring injury.

Continue for updates.


Hamilton Out With Hamstring Injury

Tuesday, June 2

Hamilton suffered a hamstring injury and will miss tonight’s game against the Chicago White Sox, according to a tweet from Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: “Josh Hamilton said he aggravated his left hamstring Sunday. Says sitting today and maybe Wednesday is precautionary.”

Hamilton has missed nearly two months of the season with a shoulder injury.

The 34-year-old slugger enjoyed five great seasons with the Rangers, reaching the World Series twice and winning the American League MVP award in 2010.

Things went south after he signed with the Los Angeles Angels, though, and Hamilton and the Angels had a less-than-ideal parting of the ways. Following Hamilton’s substance-abuse relapse during the offseason, the Angels decided to trade him back to Texas.

There were some hard feelings among Rangers fans when Hamilton decided to leave Texas in favor of the Angels, but he received a warm welcome upon his return, according to Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News:

Also, Rangers manager Jeff Banister was excited to have a player of Hamilton’s caliber back in the fold, according to The Associated Press (h/t CBSDFW.com).

“Since he’s been here, Josh looks fresh, he looks good and he’s got tremendous energy,” Banister said. “He wants to play hard, and he’s going to be a very nice winning player for us.”

Hamilton is currently batting .273 with two home runs and five RBI in 22 at-bats. 

He is one of the biggest X-factors in Major League Baseball right now, and the Rangers will certainly lose a dimension to their game if they are forced to play without him for any length of time.

 

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Josh Hamilton Hits First 2 Home Runs of Season Following Return to Rangers

Josh Hamilton is back where he belongs.

After a bumpy two seasons with the Los Angeles Angels, the former MVP was traded back to the Texas Rangers last month, the team with whom he spent five years and became a star.

In just his second game back in Texas (and fifth game of the season), Hamilton took Boston Red Sox pitcher Steven Wright deep in the bottom of the second for his first home run since last August. 

Two innings later, Hamilton hit another one out.

It’s his first multi-dinger game in a long while, per ESPN Stats & Info:

There’s no place like home.

[MLB]

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With Rangers Streaking, Josh Hamilton Could Be More Than Novelty in Texas

When the Texas Rangers traded for Josh Hamilton in late April, it was easy to interpret the deal as a low-risk move that, at the least, would help generate interest in an otherwise uninteresting team.

But now, you can’t help but wonder if the Rangers will end up getting more than they bargained for.

It’s not because Hamilton’s 2015 debut went particularly well. In four plate appearances against the Cleveland Indians on Monday, the veteran left fielder went 0-for-3 with a walk and two strikeouts. The only other time he reached base was in the seventh inning on an error by Tribe hurler Zach McAllister, who gathered a weak chopper and threw it into right field.

On the bright side, that error did allow the Rangers to score the go-ahead run in an eventual 10-8 victory. On an even brighter side, the Rangers have now won six in a row to push their record to 22-23.

That’s obviously not very good, but it at least counts as a passable record in this year’s American League. There are two elite teams in Kansas City and Houston—if you’ve traveled forward in time from April 2014, yes, that’s actually true—but mainly mediocrity elsewhere. Hence why the Rangers are only 3.5 games out of the AL wild-card race.

Or, to put it another way: on the opposite side of the spectrum from when they first acquired Hamilton.

The Rangers acquired (or re-acquired, if you prefer) the former MVP from the Los Angeles Angels on April 27. They were 7-12 at the time, and would soon be 7-15. That put them in last place in the AL West, a place they seemed destined to stay.

With that taken into account alongside Hamilton’s baggage—namely his two subpar years in Anaheim, surgery on his right shoulder and the latest in an unfortunate line of drug and alcohol relapsesthe Rangers didn’t seem to be acquiring a missing piece for a contending season. With less than $7 million of Hamilton’s $80.2 million remaining contract on their hands, what they really seemed to be acquiring was a cheap nostalgia act who would help put butts in seats at Globe Life Park in Arlington.

But now that the Rangers have apparently decided that they’re going to be good this year, maybe Hamilton can be more than that. Maybe he can actually help.

Before any of us get too excited, let’s be real and remind ourselves that the odds of Hamilton actually being a useful player for the Rangers aren’t great. Or good. Or even OK, really.

It’s been three years since Hamilton’s last really good season, after all. Following a 2012 campaign that featured 43 homers and a .930 OPS, the lefty swinger OPS’d just .741 with 31 homers in two seasons in Anaheim. Factor in very little baserunning and defensive value, and Hamilton was worth barely 3.0 wins above replacement whether you ask Baseball-Reference.com or FanGraphs.

Furthermore, we have multiple examples (Adrian Gonzalez, Matt Kemp, Hanley Ramirez, etc.) that prove it takes time for a hitter to fully recover from surgery on his lead shoulder. With Hamilton having turned 34 just a couple of days ago, it’ll probably be even tougher for him to make a full recovery.

These are the things you could have been skeptical of coming into Hamilton’s 2015 debut, and he added to the list throughout the day.

At no point did Hamilton come close to a hit, as the dribbler thrown into right field was the only ball he put in play. And in swinging through several secondary pitches outside the strike zone, Hamilton effectively invited pitchers to continue feeding him the insanely fastball-light diet that Jeff Sullivan of FanGraphs highlighted last year. Given how well it’s worked against him, that’s…not ideal.

So as far as first impressions go, Hamilton’s wasn’t great. As much as everyone would love to see him revert to his old MVP-caliber self, he hasn’t been that guy for years and didn’t give much of an indication on Monday that he could be that guy again.

And yet, we wouldn’t be having this conversation if there wasn’t any hope. 

As easy as it is to get lost in the “0-for-3” portion of Hamilton’s afternoon, he deserves some credit for the third-inning walk he worked against Shaun Marcum. He seemed to have Hamilton in the bag after he got him to whiff on consecutive down-and-away changeups to run the count to 2-2, but Hamilton took the next two changeups for the walk. Like that, he showed his plate discipline isn’t totally kaput just yet.

Hamilton also showed that his bat hasn’t lost all its old quickness. It’s not going to show up in the box score, but he hit a hard foul ball outside of first off of a Marcum cutter in the first inning that looked like this:

Sure, it was only a foul ball. But to hit a pitch like that at all, you have to have at least some bat speed left in your tank. 

Then there are the other reasons for optimism that Hamilton can be of use to the Rangers.

The ones that have been obvious all along are that he’s returning to a team that has a much, much more hitter-friendly ballpark than the one he left behind in Anaheim and also to a place where he was mostly comfortable between 2008 and 2012.

But another that’s become even more prevalent in recent days is the reality that there’s roughly zero pressure on Hamilton to perform. With the Rangers playing such good baseball, he can slide into the mix as just another contributor rather than as a potential savior.

“I told him, go be one of 25,” said Rangers manager Jeff Banister, via August Fagerstrom of MLB.com. “Enjoy today. Compete. Give us what you got. Don’t try to give us anything more than that. He’s ready to play. He’s excited. He feels good about being back. These guys are a great group, they welcomed him back. They’ve been looking forward to that.”

This might have been Banister’s advice either way, granted, but it must have been much easier for him to give it with the Rangers riding a five-game winning streak. And Hamilton had no problem accepting it, saying, “It’s easy to enter into something new when that something new is working and going well.”

What makes these sentiments ring even truer is that it’s the Rangers offense that Hamilton is joining.

This would be the same offense that’s leading all of MLB in runs scored in the month of May with 131. This is due mainly to the piping-hot hitting of Prince Fielder, but Adrian Beltre, Shin-Soo Choo and Mitch Moreland are three more hitters with strong track records who have come alive. Add in the exciting work of young speedster Delino DeShields Jr., and you get the makings of a dangerous offense.

If it turns out that Hamilton indeed has something left to give, the Rangers offense will only become more formidable. And in an AL postseason hunt that looks as wide open as any in recent memory, simply having a formidable offense could prove to be good enough.

In all, we have our latest reminder of just how much a month’s worth of baseball can change things. Thanks to a week of hot baseball on the team’s part and a debut that wasn’t without silver linings on his part, Hamilton has gone from looking like an obvious novelty act to more like a potential role player.

It may very well be true that the Rangers only wanted Hamilton so he could help them fill seats. But the way things are going now, he could be a reason the fans filling those seats are watching winning baseball in the coming months.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Josh Hamilton Injury Update: Rangers Will Activate Star OF on Monday

The Texas Rangers will place outfielder Josh Hamilton on the active roster Monday, per Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Hamilton will join his teammates in Cleveland on Sunday night as they prepare for a three-game series with the Indians.

Wilson provided a comment from Rangers general manager Jon Daniels:

Hamilton has yet to appear in a MLB game in 2015 while recovering from shoulder surgery and dealing with his acrimonious exit from the Los Angeles Angels.

He has played 12 games for Texas’ Double-A and Triple-A affiliates. ESPN Stats & Info posted his notable numbers from his minor league stint:

Last Thursday, Rangers manager Jeff Banister gave an interview with KRLD-FM 105.3 in Dallas, via the Dallas Morning News, about the 34-year-old’s potential return to the majors. Banister said the big thing regarding Hamilton was being able to play nine innings on a nightly basis:

The timetable [for his return] is about the same, really. From everything from all of the evaluations that I get I’m getting that he feels good, feels better. The timing is really close, the at bats have been good, the attitude has been exceptional down there with the interaction with the fans. Really, the back-to-back nine inning games are what we need him to pull through and to come out on the other side healthy, in shape and ready to go.

Given everything that has happened, expectations for Hamilton this year will be tempered. There’s a big question as to how he’ll perform after the shoulder surgery, not to mention he looked little like the slugger who captured the 2010 Most Valuable Player Award before the shoulder injury.

Texas will hope that Hamilton can at least provide something positive as the team tries to get back to .500. As of Saturday night, the Rangers have a 12.6 percent chance to make the playoffs, according to Baseball Prospectus, so they’ve already dug themselves into a hole to start the 2015 campaign.

Hamilton can’t single-handedly turn the season around, but he could provide a spark for an offense that ranks 10th in home runs (43) and is tied for 17th in slugging percentage (.388).

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Josh Hamilton Injury: Updates on Rangers OF’s Shoulder and Recovery

Josh Hamilton‘s on-field return with the Texas Rangers is inching closer. The 2010 American League MVP has started playing games in extended spring training, with a rehab assignment on the horizon. 

Continue for updates.  


Hamilton To Join Triple-A Round Rock

Friday, May 8

According to Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Hamilton will begin his rehab assignment with Triple-A Round Rock on Sunday. The report notes the slugger took part in an extended spring training game Friday in which the club found him to be ready for more advanced competition:

The left fielder played Friday in an extended spring game on his 11th day in Surprise, Ariz., and was deemed ready for a higher level of competition after going 1-for-5 with a three-run homer against Seattle. The Rangers have no set plan for how long Hamilton will be with Round Rock.

Rangers manager Jeff Banister is quoted in Wilson’s report as saying Hamilton’s rehab is “about him being in shape and having his legs underneath him and the ability to repeat daily how he feels.”

Hamilton is recovering from right shoulder surgery he had in February that would keep him out for six to eight weeks. He was still with the Los Angeles Angels at the time of the operation but was dealt back to Texas, where he played from 2008-12, on April 27. 

The 33-year-old has a well-documented past off the field, but staying on the field has been a problem as well due to injuries throughout his career. The Rangers know Hamilton as well as any team, so they are going to take their time with his rehab to ensure they get the best version of the former All-Star as he looks to reignite his career. 

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10 Biggest Takeaways from the First Month of MLB Action

Surprised yet?

You should be.

The first calendar month of the Major League Baseball season is behind us, and there was absolutely no shortage of stunning happenings during that time. From the supposed best team in baseball literally kicking away wins to one of the game’s biggest stars involved in a disturbing soap opera, the game has provided plenty of early barstool chatter.

While some of these surprises can be dismissed as small-sample-size oddities—the Houston Astros in first place and Clayton Kershaw’s 3.73 ERA among them—there are others that will have relevant impacts for a significant portion of the summer. Ignoring them would be to scoff at the most important dealings of the early season.

We shall not scoff here. Instead, we will explore them, focusing on events and trends that not only shaped the first month but can continue to mold how the rest of the season unfolds.

Begin Slideshow


Josh Hamilton to Rangers: Takeaways from OF’s Press Conference After Trade

Outfielder Josh Hamilton held a press conference Monday to discuss being traded from the Los Angeles Angels to the Texas Rangers, his drug and alcohol relapse and his future with the Rangers and beyond baseball.     

Hamilton played for the Rangers from 2008 to 2012 and seemed excited about his return to the Lone Star State, per Fox Sports: MLB:

Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com passed along some quotes from Hamilton indicating that he will be more comfortable back with Texas than he was as a member of the Angels, while Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram noted that Hamilton expects a warmer welcome from Rangers fans than those in Los Angeles:

Hamilton’s time in Los Angeles did not go according to plan, as he struggled both on and off the field. He only played in 89 games in the 2014 season and hit .263 with 10 home runs and 44 RBI. Off-field concerns also contributed to the Angels’ decision to trade him. He relapsed in his recovery from drug and alcohol addiction during the past offseason. 

Angels owner Arte Moreno suggested in early April that certain language in Hamilton’s contract protected the team in the face of a relapse. Hamilton responded to that claim at his press conference, per Wilson and Gonzalez:

Ideally, Hamilton’s attention will now turn back to the field with the Rangers. Hamilton was a five-time All-Star in Texas, winning the 2010 American League MVP. He also helped the team reach back-to-back World Series in 2010 and 2011. 

Gonzalez passed along Hamilton’s encouraging words for Rangers fans:

T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com noted that Hamilton is on the disabled list while recovering from offseason shoulder surgery, and he is expected to go to Arizona for a rehab program at the Rangers’ spring training facility. From there, he will likely go on a minor league rehab assignment for several games before realistically reaching the major league level.

Texas could certainly use him, considering the team is dead last in the majors in team batting average entering play Monday. 

There is also life after baseball to take into account with Hamilton, which he addressed during the press conference, per Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times and Gonzalez:

There are plenty of people who hope Hamilton is fine after baseball is over.

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Josh Hamilton to Rangers: Latest Trade Details, Reaction and Analysis

After a little over two seasons, Josh Hamilton is no longer a member of the Los Angeles Angels.

The team announced Monday that it has agreed to trade Hamilton to the Texas Rangers:

Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal provided more details on the trade:

On Tuesday, Jon Morosi of CBS Sports broke down the financial details of the deal:

The Rangers posted the following on Twitter announcing the news:

Angels general manager Jerry Dipoto issued a statement, via Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com:

Gonzalez passed along comments from Hamilton during his press conference:

Sports Illustrated‘s Michael McCann first reported that Hamilton’s time with the Angels was drawing to a close. Rosenthal added that a trade was in the works, with the Rangers as the potential suitor, per MLB.com’s TR Sullivan and ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick.    

Grantland’s Jonah Keri is already envisioning ways Hamilton can get revenge on Angels owner Arte Moreno:

According to Fox Sports’ Jon Morosi, Hamilton is nearing a return to the field:

The 33-year-old outfielder signed a five-year, $125 million deal with the Angels in 2012. Since then, he largely disappointed in Los Angeles, batting .255 with 31 home runs and 123 runs batted in in 240 games. He looked like a shadow of the player who captured the 2010 American League MVP Award with the Texas Rangers.

Hamilton’s relationship with the Angels took a turn for the worse this past offseason, following a reported drug relapse.

An arbitrator ruled MLB couldn’t punish Hamilton under the joint drug program it has with the MLB Players Association. The Angels’ front office wasn’t shy about voicing its displeasure with the decision.

“It defies logic that Josh’s reported behavior is not a violation of his drug program,” team president John Carpino said, per Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times.

Moreno added that language in Hamilton’s contract protected the team should the five-time All-Star relapse, a claim the players’ union denied, per Rosenthal.

Angels starting pitcher C.J. Wilson came to his teammate’s defense, per Pedro Moura of the Orange County Register:

After a while, it became clear Hamilton’s partnership with the Angels had been irreparably damaged. It was only a matter of time before he was bought out, released outright or traded.

Hamilton played only 89 games last year and has missed the first part of the 2015 season while recovering from shoulder surgery he had in February. He’s played in 140-plus regular-season games just three times in an eight-year career.

There’s also his noticeable decline. Hamilton’s batting average dropped three years in a row after the 2010 season, while his slugging percentage fell from .577 in 2012 to .432 in 2013. Add in the fact that he’s owed another $60 million between 2016 and 2017, and few players have such a toxic combination of an unwieldy salary with dwindling on-field returns.

Perhaps a change of scenery is exactly what Hamilton needs, though, and the Rangers may be just the franchise to help him regain some of what made him one of the best hitters in the game. Hamilton’s best years came in Texas, and he’ll likely have the fanbase firmly behind him upon his return.

The Rangers have a lot of aging veterans on the squad, and their window for success is closing fast. Expecting to see Hamilton circa 2010 is unrealistic, but if he can produce something a little better than his 2013 numbers (.250 AVG, 21 HR, 79 RBI), Texas might have an offensive spark who can help the team move up the standings in a competitive American League West.

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Josh Hamilton’s Rangers Reunion Offers Happy Homecoming After Toxic Angels Saga

They say you can’t go home again. Josh Hamilton is hoping they’re wrong.

In early February, Hamilton underwent shoulder surgery. Then, a few weeks later, he admitted he’d “suffered a relapse in his battle with substance abuse,” as Mike DiGiovanna and Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times put it. 

He’s yet to play a game for the Los Angeles Angels this season, and now he’s leaving town. His destination? Arlington, Texas.

Yes, as CBSSports.com’s Jon Heyman confirmed, the Texas Rangers have agreed to acquire Hamilton from the Angels, bringing the controversial outfielder back to where it all began.

OK, technically Hamilton made his big league debut with the Cincinnati Reds in 2007, but his best years came in a Rangers uniform. 

Texas is where he made five straight All-Star appearances, won an American League MVP Award in 2010 and guided the Rangers to two consecutive World Series appearances.

Hamilton parlayed his Lone Star success into a five-year, $125 million contract with the Angels prior to the 2013 season. His production dipped significantly in the deal’s first year, but he did hit 21 home runs and appear in 151 games.

Last season, the wheels truly came off. The 33-year-old missed nearly half the season to injury and, while he returned for the division series against the Kansas City Royals, he went hitless in 13 at-bats as the Angels were swept.

The relapse revelation, however, was a backbreaker for his relationship with the Halos.

Hamilton chronicled his drug and alcohol abuse in a 2010 autobiography titled Beyond Belief. The book’s subtitle, “Finding the strength to come back,” could also apply to this next chapter of his career.

A former No. 1 overall pick, Hamilton has always had the raw talent to be an elite player. He’s moving out of his prime years, and injuries have taken their toll, but a Texas rebirth seems possible, if not probable.

At the very least, a change of scenery will allow Hamilton to distance himself from the toxic saga that’s played out over the past two months, as MLB mulled the possibility of a suspension and the Angels front office implied it might be able to void his contract.

In the end, an outside arbitrator ruled the league could not take action and the contract stood, as Sports Illustrated‘s Michael McCann reported. 

The damage, though, was done. One way or another, it was clear Hamilton and the Angels’ rocky marriage had to end. The only problem: It’s no simple feat to move a declining veteran with an injury history, personal baggage and three years and $83 million left on the ledger.

Enter the Rangers, who will shell out about $15 million, with Los Angeles picking up the rest, per Yahoo Sports‘ Jeff Passan. 

Passan characterizes Hamilton’s departure from Texas after the 2012 season as “bitter.” USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale conjured the outfielder’s comments from when that time, when he declared Arlington was “not a true baseball town.”

Apparently there was enough love left to make a reunion enticing, or at least palatable. 

“He was here before, so we know him,” Rangers third baseman Adrian Beltre said after news of the impending deal broke, per Evan Grant of The Dallas Morning News. “If he can help us win games, I’m open to it.”

After a disappointing, snake-bitten 2014 season, the Rangers are again mired under .500. This is a team in search of a spark.

Can Hamilton provide it? We won’t know until the shoulder heals, and he returns to the field. A cynic could certainly find plenty of reasons to assume the worst. Steamer projects a pedestrian .245/.309/.409 slash line, per FanGraphs.

Then again, Hamilton has risen from the ashes before.

Last February, the Los Angeles Times‘ DiGiovanna reported there was talk of turning Hamilton’s story into a movie. A script had been written, and Casey Affleck was attached to direct. 

Asked about it, Hamilton offered a curiously prescient answer.

It’s set up pretty good, isn’t it?” he said. “And the story is not close to being over.”

The question now is whether it’ll have a happy ending.

 

All statistics current as of April 24 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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Josh Hamilton Trade Rumors: Rangers Reportedly Working on Deal for Angels Star

Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim outfielder Josh Hamilton is at the center of trade rumors, as it looks like his tenure with the organization is set to come to a close. 

Continue for updates.


Multiple Parties Involved in Potential Hamilton Trade to Rangers

Saturday, April 25

Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal broke down the specific parties involved in a potential Hamilton trade between the Angels and Rangers:

On April 24, Jon Heyman of CBS Sports reported that the deal sending Hamilton to Texas is done except for a few ancillary details. Heyman added that it could take a few days to iron out the final details. However, Rosenthal cautioned that the deal could still fall apart.

Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports tweeted that the Rangers are expected to pay around $15 million of Hamilton’s remaining salary.

Rosenthal first reported a deal was in the works.

Evan Grant of The Dallas Morning News broke down the details of the possible deal:

It will be a complicated deal, in which the Rangers acquire Hamilton and a significant amount of cash from Los Angeles in exchange for Hamilton’s rights. There will be no player going back to the Angels. While Hamilton is owed about $80 million through 2017 by the Angels, the Rangers’ cash outlay amounts to a token amount, according to a source.

Because of the money involved and Hamilton’s circumstances, details are still being finalized, but the deal could be announced as early as Saturday. Hamilton, however, probably would not play until sometime in early to mid-May since he’s had no spring training.

Jon Morosi of Fox Sports pointed out that there could be a number of pieces involved in an impending swap:

However, Rosenthal added that the Rangers won’t be sending players the other way:

Hamilton admitted in February that he relapsed in his battle with substance abuse. The 33-year-old avoided league punishment after an arbitrator was needed to break a tie among a four-person treatment board created by baseball’s joint drug program.

Angels owner Arte Moreno implied that there was language in Hamilton’s contract that protected the team in case Hamilton relapsed. Michael McCann of Sports Illustrated discussed the situation in light of the trade rumors and Moreno’s claims:

Team officials, including owner Arte Moreno and general manager Jerry DiPoto, appear displeased by Hamilton’s self-reported relapse in February and a subsequent decision by an arbitrator that Major League Baseball cannot punish Hamilton. The Angels might also be skeptical that Hamilton, who underperformed at the plate during the 2013 and ’14 seasons, will regain the hitting stroke that made him one of the most feared hitters in baseball from ’08 to ’12. …

… But an industry source tells SI.com that Hamilton’s contract does not contain any language that would make it easier for the Angels to void the contract. … The MLBPA is most concerned with preventing the creation of a precedent whereby teams can readily convert guaranteed contracts into non-guaranteed contracts.

In total, the Angels owe Hamilton $83 million for the last three seasons of his original five-year, $125 million contract that he signed after the 2012 season, per ESPN.com.

Hamilton is yet to play a game for the Angels this year and appeared in only 89 games for the team during the 2014 campaign. He hit .263 with 10 home runs and 44 RBI, which was a far cry from his 2010 American League MVP season when he hit .359 with 32 home runs and 100 RBI for the Rangers in 133 games.

Hamilton played for Texas from 2008-2012 and was one of the most feared hitters in all of baseball. He hit 142 home runs during that span. 

Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram provided an interesting update on the Rangers’ evolving position on a reunion with Hamilton after the reports surfaced:

The Rangers are off to a disappointing 6-9 start and sit in last place in the American League West as of Friday. While Hamilton has not appeared to be the player who dominated in Texas for quite some time, the Rangers could use another power bat in the middle of their lineup.

Only Adrian Beltre and Robinson Chirinos have more than a single home run on the season, and they both have two.

Perhaps a change of scenery to the place where he played the best baseball of his career will help Hamilton tap into the power surge fans saw when he was with the Rangers.

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