Tag: Los Angeles Angels

Albert Pujols’ Health Is Critical to the Angels’ Postseason Hopes

Albert Pujols’ discomfort was mild, but it was enough to cause serious concern. 

When the future-Hall of Fame first baseman grabbed his left hamstring Wednesday night, the Los Angeles Angels’ panic needle moved, even if they would not admit it publicly. And when he had to be removed from that game and missed the following two, it undoubtedly brought on worry.

With Josh Hamilton removed from the Angels’ current situation and with their offense showing only whimpers of life, Pujols’ health is now essential to any success the team might have, and, in turn, their postseason hopes.

Even though he is struggling to find an offensive groove, Pujols’ presence in the fat part of the Angels’ lineup is still critical, since it appears the team’s silent offseason will spill over into the July trade deadline. That means outside help is not on the way for a team that is 11-14 partly because of a roster that sits near the bottom of the majors in several offensive categories.

“We didn’t have a good series offensively …,” manager Mike Scioscia told reporters after the San Francisco Giants swept the Angels over the weekend, a series in which they hit .168. “We’re still trying to get some groupings that work. Seems like couple guys show some signs, then slide back a little bit, but we’re going to find it.”

Pujols is clearly not alone on the list of the team’s struggling hitters. The Angels are 28th in the majors in batting average (.224), 27th in OBP (.289), 28th in slugging percentage (.339), 29th in OPS (.628) and 27th in doubles (32). They also have scored three or fewer runs in 14 of their 25 games, including being shut out Sunday. 

This coming from an offense that led the majors in runs last season, and from a team that won a major league-best 98 games last year.

While the pitching has not helped much—the rotation’s 4.26 ERA is 20th in the majors—the offense has been bad over a large enough sample that it has to be a major concern by now.

“It’s just a stretch where we haven’t hit to our capability,” catcher Chris Iannetta said to Jeff Fletcher of The Orange County Register. “I don’t think it’s going to last all year… I think it’s going to turn around. Get in a groove, catch fire. We’ll start swinging it better.”

Pujols has also had enough plate appearances that his numbers show more significance than just a brief slump. He is hitting .212/.287/.388 with a .675 OPS in 94 plate appearances. Since returning from the hamstring discomfort, Pujols is 2-for-8 with a mammoth home run.

Going into Monday, Pujols’ line-drive rate was 13.9 percent, the worst of his storied career. The American League average was 20.7 percent before the start of Monday’s games, according to FanGraphs.

Pujols went into Monday seeing 40.1 percent of pitches thrown to him ending up within the strike zone, according to Baseball Info Solutions (via FanGraphs). That number would by far be a career low. Also, Pujols was swinging at 44.6 percent of all pitches, his lowest mark since 2010.

Common sense would tell us line drives are more likely to fall for hits. It also says it is more difficult for a hitter to smack a line drive if the pitch is out of the zone. So far, it appears that is one of Pujols’ negative trends through the season’s first month.

Despite those troubling tendencies, the Angels still need him healthy and in the lineup. As the team’s No 3 hitter, he has been sandwiched between No. 2 hitter Mike Trout and a flurry of ineffective cleanup hitters. However, Pujols’ brief injury caused Scioscia to move leadoff hitter Kole Calhoun into the No. 4 spot, and he has remained there for the two games since Pujols returned. 

Calhoun is hitting .309/.385/.469 with an .854 OPS. Aside from Trout, he has been the team’s best hitter. Because of that, Calhoun could stay in that new place as long as Erick Aybar can produce from the leadoff spot, although he’s hit .148/.207/.185 from there in seven games this season.

“If the whole lineup makes more sense with Kole out of the leadoff position, we’ll do it, but I don’t know if we’re at that point right now,” Scioscia told reporters Saturday.

Calhoun’s spot in the order would matter much less if the rest of the lineup remembered how to reach base, and that includes Pujols. When he is producing, he is capable of masking the non-production of others because of his ability to draw walks and club extra-base hits.

Pujols showed last season he is still able to do those things, albeit at a declining level from what he was before signing with the Angles four seasons ago. Regardless of where he is at in his career, Pujols is still a big enough piece to the Angels’ puzzle that he has to be healthy and productive for them to accomplish their goals.

If neither happens, the Angles might find themselves home for the playoffs for the third time in Pujols’ four years with the club.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Mike Trout’s New Aggressive Approach Is Making Baseball’s Best Even Better

There’s a new Mike Trout roaming the baseball landscape early in 2015. And so far, he looks suspiciously like the old Mike Trout, who most everyone knew and loved as the game’s best player.

That’s the takeaway you get when looking at Trout’s numbers. In 19 games, the Los Angeles Angels Angels center fielder is slashing .318/.432/.545 with four home runs, five stolen bases and a .978 OPS.

Among the game’s elite players, numbers like these place Trout about where you’d expect. On Monday morning, he ranked in the top 10 in the American League in adjusted OPS and behind only three other players in Wins Above Replacement.

Because Trout led everyone in adjusted OPS and WAR between 2012 and 2014, it might be tempting to say his current positions in both categories were inevitable. But if you rack your brain, you’ll remember that Trout being his usual self in 2015 wasn’t supposed to be a sure thing.

Though Trout captured an overdue MVP award in 2014, it was a down season by his standards. His average fell from the mid-.320s to just .287, and his OPS fell to .939 from .988 the previous season. He went from being “easily” baseball’s best player to “arguably” baseball’s best player.

After a year like that, it was clear that making an adjustment or two would be in Trout’s best interest. And that, naturally, brings us to where this “new” Mike Trout is coming from.

If you already know where we’re going, that’s either (a) because you can read headlines or (b) because Trout wasn’t keeping any secrets in spring training about what he wanted to do in 2015.

In February, Trout told Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times that one of his biggest goals for 2015 was cutting down on his strikeouts after leading the AL with 184 of them in 2014. When asked in early March to elaborate on his plan, Trout made a point about being more aggressive.

“Throughout my career, I’ve been taking,” he said. “I like to see pitches, but I’m going to get locked and loaded on the first pitch. If it’s in the zone, I’m going to take a hack at it.”

In theory, swinging at pitches that are good to hit instead of taking them makes perfect sense. And according to a person in the know, this was the right idea for Trout to pursue.

An advisor to an AL team told this to Anthony Castrovince of Sports on Earth: “The book on Trout is to get a first-pitch strike on him, because he usually takes on first pitches. … So what I want to know is what happens when he starts swinging at more first pitches. How does that change everything else?”

As far as that last question is concerned, Trout hinted at what he could do with more early swings with his spring performance. He hit .441 with a 1.362 OPS, numbers that, as he told Bob Nightengale of USA Today, had a lot to do with his newfound aggressive approach.

But now we’re in the regular season, and we don’t need to take his word for it about what’s behind his production anymore. We can see for ourselves.

Not surprisingly, what we can see is some pretty good stuff.

Trout is indeed being more aggressive. He’s doubled his first-pitch swing rate, going from 10.6 in 2014 to 21.0 this year. And according to FanGraphs, his overall swing rate is at a career-high 41.7 percent.

Now, you’d think that these extra swings would be leading to shorter, easier at-bats. But actually, the opposite has happened. Trout is working on a career-high rate of 4.52 pitches per plate appearance and, according to Baseball Savant, seeing more two-strike pitches than ever before.

But this isn’t to say Trout’s extra swings have been wasted. It just means we have to go back to something else he said during spring training.

As told to DiGiovanna: “Being aggressive on that first pitch is getting me ready to hit better than just taking.”

Or, translated: You can be a better hitter by swinging than you can by taking.

That Trout’s strikeout rate has dropped from an ugly 26.1 percent last year to a more reasonable 19.8 percent this year says this new outlook is working for him, and it’s no mirage. He has a career-low 5.7 swinging-strike rate, as well as a career-high 36.8 foul-ball percentage.

There’s no need to explain the value of a low whiff rate, but don’t underestimate the value of a high foul-ball rate. Many believe foul balls are a valuable skill, including former major leaguer Gabe Kapler:

That Trout has improved his whiff and foul-ball rates despite being more aggressive looks good enough on its own. But what can make these two strengths look even better is how they’re stemming largely from an area that had previously been a key weakness.

One of the worst-kept secrets in baseball in 2014 was how much Trout was struggling against high fastballs. He saw a lot of them, and Baseball Savant says he hit a career-low .113 against them.

In 2015, Trout is seeing even more high heat. But he’s handling it a lot better, as he’s 6-for-22 (.273) against the high hard stuff. That’s obviously a small sample, but there are good reasons for it. Though Trout has being similarly aggressive against high heat, his whiff and foul rates against it have improved dramatically:

As such, Trout’s aggressiveness hasn’t just helped him solve his strikeout problem. It’s also helped him take away the best weapon pitchers had against him in 2014. More so than ever before, he’s dictating his own at-bats.

And in a big-picture sense, it’s not hard to see how this is benefiting him.

Easily the biggest benefit of Trout’s new approach is something he hinted was coming: domination within the strike zone.

Given how much he killed pitches in the zone between 2012 and 2014 when he did swing, it was frustrating how infrequent Trout’s in-zone swings were. But so far in 2015, he’s drastically ramped up his in-zone swing rate (Z-Swing%) and, per Baseball Savant, is crushing in-zone pitches better than before:

Trout’s increased aggressiveness and production against in-zone pitches accounts for the bulk of his overall production. Just as important, though, is how this transition doesn’t come with the expected downside.

One thing you fear with hitters who are being more aggressive is that they might also be chasing more pitches outside the zone. But this hasn’t been the case with Trout. His chase rate (O-Swing%) hasn’t increased nearly as much as his zone rate (Zone%) has dropped:

When you mix good discipline and a small percentage of pitches in the zone like that, you’re going to walk a lot. So it has been with Trout, who’s working on a career-best 16.0 BB%.

Add it all up, and what we’re seeing in 2015 is Trout at his very best as a hitter.

By becoming more aggressive, Trout has been able to fix things that were ailing him in 2015. And by mashing in the strike zone and still maintaining enough discipline to take his walks, he’s enjoying the best of both worlds like never before.

Basically, he’s answering the challenge that was issued in 2014. The league sent a message that Trout was going to have to get better if he wanted to remain the best. He’s done that, and in the process, Trout has sent a message of his own:

How ’bout something a little harder next time?

 

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

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Josh Hamilton: Latest News, Rumors, Speculation on Star’s Future with Angels

Outfielder Josh Hamilton‘s future with the Los Angeles Angels is very much in question, but the two sides are in talks to reach some type of resolution.

Continue for updates.


Trade, Buyout Potentially on the Table

Saturday, April 18

Despite having yet to play a game in 2015, Hamilton has dominated headlines since it was revealed that he had a substance-abuse relapse during the offseason. Shortly around that time, Hamilton also filed for divorce from his wife, Katie, according to Naheed Rajwani of The Dallas Morning News. 

The 33-year-old slugger was not disciplined by Major League Baseball, but he is out as he continues to recover from a shoulder injury. Even when Hamilton is ready to play, though, the Angels may not welcome him back.

According to Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports, Los Angeles is looking into trading him:

That could be difficult due to Hamilton’s bloated contract, which is why buying him out is also a potential option, albeit a somewhat unlikely one:

Hamilton’s play dropped off last year, as he hit just .263 with 10 home runs and 44 RBI while missing nearly half the season, but the biggest concern may relate to his off-field issues.

With that said, Angels pitcher C.J. Wilson is confident Hamilton has moved past the relapse, per ESPN.com.

“I feel like he’s in a good place and he’s doing the right things,” Wilson said. “He’s going through the counseling stuff that’s good for him. I feel like he’s ready to go in that regard.”

There is no question that Hamilton’s lefty bat is a huge addition to the Angels lineup when he is healthy and playing up to his potential.

The organization seems to be hesitant to bring him back, though, which means it is possible Hamilton has played his last game for the Angels.

 

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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MLB Opening Day 2015: Key Takeaways from Baseball’s Opening Act

The beginning of April means millions of fans tune in for MLB Opening Day 2015, but what did we learn from the first day of meaningful baseball?

Some teams came out of the gate firing like the Boston Red Sox and Oakland Athletics. Both teams crushed their opponents, Philadelphia Phillies and Texas Rangers, with an eight-run shutout performance.

While some teams launched bombs over the outfield walls, others relied on their Aces paired with their bullpens to carry them to opening-day victory. Six teams successfully threw Opening Day shutouts this year.

Both Felix Hernandez and Johnny Cueto struck out 10 batters as their teams won their first game of the season.

Although the above mentions put in solid performances they were not the whole story. Lets take a look at the good, the bad and the funny from Opening Day. 

 

Trout vs. King Felix Part Two

Reigning MVP Mike Trout began the season just the way people expected, but the rest of his team did not follow suit as they fell 4-1 to the Seattle Mariners.

The 23-year-old star hit a home run to center field off Felix Hernandez in his first at-bat of the season Monday.

If this sounds familiar, that is because it is. Trout tagged King Felix for a home run last year in the outfielder’s first at-bat to jump-start his MVP season.

On top of the quick start at the plate, Trout also provided one of his vintage defensive plays by robbing Mariner’s first baseman Logan Morrison of a homer.

However, Hernandez had the last laugh on the day as Trout finished 1-4 from the plate with three strikeouts. The Mariners did not surrender another run on the day and Hernandez only gave up one more hit in his seven innings.

 

Return of Baseball’s Villain

After missing the entire 2014 season due to suspension, Alex Rodriguez returned to the New York Yankees as the biggest villain in baseball.

Villain? Apparently nobody told Yankees fans about the player’s past transgressions. Rodriguez enjoyed a strong ovation as he stepped up to the plate for his first at-bat of the season.

Rodriguez’s on-field performance was nothing to laud as he earned a single and a walk in his three plate appearances.

As the current face of steroids in baseball, his performances will be scrutinized all season, and he will be polarizing wherever the Yankees play.

Some Yankees fans held up signs spelling out “#Forg1v3” during his first at-bat since 2013, but opposing fans may not be so welcoming. 

 

Sometimes You Just Can’t Hold It

The start of the Major League Baseball season officially kicked off with the game between St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs on Sunday night, but the Cubs defeat was not the only bad part about the night for Chicago fans. 

The Cardinals won 3-0 over the Cubs behind a routinely strong pitching performance by Adam Wainwright, but the renovations to Wrigley Field took the main stage. The new construction is not complete, leaving the bathroom situation at the stadium pretty dire.

The lines for the restrooms left fans waiting 30 minutes or more, and this wait appeared to lower the standard for what qualifies as a toilet.

Some fans opted to relieve themselves at their own convenience through the use of plastic cups. Then these cups were left in corners of the concourse.

There will be plenty of 3-0 games this season, but the Cubs will hope the organization and sanitation failure of Opening Day does not repeat themselves. In order to prevent this, there will be portable toilets installed at the stadium to help make up for the lost amenities until the renovations are finished in late May, according to a report by the Chicago Tribune.

The 2015 Opening Day churned out major headlines all day, bypassing both the San Francisco Giants and Kansas City Royals. Not often does conversation of the previous World Series champs title defense fall by the wayside.

If the rest of the regular season serves to be just as entertaining as the Opening Day, it should be an entertaining season.

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Josh Hamilton’s Free Pass Impacts Angels, Helps Set Stage for Bloody CBA Battle

For a while there, it was possible that Josh Hamilton would not be seen on a Major League Baseball diamond in 2015.

Now we know he’ll be playing ball as soon as he can, and that has ramifications for the Los Angeles Angels and, eventually, for MLB and the MLB Players Association.

Various outlets, including ESPN, reported in late February that Hamilton had suffered a relapse earlier in the offseason, which was said to involve cocaine and alcohol. In light of the 33-year-old’s history with substance abuse, the word a few weeks back was that a yearlong suspension was in play.

That won’t be happening. MLB announced Friday that an independent arbitrator ruled Hamilton will not be punished at all:

If for no other reason, this announcement is surprising for its timing. It’s only been a day since MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said in an MLB Network Radio interview (via Mike Oz of Yahoo Sports) that he expected a decision on Hamilton’s situation “shortly after” the season opens this Sunday.

But the real surprise? That Hamilton is getting off scot-free.

That seemed unlikely in light of how, unlike his alcohol relapses in 2009 and 2012, Hamilton’s latest relapse involved cocaine. That’s forbidden as a drug of abuse in baseball’s Joint Drug Agreement.

There was also Hamilton’s past to consider. As Nathaniel Grow noted at FanGraphs, MLB hypothetically had grounds to treat Hamilton’s latest relapse as the fifth offense of the drug treatment program that he first entered in 2003. As such, it did indeed have grounds to consider a suspension as long as a year.

But while all of this is worth acknowledging, let’s be real. It may be surprising that Hamilton is getting a free pass, but it’s not outrageous.

Morally speaking, letting Hamilton off the hook is the right call. There were many who argued as much when word of his relapse first came out, and their arguments had an overarching message.

Hamilton’s relapse was the latest reminder that he’s an addict. If the idea is to help addicts get over their addiction, retribution isn’t going to get you anywhere. Helping them is more effective, not to mention more compassionate.

Not punishing Hamilton is also the right call from a practical perspective. This case hinged on the arbitrator’s interpretation of Section 4(C) of the Joint Drug Agreement, which Craig Calcaterra of Hardball Talk summed up like so:

Under that section, a player is said to have committed a violation if the player (a) refuses to submit to evaluations and followup tests; (b) “consistently fails to participate in mandatory sessions with his assigned health care professional”; (c) his health care professional tells Major League Baseball that the player is not cooperating; or (d) the player tests positive for a drug of abuse.

As Calcaterra noted, none of these applied to Hamilton. Baseball didn’t catch him either in the act or through a positive test. What happened instead was he gave himself up and has been cooperating with MLB ever since.

As a result, he’ll get to play baseball in 2015. And while that’s news that doesn’t necessarily make the Angels’ year, it should at least help them on the field.

Hamilton is most certainly not the player he once was. After averaging a .912 OPS and around 30 homers a season between 2008 and 2012, he has only a .741 OPS with 31 home runs in the first two campaigns of his five-year, $125 million contract with the Angels.

He’s also coming off of a season in which injuries limited him to 89 games, and his health woes are ongoing. He had surgery on his right shoulder in early February, and the team put his recovery period around 12 weeks. He’s going to miss at least the first month of the 2015 season.

But as dire as Hamilton’s situation appears, he can still help.

Though his bat has declined mightily in the last two seasons, the 110 OPS+ he’s racked up qualifies him as an above-average hitter. And even if the Angels can’t or don’t want to use him as an everyday player, his recent track record against right-handed pitching says he would actually make a solid platoon player.

The Angels are already loaded with quality hitters even without Hamilton, of course. But because they have the look of a team that will need to hit a lot to make up for a pedestrian pitching staff, having even so much as an extra part-time bat can’t hurt their quest for a second straight AL West title.

As for Hamilton’s relationship with the Angels, it seems the repair work that needs to be done there goes beyond whatever he can do on the field.

The Angels don’t sound thrilled about Friday’s ruling. Though general manager Jerry Dipoto vowed in a statement issued on the team’s official website to do “everything possible to assure he receives proper help for himself and for the well-being of his family,” Dipoto also made it clear they “have serious concerns about Josh’s conduct, health and behavior and we are disappointed that he has broken an important commitment which he made to himself, his family, his teammates and our fans.”

That doesn’t sound like a team brimming with relief. That sounds like a team that was already fed up and is now annoyed that it’s missing out on saving some money on a suspension.

Per Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com, here’s Angels president John Carpino to drive the point home:

This recalls the conversation everyone was having about Hamilton before news of his shoulder surgery and relapse hit. Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports and Gonzalez both opined that him actually serving out the three remaining years of his contract with the Angels was unlikely.

That sounded reasonable at the time. It sounds even more reasonable now. The bridge between Hamilton and the Angels already appeared to be weakening. After the Angels’ remarks about Hamilton’s suspension, you can practically hear it cracking.

Speaking of which, another thing you can hear cracking right now are the knuckles of Manfred and MLBPA Executive Director Tony Clark. Not that they needed another battle, but now they have one to fight when the war over the next collective bargaining agreement begins, a pact that expires Dec. 1, 2016.

MLB indicated as much in its initial statement when it vowed to “seek to address deficiencies in the manner in which drugs of abuse are addressed under the program in the collective bargaining process.” If the outcome of Hamilton’s case is any indication, that points toward the league pursuing more precise language that puts the final decision in similar situations squarely in the hands of the commissioner and the commissioner alone.

That would mean a big fight for Clark to go with the other big fights he’s already set for.

Those include a revision of the service time rules that the union (rightfully) thinks have screwed over Kris Bryant and so many other young players. They also include possible changes to the qualifying offer system, and a dispute over the players’ share of league revenue. As Grow noted at FanGraphs, player salaries have gone from 56 percent of the league’s revenue in 2002 to just 38 percent last year.

Surprising though it was, the decision to not punish Hamilton is justified from a moral and practical standpoint. Though it’s likely to forever be referred to as “controversial,” the arbitrator made the right call.

But make no mistake, real controversies are coming in the fallout. Though things will die down when the focus shifts to baseball upon Hamilton’s return, shortly after is when Friday’s decision figures to spur heated action in the Angels front office and in the offices of both Manfred and Clark.

The league has a decision on Hamilton’s fate, but this saga isn’t over.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.

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Josh Hamilton Won’t Be Suspended by MLB: Latest Details, Comments, Reaction

Los Angeles Angels outfielder Josh Hamilton will not be suspended for his substance abuse missteps in the offseason, according to a statement from Major League Baseball:

Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports reported the Angels’ statement on MLB‘s decision:

MLB.com’s Alden Gonzalez had more from Angels president John Carpino:

CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman noted that credit for Hamilton escaping discipline belongs to the MLB Players Association:

Reports of a potential punishment first began surfacing after Hamilton met with MLB officials on Feb. 25. A source told Rosenthal the meeting concerned a disciplinary issue “worse” than performance-enhancing drugs. Heyman later confirmed with a source that Hamilton admitted to officials he suffered a relapse with cocaine.

The top overall pick in the 1999 MLB draft by Tampa Bay, Hamilton never made the majors with the Rays due to a number of off-field problems—most notably drug addiction. After bouncing in and out of the Tampa Bay system for years, he eventually rejuvenated his career after Cincinnati, via the Chicago Cubs, acquired him in the 2006 Rule 5 draft.

After a year with the Reds, Hamilton spent five seasons in Texas, emerging as one of baseball’s best hitters. He won the 2010 AL MVP, made the All-Star team five times and belted 100 home runs over his final three campaigns with the Rangers. In 2012, Hamilton addressed a relapse with alcohol related to a family matter.

The Angels signed Hamilton to a $125 million contract before the 2013 season. The move has largely been a disappointment, with Hamilton hitting only 31 home runs his first two seasons in Los Angeles. Injury limited him to 89 games last season.

Hamilton underwent offseason shoulder surgery, and his status is unclear for the beginning of the 2015 regular season. However, ESPN’s Jerry Crasnick reported that, “Hamilton is ‘working hard’ to get back on field, sources say. But there’s no specific timetable for his return.”

It’s hard to tell exactly when Hamilton will be ready to take the field for the Angels, but the team now knows that he’ll be able to play once his shoulder heals. That provides a boost for a team already considered amongst MLB’s biggest contenders.

 

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Healthy and Locked In, Albert Pujols Looks Ready to Deliver for Angels

Watch out, American League. Albert Pujols is coming for you.

That’s what he and the Los Angeles Angels would have everyone believe, anyway. And as far as threats go, this one appears credible.

If you haven’t been paying attention, you’ve missed Pujols catch fire. The 35-year-old slugger came into Friday’s action with six hits in his last 18 at-bats, including four dingers (take that, The Associated Press) and a double. This hot stretched upped his spring average to .326, and his spring OPS to .968.

Now, this isn’t totally out of left field. As Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com was quick to note, it’s not unlike Pujols to punish the ball in spring training. As you’d expect for a guy with a .317 career average and 520 career home runs, it’s long been a hobby of his.

But what Pujols is doing this spring is an encouraging follow-up to what happened in 2014. Though he did post a respectable .790 OPS with 28 home runs, he sputtered to the tune of a .745 OPS over his final 127 games

He looks poised to improve greatly on that, and those who are watching up close say it’s no accident. The Angels shared highlights of Pujols’ on-field performance:

As Angels hitting coach Don Baylor told Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times“He’s driving off his back leg, swinging with conviction and hitting balls out on a line. He could lead the league in runs batted in because he’s swinging the bat a lot better this spring than he did last spring.”

And Angels third baseman David Freese told Gonzalez: “He looks strong right now. His lower half looks strong; as strong as I’ve seen it over the last few years, watching him and obviously seeing it in person. I think he’s taking care of himself.”

And Angels shortstop Erick Aybar told Gonzalez: “You could tell the difference when you’re in good health, and he is right now.”

There might also be a mental-health component at play. Go and read what Tim Brown of Yahoo Sports has to say about Pujols and you’ll come away believing that he’s in a much better frame of mind than he was heading into more recent seasons.

This is where we acknowledge that this may be nothing more than standard spring training fluff. Since nobody is broken down yet, it’s easy to look healthy in spring training. And as good as Pujols has looked, Baseball-Reference.com rates the quality of the competition he’s faced below MLB-caliber.

However, there might be something to the idea of a rejuvenated Pujols. Health has a lot to do with why the only two sub-.800 OPS seasons of his career have come in the last two, as he was coming off right knee surgery in 2013 and had to rehab from plantar fasciitis after the season. After playing in 159 games in 2014, he got to enjoy a normal offseason for the first time in two years.

If that means that Pujols indeed has his legs under him for the first time in a few years, there are darn good reasons for the competition to be worried.

When you look at what’s gone wrong with Pujols in the last two seasons, the thing that immediately stands out is that his power just hasn’t been the same. 

Take, for example, his isolated slugging. As FanGraphs can show, the .179 ISO he posted in his injury-wrecked 2013 season was the worst of his career. And even in his bounce-back 2014, his ISO only rose to .194. 

And even a modest rise like that looks misleading when we focus on the average distance of Pujols’ batted balls. Courtesy of BaseballHeatMaps.com, here’s some data:

As recently as five years ago, Pujols was routinely hitting balls farther than 300 feet. But there was a notable decline in his first year in Anaheim, and he actually hit a new low in 2014, despite his increased power production.

Sure, being old doesn’t help. But not having a strong base to hit off could also feed into a decline like that. If Pujols’ lower half is as healthy as he and others say it is, then it really wouldn’t be that surprising to see him put a charge into the ball more regularly in 2015.

The result could very well be him pushing his isolated power north of .200 again. Practically speaking, that could mean a run at 30-35 home runs instead of 25-30 home runs.

But there’s another potential benefit of Pujols having a strong base underneath him. In addition to improved power, it could lead to improved consistency.

That Pujols posted the lowest on-base percentage of his career (.324) is testament enough to how he struggled with consistency in 2014. A big reason why has to do with how teams had him figured out.

As Gonzalez noted in February, Pujols was shifted to pull 224 times in 2014. That’s over 30 percent of his 695 plate appearances, which is an absurd rate for a right-handed hitter.

But it’s justified in Pujols’ case. According to FanGraphs, a reasonable 54.4 percent of his career batted balls to his pull side were on the ground before 2014. But in 2014, 63.2 percent of his batted balls to his pull side were on the ground.

That can happen when a guy doesn’t have strong legs underneath him. He’s forced to use more upper-body strength, and that can increase the risk of a hitter rolling over on pitches.

Pujols did a lot of that in 2014, as BaseballSavant.com can show he hit a career-high number of pitches away from him on the ground to the left side. And with so many shifts and so many ground balls, it’s no wonder he only had a .250 average on balls in play to his pull side.

As told by Gonzalez, the Angels haven’t seen as much of that this spring. What they’ve seen instead is Pujols regularly hitting the ball to right field and with authority to boot. It’s hard to confirm that without data, but it’s definitely a portrait of a guy with a strong hitting base.

If Pujols keeps that up, it won’t be so easy to shift on him in 2015. That could allow him to complement his increased power with more base hits, thereby rescuing both his slugging and his on-base habit from downward spirals.

It bears repeating that this is all in theory. Glowing reviews of a guy’s appearance in spring training have been known to go “pluh” once the games start to count. And at Pujols’ age, the odds of him suffering that fate aren’t exactly small.

But then again, a guy who’s able to enjoy a normal offseason for the first time in two years would be healthy. And considering the guy in question, the result would be more power and less predictability.

So, the Angels darn well should be optimistic. Doubly so, in fact, as Pujols returning to something like his vintage self in 2015 would be a huge boost to their chances of authoring a worthy follow-up to last year’s 98-win effort.

What made the Angels tick in 2014 was their offense, as they finished seventh in OPS at .728 and first in runs with 773. But with Howie Kendrick gone via trade and Josh Hamilton potentially missing much of 2015 due to injury and a suspension, repeating last year’s dominant offensive effort figured to be no easy feat if Pujols could only duplicate his good-not-great 2014 season.

So, you could put it this way: By being whole again, Pujols may be able to make the Angels’ offense whole again. Good for them and bad for all those playing against them in 2015.

Given that Pujols is 35 and we’re still only in spring training, this is no promise. It is, however, a warning worth heeding.

 

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

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With Lessons of Game’s Greats, Mike Trout Poised for Move from MVP to MLB Icon

TEMPE, Ariz. — How did Mike Trout celebrate his Most Valuable Player award?

With a trip to the hospital and an IV hookup. Followed by a week on the couch, sick as he can ever remember.

So the takeaway is, as the celebrated center fielder moves forward as the leader of the Angels and is cemented as one of the game’s post-Derek Jeter pillars, a winter virus finally did what few pitchers have been able to accomplish.

It stopped this man of perpetual motion in his tracks.

“I didn’t get off the couch for a week,” says Trout, who was forced to call in sick to the New York Baseball Writers’ Association of America dinner in late January, where he was supposed to accept his award. “Usually, I can’t sit on a couch longer than 25 or 30 minutes. I like to move around, do stuff, be outside. It put me on the couch for a week, not even getting up.

“Chicken noodle soup every day. Pedialyte. I still can feel it when I talk about it. I couldn’t lift my arms. My dad carried me to the car. It was weird.

“It was probably the first time ever I was down like that. I had no intention of getting up. I couldn’t get up.”

Now, with Opening Day less than two weeks away and another masterpiece waiting to be painted, good luck keeping him down.

Not only is Trout the majors’ best player, in just three full seasons he has ascended into that rarified ambassadorial role reserved for the Jeters and Cal Ripken Juniors and Ernie Banks of the world. Just as you want him at the plate with runners aboard and the game on the line, there are few others this side of Pittsburgh‘s Andrew McCutchen you would rather have pedaling the MLB brand, too.

“He’s 23 years old, and he’s a global brand,” says Eric Kay, the Angels’ longtime director of communications. “And yet, do you know who’s down the line signing autographs every single day? Mike Trout.”

Kay and his boss, Tim Mead, are pivotal gatekeepers, helping Trout manage the crushing demand for his time while making sure he’s rested and ready when 7:05 p.m. rolls around each night.

Already this spring, Trout has shot spots for, among others, Body Armor, Major League Baseball, MLB Network, Nike and Zepp, a company that specializes in analyzing swings in 3-D.

Trout breezes through it all as if he has been groomed for this moment his entire life. Which, in a way, he has.

His parents, Jeff and Debbie, clearly established a model foundation. Veteran Torii Hunter mentored Trout from the day he debuted in the majors at 19 in 2011 until Hunter signed with the Tigers in November 2012. Since then, Trout has grown especially close with teammate Albert Pujols, 35, who knows a few secrets about keeping both eyes on the ball when the world wants several pounds of superstar flesh.

“I have fun with all the stuff,” Trout says during a wide-ranging conversation with Bleacher Report. “If you go in there with a negative, bad attitude, like, ‘Oh, I’ve got to do a photo shoot today, or an interview,’ it’ll just make it longer and even worse.

“Every appearance I do, I try to have fun. It’s good for me, it’s good for the fans, and that’s all that matters.”

His smile comes easy and often. His zest for everything from belting a fastball to making a kid’s day with a selfie at the ballpark is genuine. Growing up in Millville, N.J., he idolized Jeter, and to this day, he sometimes will ask the Angels’ public relations specialists how they think Jeter would handle a particular situation.

Watching Trout and Jeter together at the All-Star Game in Minneapolis last July, in fact, it was difficult not to sense an unofficial passing of the torch.

“I don’t think people have to necessarily appoint someone to a particular position,” Jeter said then. “You know, if he continues to do the things that he’s done, he has his head on right, he plays the game the right way, he plays hard. The challenge for him is going to be like the challenge for most people, to be consistent year-in and year-out.

“But Mike’s going to be in a lot of All-Star Games. He already has the respect from players around the league.”

Says Trout: “For me, personally, being in same All-Star Game, his last one, him being my role model growing up, it was definitely special. Just to be able to talk to him, to have the locker next to him, to eat lunch with him, just being around him.

“It’s incredible what he [went] through, being in New York with media. You saw the cameras following him, the way he handle[d] himself on and off the field, always in the right spot, never in trouble.

“He’s definitely a person to plan your game around.”

In no small way, as seasons pass and generations change, Trout is the latest link in a lineage that traces back through time. In fact, the late Hall of Famer Kirby Puckett, of all people, is indirectly responsible for helping shape him as well. It was Puckett who taught Hunter to find the joy while fulfilling professional responsibilities and obligations each day.

“I remember my first year, I probably talked Torii Hunter’s ear off,” Trout says. “It was all in a good way. When you have a great teammate like that, it’s something special for the young guys.”

Hunter went out of his way to teach Trout, the veteran told the kid, because of, among other things, the lessons he learned from Puckett.

“He always brought that up,” Trout says. “Just having Torii, such an outgoing person. When you were going bad[ly], he would always bring you up. That’s the biggest thing. When you made a mistake, he was always there to pick you up.

“He could feel you out. When he knew you were struggling or down, he could bring out the best in you. And I don’t think I’ve ever seen him without a smile. I think that’s the biggest thing. Some people get down on themselves, but he’s always smiling. I was just very fortunate when I came up to have guys like that take me under their wing.”

Pujols, too. When the All-Star Game was in St. Louis in 2009, Pujols was still with the Cardinals, and he may as well have been the mayor of St. Louis for the week. He set an unofficial record for most promotional commitments in a 72-hour period. It’s a wonder he didn’t need to hibernate like a bear in the winter during that season’s second half.

“He definitely handles it well,” Trout says. “He’s told me some stuff, like, ‘You’re still out here playing a game, you have a job to do, that’s the first thing you’ve got to do. And all of the other stuff comes after that. You can find time for it. Spread it out.'”

So that’s what Trout has tried to do. Spread it out. Don’t overschedule endorsement commitments, commercial shoots, personal appearances and interviews. He shuts most of it down during the winter and schedules most of those things during spring training—sprinkled over time.

“Sometimes if you keep doing it over and over, you get tired,” Trout says. “It beats you up. It’s a long season, and you get to September and you’re exhausted.

“It doesn’t do anybody any good.”

Ask Pujols if he sees his younger self in Trout, and the first baseman quickly says no.

“He has better talent and better skills,” Pujols says. “He’s a better player.”

As for the advice he offers Trout in handling the burgeoning responsibilities of superstardom—advice both solicited and unsolicited—Pujols offers a nod to those who came before him. Much like Hunter, with Puckett. Pujols unspools a long list of those who helped him when he was younger, name-checking Mark McGwire, Mike Matheny, Placido Polanco, Reggie Sanders and the late Darryl Kile.

“My compadre, Polanco, took me under his wing when I wasn’t even on the roster yet,” Pujols says of his first spring training with St. Louis, in 2001. “My wife was pregnant at the time, and he opened his door to me. We lived with him for the first part of that spring training.

“You don’t just learn things. It takes a lot of guys who care about you. Trouty is a great kid. I treat him like my little brother.”

Which is interesting, because during our discussion a little earlier in the morning, Trout said that Pujols is “like a big brother” in looking out for him and helping him thrive both on and off the field as his career has launched toward the stratosphere.

Be in the right spot at the right time, Pujols tells Trout. Don’t get yourself in trouble. Take every at-bat like it’s your last at-bat.

“I’ve really gotten close with him,” Trout says. “He hooks me up with everything. Anything I need, he’s got a hook-up for. Shoes. A golf course—’I’ve got a guy over here.’ Dinner—’Have you been to that restaurant? No? I’ll get you hooked up.’

“It’s something special to have a guy like that in the clubhouse. Especially for young guys. In the blink of an eye, I think about it, four years ago he was sitting over there in the corner of the clubhouse, and I’m, like, ‘Oh, should I go up to him? Should I do this?’ But it’s pretty cool.”

On the field, Trout this summer wants to reduce his strikeouts, which crept up to uncomfortable (for him) levels last summer. He led the league with a career-high 184, up dramatically from his 136 in 2013. But he also led the league in runs (115), RBI (111) and total bases (338).

Though Trout’s strikeout rate tripled when he swung at pitches in the upper third of the strike zone as opposed to the bottom third, according to data from Baseball Prospectus, the adjustments he’s making this spring do not simply involve attempting to lay off of the high strike.

“I’ve been trying to attack the first pitch more,” he says. “I’m not just going up there taking the first pitch as in the past. If you’re laying a cookie down the middle, I’m going to hit it now. I’m comfortable hitting with two strikes. The last couple games in the spring, when I get myself loaded on that first pitch, it gets me locked in later in the at-bat.

“It’s been working. I’m just playing with it. I’m going to definitely try and take it into the regular season.”

One myth from last season is that Trout started chasing too many high pitches. It wasn’t exactly like he was getting himself out by swinging at balls: According to data from FanGraphs’ leaderboards, Trout’s swing rate of 24.5 percent on pitches outside the strike zone ranked 133rd in the majors. In other words, there were 132 players who swung at more pitches outside of the strike zone than did Trout.

“There are spots in games you need to take a first pitch,” he says. “If a guy can’t throw a strike, obviously, you want to be selective. But if I get the pitch I want, I’m going to swing at it.”

He also would like to run more this summer if possible. His 16 steals last year were significantly down from his AL-leading 49 in 2012 but, here again, credit goes to opposing pitchers and scouting reports designed to anchor him to the bag as much as possible. He’ll look for his spots, he says, but if opposing pitchers are 1.1, 1.2 seconds to the plate, it is humanly impossible to beat many throws to second.

Meanwhile, he continues to work diligently this spring, as he did last year, on improving his throwing arm. Of his five tools, arm strength and accuracy has been Trout’s weakest. Now? Angels bench coach Dino Ebel says that through sheer determination and hard work, Trout’s arm has gone from average last spring to above average now.

“He takes pride in that,” Ebel says. “He has a chip on his shoulder.”

It is a chip that keeps him both grounded and moving in the right direction.

“He is a very unique individual,” says Angels third baseman David Freese, who broke into the majors in St. Louis during Pujols’ glory years. “The way he can play the game the way he does, the way he interacts with fans, how genuine his smile is.

“There is nobody like him right now. I see the way he is when nobody’s looking. People see him on camera, fans. But even with the cameras off, he’s the same guy.”

Says Pujols: “He’s a really humble kid who doesn’t let success bother him. That’s the main thing. You can’t allow the game to change who you are.

“At the end of the day, we’re all going to walk out of this game, and how are we going to be remembered? As a great player who didn’t care about his teammates? Or as a guy who was a great player and a great teammate? Because in 10 or 20 years, there’s going to be another Mike Trout. There’s going to be another Albert Pujols.”

For now, though, with the curtain about to raise on 2015 and autographs waiting to be signed, there is only one Mike Trout. And now that he’s back up off of the couch, there’s one thing that is as close to a guarantee as there is in this game: The only thing sick about Trout this summer will be his numbers.

“It’s always a good feeling winning MVP,” says the man most in the industry predict will win several more before he’s finished. “When you go out, it’s definitely a lot different. People notice you.

“For me, it’s just about keeping my head on straight and staying humble. Since I was a kid, that’s what I was taught. I’ve got great family members and great teammates who help me do that.”

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

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What Should Major League Baseball Do with Josh Hamilton?

At the center of the latest controversy for Major League Baseball is an aging, embattled, injury-prone, high-priced former MVP. And for once, it isn’t Alex Rodriguez.

While Rodriguez is busy getting in at-bats and fielding as many questions as grounders in New York Yankees camp after being suspended for all of 2014 as part of the league’s investigation into Biogenesis, Josh Hamilton is embroiled in his own scandal. But it’s more than that.

For Hamilton, a 33-year-old with a well-known history of abusing alcohol and drugs, it’s a battle for his life and well-being even more than it is a battle for his baseball career.

The Los Angeles Angels outfielder has had an extremely difficult, trying offseason, first undergoing surgery to repair a shoulder that had been bothering him since the end of last year, and then—here’s where that controversy comes in—dealing with the aftereffects of the surprising (but not altogether shocking) news that he had suffered a relapse.

Mike DiGiovanna and Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times initially reported the incident, aspects of which were confirmed by others:

The latest details on Hamilton’s relapse comes from Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports, who writes:

Multiple sources with knowledge of the situation told Yahoo Sports that Hamilton has told people his latest spiral began around Super Bowl weekend after a fight with his wife. Because he cannot carry cash or credit cards, Hamilton wrote himself a check to cash. He wound up at a strip club and used cocaine. Before his next test, Hamilton admitted to using drugs, which prompted the meeting with MLB in New York that the Los Angeles Times first reported, sending Hamilton’s case into the public view.

Those in and around baseball now await word on how the league will handle this and what sort of punishment Hamilton will face. A decision is expected before Opening Day and could come as soon as this week (i.e., mid-March), according to Ken Rosenthal and Jon Paul Morosi of Fox Sports.

But this decision is anything but simple, and the process has been anything but confidential, as it is supposed to be.

For one, there’s the fact that an arbitrator will need to evaluate the evidence and make a determination about whether Hamilton needs to enter a rehabilitation center or should be suspended for his reported relapse after the four-person treatment panel failed to come to a consensus or even a three-to-one majority.

The panel that was supposed to make the call—and which consists of a pair of representatives each from MLB and the MLB Players Association—deadlocked at two votes apiece, as the Los Angeles Times reports.

For another, if the findings call for a suspension, there’s the question of how long Hamilton should be held out and whether he should be treated as a first-time offender or a multiple offender.

As to the fact that all this has been made public, here is the statement the MLBPA released, via Jerry Crasnick of ESPN.com:

It is regrettable that people who want to see Josh Hamilton hurt personally and professionally have started leaking information about the status of his treatment program and the confidential processes under our Joint Drug Agreement. These anonymous leaks are cowardly, undermine the integrity of our collectively bargained agreements and in some instances have been wholly inaccurate.

The Major League Baseball Players Association will use every right we have under the collective bargaining agreement to make sure Josh gets the help he needs, and the fair and confidential process to which he is entitled.

Clearly, this has become an unfortunate situation for everyone, including new commissioner Rob Manfred, who will have to weigh all matters and angles in handling this.

The thought is that Hamilton likely will be forced to miss at least 25 games, per Rosenthal and Morosi of Fox Sports. But if he’s treated as a multiple offender, then the punishment would be more severe, perhaps up to the entire 2015 season.

As a player with a long and disturbing history of addiction problems and drug use, Hamilton’s case is rare in baseball. After being selected No. 1 overall out of high school in 1999 by the Tampa Bay Rays, he was suspended from the sport altogether from February of 2004 to June of 2006 because of his problems.

That Hamilton was able to overcome everything and contribute anything at all on the major league level—let alone be one of the game’s biggest stars for a half-decade from 2008 to 2012—makes his career even more remarkable and this situation even more atypical.

An argument could be made that keeping Hamilton away from the game too long may be detrimental to his well-being, considering that baseball provides him with all kinds of day-to-day activities to keep him busy and in line, from hours of work in the gym or batting cages to busy travel itineraries to the games themselves.

Buster Olney pointed this out on his Baseball Tonight podcast, citing Darryl Strawberry, another longtime big league star who battled addiction but who found some solace in the clubhouse and on the field while playing with the New York Yankees in the mid to late 1990s.

Perhaps the best—or at least, the most mindful—option, then, would be to suspend Hamilton for, say, 25 games without pay. In a way, that almost would amount to a time-served sentence, since he already is expected to be out until May or June while recovering and rehabbing from surgery on his shoulder, per DiGiovanna.

All that said, the financial factor is one that makes this even stickier. Hamilton’s $25 million salary, as part of the five-year, $125 million deal he inked with the Angels in December of 2012, is among the highest in baseball, and especially steep for a player who—let’s not ignore the facts—wasn’t very healthy (89 games) or even all that good in 2014 (.263/.331/.414).

Were Hamilton to be suspended, he would lose his salary for as long as he’s forced to sit out, according to DiGiovanna and Shaikin. Given the circumstances, that wouldn’t be such a bad thing for the Angels, who could use the saved funds elsewhere. It’s not something that should be a major consideration here, but to pretend it isn’t one is naive.

“If [Hamilton is] in rehab,” Jean-Jacques Taylor of ESPNDallas.com writes, “he would be paid his full salary for 30 days and half his salary for the next 30 days. If he’s suspended, he would not be paid.”

Whenever he’s allowed to come back to baseball, Hamilton should be, as a result of his latest mistake, subject to even more frequent drug testing than he already has been. Not for punitive reasons—merely to make sure he’s not hurting himself or his family or friends.

“[Hamilton] served a 28-month suspension that ended in June 2006 for violating the league’s substance-abuse program,” Taylor reminds. “One of the conditions of Hamilton’s reinstatement in 2006 was that he undergo drug testing three times a week.”

Addiction, after all, is a disease, a battle that isn’t “won” or “lost” but fought daily, constantly even.

As Cliff Corcoran of Sports Illustrated writes:

This is a pivotal moment, not so much for the Angels’ season or Hamilton’s career, but for Hamilton’s future as a human being, a husband and a father. It is also a pivotal moment for MLB to lead by example by considering drug addiction as an illness that needs to be treated as such, and by viewing drug addicts not as criminals who need to be punished, but as victims of their own bad choices who need to be shown compassion and helped back to health.

Obviously, this is a controversy and a very sensitive one at that. There is no “right” way, no precedent to handle something that will impact Hamilton and those around him. But there very well could be a wrong way.

Ultimately, whatever Manfred and MLB decide to do with regards to punishing Hamilton for his most recent transgression, the most important thing is that Hamilton’s life and future—not his past—are the priorities.

 

Statistics are accurate through Monday, March 9 and courtesy of MLB.com, Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted.

To talk baseball or fantasy baseball, check in with me on Twitter: @JayCat11

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Josh Hamilton Surgery Foreshadows Another Letdown Year in 2015

It appears that $125 million man Josh Hamilton could be headed for another rough season in 2015.

Limited by injuries to just 89 games last season, the Los Angeles Angels slugger is now scheduled for surgery this Wednesday to repair the AC joint in that same right shoulder.

That according to tweets from the team’s official Twitter account:

The immediate question that jumps to mind is why this was not taken care of immediately following the season, considering that same right shoulder cost him 11 games in September. But let’s instead focus on what this means for Hamilton going forward.

The former No. 1 overall pick in the 1999 draft joined the Angels in the offseason leading up to the 2013 season, signing a five-year, $125 million deal as the top bat on the market.

That came just a year after the Angels shelled out $240 million over 10 years to sign Albert Pujols and another $77.5 million over five years for starter C.J. Wilson.

However, that high-priced trio has only managed to produce one disappointing American League Division Series exit in three years, and at least for Hamilton, it looks like 2015 could bring more disappointment.

The 33-year-old outfielder has fallen a long way from his time with the Texas Rangers, when he was one of the most productive run producers in the league and an All-Star in five straight seasons.

Jon Heyman of CBS Sports may have put it best when news broke that Hamilton was headed for surgery:

Hamilton was entering his age-32 season when he joined the Angels, so there was plenty of reason to think he had at least a few more prime seasons in the tank.

However, there were also red flags of the injuries to come, as he topped 140 games in just two of his five seasons in Texas and averaged just 129 games per year.

Injuries were not the issue during his first season with the Angels, as he played 151 games. It was a simple lack of production.

In fact, his statistical drop-off from 2012 to 2013, when you consider that he had an identical number of plate appearances (636), is staggering.

Despite those struggles, a bounce-back season seemed to be in the works this past year when he opened the season hitting .444/.545/.741 through his first eight games.

A thumb injury quickly put a stop to that, though, and he missed 48 games after undergoing surgery to repair a torn UCL.

He returned on June 3 and managed to stay relatively healthy until his early September shoulder injury, but he would hit just .247/.310/.386 with eight home runs in 308 at-bats over that 80-game span.

With the thumb injury behind him and a full offseason to prepare for 2015, Hamilton had high hopes for a big turnaround.

Just over a week ago, Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com tweeted about his expectations for Hamilton’s upcoming campaign:

Now a more realistic goal seems to be simply getting healthy and staying on the field, and that’s not exactly the sort of thing a team wants to be shooting for when it’s set to pay a player $23 million.

To the Angels’ credit, they were proactive this winter despite a roster that looked more or less complete heading into the offseason.

One of the pieces they picked up was outfielder Matt Joyce in a trade with the Tampa Bay Rays, and he gives the team a player capable of stepping into an expanded role and producing.

When Hamilton went down last year, the team was forced to go with a combination of Grant Green, Collin Cowgill, J.B. Shuck and Raul Ibanez in left field, with none of them providing much in the way of consistency.

Now they at least won’t have to mix and match on a daily basis, though they will likely still opt for a platoon, considering Joyce hit just .147 with a .408 OPS against left-handed pitching last year.

With a late start to the regular season, Hamilton will be playing catch-up once he debuts, and that does not bode well for a player coming off of back-to-back disappointing seasons.

At this point the Angels are still on the hook for $83 million over the next three years, so they will give him every chance to turn things around.

However, it’s hard not to think this latest setback is just the start of another disappointing season for a player who has fallen a long way from his days in Texas.

 

All stats courtesy of Baseball Reference.com, unless otherwise noted.

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