Tag: Los Angeles Angels

Angels’ Albert Pujols Takes Sole Possesion of 21st Place on All-Time Homers List

Los Angeles Angels first baseman Albert Pujols hit his 513th career home run in Tuesday’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. According to MLB Milestones‘ Twitter account, that moved him into sole possession of 21st place on MLB‘s all-time home runs list.

Pujols’ long ball, an eighth-inning shot off Dodgers setup man Brian Wilson, was his 21st of the 2014 season.

The home run tied the contest at 4-4, but Angels reliever Kevin Jepsen was unable to hold off the Dodgers in the ninth inning, as Juan Uribe scored the walk-off winning run on third baseman David Freese’s errant throw.

After an injury-plagued 2013 in which he played in only 99 games and hit a career-low .258, Pujols has already appeared in 111 games in 2014 and is on pace to exceed his 155-game average through the first 12 years of his career from 2001 to 2012.

However, it does appear that the 34-year-old nine-time All-Star has slowed down a bit.

His .275 batting average this season is the second-worst of his career, only besting the aforementioned .258 from 2013. Also, his 2014 on-base percentage, slugging percentage and OPS are only better than his marks from 2013 and sit significantly lower than his career numbers.

Pujols’ home run Tuesday broke a three-way tie for 21st on the all-time home runs list, vaulting the former St. Louis Cardinal past a pair of Hall of Famers, Eddie Matthews and Ernie Banks.

Pujols now needs eight home runs to catch a trio of Hall of Fame greats tied in 18th place at 521—Willie McCovey, recently inducted Frank Thomas and Boston Red Sox legend Ted Williams.

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Josh Hamilton Injury: Updates on Angels Star’s Knee and Return

Updates from Saturday, July 26

MLB Lineups reports Josh Hamilton is not in the Angels’ lineup:

James Schmehl of MLive provides more details:

Original Text:

Los Angeles Angels outfielder Josh Hamilton is once again dealing with an injury that could keep him out of the lineup.

The 33-year-old veteran was removed from his team’s game Friday against the Detroit Tigers in the fourth inning and replaced by Efren Navarro. The club later announced that this was the result of a knee injury:

Hamilton missed about a month-and-a-half earlier in the year due to a torn ligament in his thumb. He had been able to remain in the lineup until this point, but he struggled to a .291 batting average and just five home runs.

Despite the lack of power, Hamilton has remained the cleanup hitter for the Angels, where he has contributed with his .322 batting average with runners in scoring position. His solid production has helped the team remain one of the best in the major leagues. Only the AL West rival Oakland Athletics have a better record at this point of the year.

If Hamilton is forced to miss a significant amount of time, the squad could end up struggling to replace him in the lineup. Outfielder Grant Green was recently placed on the disabled list, which leaves Navarro as the only other option for the Angels.

Based on the severity of the injury, it is possible Los Angeles will start looking for outfielders before the trade deadline.

 

Follow Rob Goldberg on Twitter for the latest breaking news and analysis.

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Huston Street Trade Puts Angels 1 Giant Step Closer in AL West Hunt

During the All-Star break, Huston Street told Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times he’d “love to” play for the Los Angeles Angels.

Wish granted.

On Friday, the Angels and San Diego Padres consummated a deal that will send Street and minor league pitcher Trevor Gott to the Halos, per Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal.

In return, the Padres get a package of prospects, including shortstop Taylor Lindsey and pitcher R.J. Alvarez—ranked by Baseball America prior to the season as the Angels’ best and fourth-best prospects, respectively—and shortstop Jose Rondon, per ESPN.com’s Jim Bowden.

Street immediately bolsters a bullpen that got off to a rocky start. On June 22, the Angels pen had posted a 4.48 ERA and blown 12 of 28 save opportunities. The relief corps has since steadied itself. Mike Morin, a 23-year-old right-hander called up in April, began blanking hitters. And Joe Smith supplanted Ernesto Frieri as closer.

On June 27, the Angels dealt Frieri to the Pittsburgh Pirates for another underperforming reliever, Jason Grilli.

As it turns out, that was merely a prelude to the main event.

Now, with the arrival of Street, the Angels have turned their biggest weakness into a strength.

Street posted a 1.09 ERA and converted 24 of 25 saves in the first half. At 30 years old, he’s still in the prime of his pitching career and has another year left on his contract, a team option, at a relatively affordable $7 million.

Los Angeles is locked in a tough race with the Oakland A’s, who went all-in with the blockbuster trade that brought pitchers Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel over from the Chicago Cubs.

By raiding their modestly stocked farm system to bring in Street and address their most glaring weakness, the Angels clearly showed they aren’t backing down.

And why would they? With a top-notch starting rotation and an offense anchored by Mike Trout, arguably the most exciting hitter in the game, the Halos are poised to make a run at their first championship in more than a decade.

Predictably, there are doubters. Keith Law tweeted his reservations about the Angels sacrificing Rondon, who was hitting .327 at High-A ball:

The bottom line, though, is that one of the best teams in the American League just added one of the best closers in all of baseball, mortgaging possible future glory for a clear shot now. And an AL West race that also includes the surprising Seattle Mariners just got a whole lot more interesting.

As for Street, look for him to settle quickly into his new home. A former member of the A’s, he’s familiar with the division and the Angels franchise.

“I was probably too young to realize how good he was at the time,” Street said of Angels skipper Mike Scioscia as trade speculation was heating up over the break, per Shaikin. “That’s one of the best managers, maybe, of all time. If I went there, I’d have a real chance to win.”

Now he has that chance. Time to see if he, and his new club, can take advantage.

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Angels’ Mike Trout Fastest to 500 Hits in Franchise History

Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout stormed his way into the record books Thursday night, using a four-hit performance against the Texas Rangers to become the fastest player in franchise history with 500 career hits, per Angels Director of Communications Eric Kay.

Trout reached the milestone in just 423 games, surpassing the record of 428 games previously held by Garret Anderson.

The 22-year-old outfielder entered Thursday’s contest with 498 career hits and proceeded to fill out the box score in a 15-6 blowout victory. Not only did Trout record a hit in four of his five at-bats, but he also finished the night with a home run, three runs and four RBI.

Set to turn 23 August 7, Trout is already shaping up as a threat to take down Anderson’s franchise record of 2,368 hits.

While never considered a true superstar, Anderson played for the Angels from 1994 to 2008 and was a productive hitter for most of that span. In addition to the franchise hits mark, he also holds Angels records for games (2,013), runs (1,024), RBI (1,292) and total bases (3,743), among others. His 272 home runs in a Halos uniform are good for second in franchise history, trailing only the 299 of retired slugger Tim Salmon.

Trout still has a ways to go before reaching Anderson in any of the counting stats, but he’s the all-time franchise leader in both on-base percentage (.403) and slugging percentage (.553).

Even more impressive, Trout is responsible for the two best seasons in franchise history as measured by wins above replacement (WAR), having posted a 10.8 WAR in 2012 and 8.9 WAR in 2013, per Baseball-Reference.com.

Assuming he sticks around in Anaheim for the long haul, Trout could one day be the Angels’ all-time leader in nearly every significant offensive category.

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Angels’ Matt Shoemaker Sets Franchise Mark for Most Strikeouts Through 10 Starts

Making his ninth start of the season and the 10th of his career, Los Angeles Angels pitcher Matt Shoemaker struck out seven Houston Astros over six innings in Thursday’s 5-2 victory.

The performance brought his strikeout total in 10 career starts to 57, setting a new franchise record for the most punchouts through the first 10 starts of a pitcher’s career, according to Eric Kay, the Angels’ director of communications.

Coming off a disastrous eight-run outing against the Kansas City Royals, Shoemaker appeared to be in for another rough day once the Astros plated a pair of runs in the third inning to erase the Angels’ early 1-0 lead. However, Shoemaker induced an inning-ending double play from Astros third baseman Matt Dominguez, thus limiting the damage in the top of the third.

The Angels would bounce back to score four runs in the bottom of the fourth, and Shoemaker ultimately bowed out after recording seven strikeouts over six strong innings, with his team holding a 5-2 lead. The bullpen finished things off, allowing Shoemaker to improve to 6-2 on the season.

The 27-year-old right-hander has seemingly come out of nowhere this year after making one start last season, in which he recorded five strikeouts over five scoreless innings. Despite that one strong outing, Shoemaker never made much noise, as his minor league track record is rather uninspiring.

Last season with Triple-A Salt Lake, he posted a 4.64 ERA and 7.81 K/9, on the heels of an even worse year in 2012. And he was no better earlier this season, as he owned a gruesome 6.31 ERA through 25.1 innings at the time of his call-up.

While he’s struggled in five appearances out of the bullpen this season, Shoemaker has made the most of his nine starts. He owns a 6-1 record as a starter and has only once surrendered more than three earned runs in an outing, in that aforementioned start against the Royals.

Shoemaker certainly hopes to have a better career than Bo Belinsky, the hurler whose franchise record he broke. Belinsky, a southpaw who played from 1962-1970, struck out 56 batters for the Angels in the first 10 starts of his career. Despite the early success, he ultimately retired with a 28-51 record and a lifetime 4.10 ERA.

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Los Angeles Angels Trade Rumors: Latest Updates, News and Reaction

The Los Angeles Angels weren’t going to wait for the calendar to flip to July before making a move, trading their own disappointing closer, Ernesto Frieri, to the Pittsburgh Pirates in exchange for another disappointing closer, Jason Grilli, toward the end of June.

But the Angels still have some holes to fill if they hope to remain in contention for both the American League West and one of the two available wild-card spots, with the bullpen remaining a work in progress that could be altered at any time.

While the club doesn’t have the high-end prospects needed to land a front-line starting pitcher like Tampa Bay‘s David Price or Chicago’s Jeff Samardzija, it does have an owner with deep pockets in Arte Moreno and a penchant for disregarding salary if it means improving his team’s chances of winning (see the Albert Pujols and Josh Hamilton free-agent signings for proof).

Bleacher Report will be bringing you the most up-to-the-minute rumblings about the Angels, along with analysis and everything else that comes with it. While the post date on this tracker will always show up as July 1, simply click to the next slide to see the latest from the rumor mill as the Halos look to bolster their roster for the stretch run.

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Garrett Richards’ Rise to Ace Status Poised to Change AL West Race

In his last start, June 14 against the Atlanta Braves, Garrett Richards tossed six scoreless innings and struck out 10 en route to an 11-6 victory. (Richards was denied the win when the bullpen coughed up the lead, but the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim ultimately prevailed in 13 innings.)

A dominant effort? Yes. Surprising? No.

That’s the kind of outing the Angels have come to expect from the 26-year-old right-hander, who has quietly emerged as one of the breakout stars of 2014—and propelled his team into the American League West race.

Jered Weaver and C.J. Wilson came into the season as the Angels’ undisputed rotation anchors, and both have pitched to expectations.

Richards, meanwhile, has left expectations in the dust.

Entering play Tuesday, Richards led or was tied for the lead among Angels starters in ERA (2.87), WHIP (1.11), strikeouts (87) and opponents’ batting average (.208).

More importantly, the Angels have won seven of his last nine starts and currently sit at 37-32, within striking distance of the first-place Oakland Athletics.

With the Texas Rangers decimated by injuries, the Seattle Mariners hovering around .500 and the Houston Astros, well, the Houston Astros, this could develop into a two-team race.

Both of Richards’ losses this season have come against the A’s. On April 15, they tagged him for five runs in a 10-9 defeat, and they matched that total in a 9-5 drubbing on May 30.

In the second loss, Richards lasted just .2 of an inning. He gave up five hits, including a home run, and walked three. It was easily his ugliest appearance.

“In the back of your mind, you want to do better than you did,” he said after the May 30 debacle, per Fox Sports West’s Michael Martinez. “Two-thirds of an inning is pretty weak.”

The next time he faced Oakland, on June 9, Richards was strong: seven innings pitched, one earned run and a 4-1 Angels victory.

“I gave them one,” Richards told Martinez, “and I felt like this time was my turn to come out and show them what I’ve got.”

Richards—a first-round pick in 2009has always had good stuff. His four-seam fastball touches the high 90s and is complemented by a two-seam sinker and plus slider. Up to now, though, the stuff hadn’t translated to consistent results.

Last year, in his first full big league season, Richards posted a 4.16 ERA in 145 innings pitched. He showed flashes but entered 2014 as a back-of-the-rotation guy.

What’s changed? For one, Richards is relying more on his sinker, throwing it nearly 57 percent of the time to left-handers, per Sports Illustrated‘s Michael Beller. And lefties are hitting just .201 against him, down from .281 last year. He’s also refined his control and kept the ball down.

Not everyone saw it coming. The 2014 Baseball Prospectus PECOTA projections (subscription required) for Richards were downright pedestrian: 154 IP, 10-12 W-L, 4.71 ERA, 1.47 WHIP—fifth-starter numbers at best.

Others were more bullish. Before the season, baseball sage Peter Gammons tapped Richards as one of his top five breakout pitchers of 2014, saying of the big right-hander:

It’s taken a while for Richards to learn fastball command, but this spring the command had improved. The hard sinking fastball was up to 97 mph and with Tyler Skaggs, the Angels are on the road back to having young power pitchers to mix in with the master, Jered Weaver.

Skaggs has had an up-and-down season, posting a 4.34 ERA through 12 starts. Richards, on the other hand, has forced his way into the All-Star conversation, pushed the Angels into contention and grabbed his manager’s attention.

“His confidence is high,” Angels skipper Mike Scioscia said of his young hurler, per the Los Angeles Times‘ Mike DiGiovanna. “There’s definitely a presence you can see with Garrett.”

A presence, and the results that come with it.

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Mike Trout’s Back Injury Is Minor Now, but Do LA Angels Need to Worry?

There’s no better player in the major leagues than Mike Trout. About the only person who can beat Trout at this stage is himself. The Los Angeles Angels haven’t had a lot of luck with health over the past couple years, struggling at all levels after a generational change in their once top-rated staff. Trout’s back issues that kept him off the field this weekend aren’t serious now, but the Angels will have to make sure that this doesn’t become something more.

Trout is scheduled to return to the Angels lineup on Tuesday after missing several games with upper-back spasms. In and of themselves, the spasms are painful, but not serious. The goal is to find the proximate cause and to address it. It can be a minor muscular injury or a more concerning underlying issue. The trick for the medical staff is not just to treat the symptoms, but to understand the cause.

If the symptoms are just treated, the condition will inevitably return, and it will likely have worsened. The wear and tear that any player with Trout’s physicality puts on his spine, both linearly and rotationally, is brutal. Maintaining the structures and the supporting musculature is key, especially if Trout thickens as normal.

Compare Trout to the body type of Matt Holliday, a similar player, from his rookie season to present day. Holliday is still productive at age 34, but he’s also dealt with severe lower-back spasms that have taken him out of the playoffs, an indication of just how serious the issue is and how difficult it is to push past. 

The Angels dealt with a similar situation just a few years back. Vladimir Guerrero had severe knee and back issues, which were largely blamed on the Montreal turf, but the Angels medical staff of Ned Bergert and Dr. Lewis Yocum were able to get Guerrero on a maintenance program that kept him strong and healthy for years. If Trout can do this now, he’ll be ahead of the game, though it is worrisome that someone his age is already having back issues. 

The downside here is that Bergert was replaced a few years ago and Dr. Yocum passed away. While the new medical staff is qualified, it has some big shoes to fill and there’s been some loss of history there. With Dr. Orr Limpisvasti around, quality of care won’t be an issue if the current Angels management doesn’t interfere.

The Angels are now heavily invested in Trout’s immediate future to the tune of nearly $150 million. Trout has to head the list of players that they must keep on the field in order to succeed, even ahead of Albert Pujols. With Trout, Pujols, Hamilton, Wilson and others all needing maintenance, the Angels medical staff is going to face challenge after challenge in the coming years.

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Albert Pujols at 34 Is Back Among the Top Sluggers in Baseball

Talk of his demise certainly appears to be premature, but is it too early to declare that Albert Pujols is back to his MVP-caliber form based on a 22-game sample?

After collecting two more hits in a 13-1 victory over the New York Yankees on Friday night, including his ninth homer of the young season against only eight strikeouts, Pujols has a 1.008 OPS—coincidentally, that’s also his career OPS—and is on pace to crack the 50-homer mark and top his career-best 49 homers in 2006. 

While there was no definitive way of knowing whether his declining numbers in 2013 were due to the injuries he was playing through—he was diagnosed with plantar fasciitis in April and also battled soreness throughout the season on his surgically repaired knee—the general feeling around the baseball world was that his skills were deteriorating as he approached his mid-30s.

Healthy or not, Pujols wasn’t near the player he was before the Los Angeles Angels rewarded him for 11 years of greatness (with the St. Louis Cardinals) by giving him a 10-year contract that would pay him $240 million through his age-41 season.

Or so it seemed. 

Through his first 22 games of 2014, the 34-year-old doesn’t look to be much different from the guy who posted a 1.115 OPS while hitting 37 homers, 44 doubles and knocking in 116 runs en route to winning his last NL MVP award back in 2009.  

It’s not uncommon for an average player to string together two to three weeks of greatness at least once during his career. The difference here is that this kind of production has always been the norm for Pujols. The longer he keeps it up, the more his disappointing 2013 season will look like the outlier and quickly be forgotten. 

Asked about his recent success after belting his 499th and 500th career homers, Pujols sounded like a hitter who was in the zone. 

“Last couple years have been really tough, but I feel that I’m getting my swing right where I want it to be,” Pujols said after the game.

That sounds about right, considering he was confident enough to tell teammates before Tuesday’s game that he’d be hitting a pair of homers that night. 

If you were paying attention to Pujols this spring, maybe his strong start shouldn’t come as much of a surprise. Despite the rough beginning to his Angels stint, he was upbeat and confident when he reported to spring training in February.

“As long as I stay healthy, I’m going to hit,” said the nine-time All-Star when he reported to camp early on Feb. 13. “I’m going to play as hard as I can and try to put some big smiles on faces and try to help this organization win a championship,” said Pujols, per Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times.

He wasn’t lying. 

It turns out that Mike Trout isn’t the only reason to go see a ballgame at Angels Stadium these days. Right now, a healthy Albert Pujols is earning every dollar of his $23 million salary for 2014, and he’s helping to put fans in the seats as he continues to pile up historic numbers. 

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Playing Fact or Fiction with Josh Hamilton’s White-Hot Start

This is the Josh Hamilton the Los Angeles Angels thought they were getting. Alas, after paying the five-time All-Star $125 million over five years in December 2012, the 32-year-old’s start to 2013 was as cold as his 2014 beginning has been hot.

In his first month as an Angel, Hamilton batted a ghastly .204/.252/.296 on his way to hitting just .250/.307/.432 with 73 runs scored, 21 home runs and 79 RBI, all of which were career worsts for seasons in which Hamilton played at least 100 games.

This April, though, the 2010 AL MVP has been the exact opposite, with 12 hits in his first 24 at-bats (.500, if you couldn’t figure that out), along with a pair of homers and doubles apiece. All of which earned Hamilton a share of the AL player of the week, per Joey Nowak of MLB.com.

“(Hamilton is) obviously a different player than he was last year,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said via Nowak‘s story. “He’s back to his playing weight (about 240 pounds). He has a comfort level in the box that started to come together the second half of last season but never really materialized the way it had before in his last couple years in Texas. Right now, we are seeing it. Hopefully, he’s in a better place in the batter’s box now and will maintain it for long stretches.”

That would be big for both the Angels, who once again have postseason aspirations, and Hamilton, who endured a calf strain that cost him a few weeks during spring training before making it back to hit .333/.378/.606 in March. Both sides want a redo on 2013, and a quick start is the best way to go about that.

Hamilton attributes his strong showing through the first seven games of the season to getting back his rhythm and timing in the batter’s box, according to Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com. “Hitting is rhythm and timing,” the outfielder told Gonzalez. “If one is out of sync, you are going to struggle.”

With Hamilton not struggling at the outset of his second year in Los Angeles, it’s time to make some general statements about his performance so far and play a little Fact or Fiction with each.

 

Statement No. 1: Josh Hamilton’s power is back.

For a hitter like Hamilton, who sports a .532 career slugging percentage, power is paramount. That wasn’t the case in 2013, especially early on.

A year ago, Hamilton managed a measly .296 SLG and .548 OPS before May. From there, his power fluctuated some, but he actually put up a solid .464 SLG and .783 OPS after April. That’s not quite the Hamilton of old, but it indicates just how much his awful beginning drowned out the progress he made over the rest of the year.

To wit, Hamilton hit .329 with a .518 SLG and .909 OPS over his final 45 games from mid-August until the end of the year.

Now that he’s in his age-33 campaign, it’s only natural for Hamilton to experience some decline in his performance. Thing is, his last April was still more of an outlier than a clear indication that Hamilton’s days as a dangerous hitter were done.

Is he going to return to his 30-plus-homer ways from his peak seasons? It’s a possibility. And even though it’s more of a cute observation than anything else, there is this: Since 2008, Hamilton has topped 30 homers and 100 RBI every other year, and 2014 is one of those other years.

Is Hamilton’s power back? Seems so. In fact, one could make a claim that it was here all along and only went hibernating for a month or two early in 2013.

Verdict: Fact

 

Statement No. 2: Josh Hamilton’s plate discipline is improving.

For Hamilton to sustain this early-season success, the two keys are going to be his health and his plate discipline, both of which have been concerns during his career. While the former is hard to control to an extent, the latter—when and when not to swing—is something that is well within a player’s ability to maintain.

Hamilton has always qualified as a free swinger, as proven by his 56.1 percent swing percentage, which is the percentage of pitches a batter goes after, and he ranks among the top 10 highest in the sport since 2007, his first year.

To start 2014, though, Hamilton has been a wee bit more selective. His swing percentage is at 46.3 percent, which would be a career low by far. Here’s a look at Hamilton’s other plate-discipline metrics so far:

That table basically shows that Hamilton has been swinging at fewer pitches overall (Swing%) while also doing a better job of swinging at pitches in the strike zone (Z-Swing%) after a dip in 2013 and swinging at pitches outside the zone (O-Swing%) at a much better rate than in recent seasons.

Add it all up, and it’s not surprising that Hamilton already has drawn six walks and has whiffed only six times in his first 30 plate appearances. By comparison, in his first year with the Angels, Hamilton had only three walks against 11 strikeouts through his first 30 trips.

A sample size of 30 PA is too small to draw any conclusions about Hamilton’s plate discipline this year, or any player’s for that matter. Studies have shown that a player’s strikeout rate tends to stabilize around plate appearance No. 60, while his walk rate takes about twice as long.

If that holds true with Hamilton, then he’ll need to continue with his current approach through the rest of April before we really buy in. And even then, this is a hitter who always will have an aggressive mentality and some swing-and-miss to his game.

Verdict: Fact (for now)

 

Statement No. 3: Thanks in part to Josh Hamilton’s early success, the Angels can avoid a third straight disappointing season.

It’s all about April for the Angels, who have been underwhelming in the face of lofty expectations the past two years despite a ton of talent on the roster.

It’s too early to put much weight on the Angel’s 3-4 start following two series against fellow AL West clubs, the Seattle Mariners and Houston Astros, but if any team in baseball needs to avoid a poor first month, it’s the Halos.

Here’s why. After April 2013, the club was just 9-17, and in April 2012, they went 8-15. From May on, though, they’ve been much, much better the past two seasons, going 69-67 last year and 81-58 in ’12.

The West is wide open at the moment, due to injuries that have the two preseason favorites to fight for the division crown more than a little short-handed: The Oakland Athletics are without Jarrod Parker after Tommy John surgery, while A.J. Griffin remains sidelined with elbow tendinitis; and the Texas Rangers lost Derek Holland for half the season after offseason knee surgery and Jurickson Profar with a shoulder injury suffered late in spring training that will cost him at least a couple months.

The Angels cannot afford to miss the opportunity that those injuries—as well as Hamilton’s hot start—is presenting. The rest of the team has to get on board with Hamilton and put together a strong opening month. After all, they’ve shown they can play well once the calendar flips to May.

Verdict: Fact

While the expectation shouldn’t be for Hamilton to regain his MVP form, he certainly should bounce back from a disappointing 2013. Ultimately, if that also helps the Angels do the same, then there’s a good chance they’ll be playing in October for the first time since 2009. That’s one final fact Hamilton and the Angels would like to change.

 

Statistics come from Baseball Reference and FanGraphs, except where otherwise noted.

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

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