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Angels blog ~ The latest on the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, by the Orange County Register Sports staff

Archive for the 'Brian Fuentes' Category

One reporter’s take on the Angels and free agency

November 21st, 2009, 11:32 am by Earl Bloom, staff writer

Baseball free agency is upon us, and since it’s a weekend, it’s not surprising it’s off to a slow start.

The Angels’ stated stance seems to be making a choice between John Lackey or Chone Figgins; hoping to bring back Vladimir Guerrero for a good price; and looking for, in Arte Moreno’s words to the Los Angeles Times, “a power bat, a starter and another bullpen guy.”Angels White Sox Spring Baseball

Here’s my take on that, point-by-point:

– Lackey has been a solid No. 1 for the Angels, and should command a huge contract simply via the timing of his free agency. If all reports are somewhat accurate, he is way too pricey to come back to Anaheim.

In my opinion, the Angels have a viable No. 1 on the premises, but are reluctant to even address that because they have three more seasons worth of Jered Weaver contracts to negotiate with Scott Boras (more on this later).

– Figgins, right, has to be a Top Five attraction on the overall board, because he can help a club in so many ways (everything except power). If the five-year, $50 million tag is accurate, it is not too much for his value somewhere, but it is here.

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This winter will be a season of change for the Angels

November 2nd, 2009, 11:37 am by Earl Bloom, staff writer

Some observations, and questions that I hope will be answered during this baseball winter ….

– The Angels outfield/designated hitter spots will look different in 2010. Torii Hunter will be in center, and Juan Rivera will play left — and likely, DH more.91788303NM090_New_York_Yank

But Vladimir Guerrero and Bobby Abreu will be free agents, and Gary Matthews Jr. has asked out. Unfortunately, at this point the most likely one of the three to be on the Angels in 2010 is Matthews.

Chone Figgins’ free agency likely opens up third base for Brandon Wood. Here’s hoping that means a full spring training, and then several months’ commitment to let Wood settle in. He won’t get a season-plus like Mike Schmidt did, but that was a long time ago.

Scot Shields’ return to health should be an enormous boost for the bullpen. So would a decision to not retire by Darren Oliver. And Brian Fuentes, the most-maligned 50-save reliever in major-league history, will know the American League hitters better this time around.

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That’s 51 saves for Fuentes, and on to New York

October 22nd, 2009, 8:33 pm by Earl Bloom, staff writer

Wow. Brian Fuentes did get another save as an Angel.

No. 51 this season, whether you’re counting or not. Two outs, 3-2, bases loaded. Nick Swisher pops up. Routine.

Hunter punches Angels ticket (Getty Images)

Hunter punches Angels ticket (Getty Images)

On to New York, Bill Plunkett.

If you haven’t figured it out by now, I am one of those people who ask how many, not how.

By the way, as one of you suggested, I would never object to seeing Daisy Fuentes, with perhaps this one exception.

That’s all.

Angels rally to stay alive, 7-6

October 22nd, 2009, 8:31 pm by BILL PLUNKETT, OCREGISTER.COM

ANAHEIM

It’s merely a flesh wound.

Like the Black Knight in Monty Python’s ‘Holy Grail,’ the Angels shook off the Yankees’ near-fatal blows with more conviction than circumstances warrant but lived to fight another day with a 7-6 victory in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series Thursday night at Angel Stadium.

The win forces a Game 6 at Yankee Stadium Saturday night (start time 4:57 p.m. PDT).

But it took a three-run rally in the bottom of the seventh inning to shake off a six-run blow by the Yankees in the top of the inning.

Angels starter John Lackey cruised into the seventh inning with a 4-0 lead only to run into the kind of moment that would have been debated for months to come.

The second-guessing began even as Scioscia was approaching the pitcher’s mound to replace Lackey. TV cameras clearly caught Lackey saying, “This is mine, Sosh. This is mine. Are you (kidding) me? This is mine.”

Lackey’s swan song began with a one-out double by Melky Cabrera. When home-plate umpire Fieldin Culbreth called his low-and-inside fastball on full count to Jorge Posada a ball, Lackey reacted angrily.

The call seemed to stick with Lackey who walked Derek Jeter on four pitches to load the bases. When Johnny Damon flew out and Cabrera scampered back to third base, Lackey used the opportunity to discuss the call some more with Culbreth as the pitcher backed up home plate.

Lackey had thrown only 104 pitches but Scioscia had seen enough and came out to get Lackey, much to Lackey’s consternation.

Scioscia brought in left-hander Darren Oliver to face switch-hitter Mark Teixeira. It was a matchup that had recent history on the Angels’ side – Oliver had not given up a run in his first six innings this post-season while Teixeira was 3 for 21 without an RBI in this series.

But Teixeira ripped Oliver’s first pitch, a curveball, to the wall in left-center field for a three-run double. After an intentional walk to Rodriguez, Yankees DH Hideki Matsui singled to center, scoring Teixeira with the tying run.

Scioscia brought in right-hander Kevin Jepsen to face left-handed hitting Robinson Cano and Cano tripled to center field, driving in Rodriguez and Matsui with the go-ahead runs.

But the Angels had an answer in the bottom of the inning.

Held in check by Yankees starter A.J. Burnett after scoring four times in the first inning, the Angels started their rally from the bottom up – No. 8 hitter Jeff Mathis singled (his club-record sixth consecutive post-season at-bat with a hit) and Burnett walked No. 9 hitter Erick Aybar before giving way to the bullpen.

Chone Figgins bunted both runners over and Mathis scored on Bobby Abreu’s ground out to first, cutting the Yankees’ lead in half.

With two outs, Yankees reliever Phil Hughes walked Torii Hunter and gave up an RBI single to Vladimir Guerrero that tied the game. Kendry Morales followed with a ground-ball single through the right side of the infield, driving in Hunter with the go-ahead run.

Oliver and Jepsen having cracked in the seventh inning, Scioscia turned to Jered Weaver in the eighth and the right-hander retired the Yankees in order, striking out two.

But in the ninth he went with closer Brian Fuentes who retired Damon and Teixeira quickly – then intentionally walked Rodriguez, putting the tying run on base with two outs.

When Fuentes also walked Hideki Matsui, the tying run moved into scoring postion. When he hit Robinson Cano with an 0-and-1 curveball, the bases were loaded with the tying run at third and the go-ahead run in scoring position.

Fuentes got ahead of Nick Swisher, 0-and-2, but Swisher worked the count full before getting him to pop out to shortstop.

Everybody loves Fuentes

October 22nd, 2009, 8:02 pm by Sam Miller, The Orange County Register

Ok, that’s sarcasm. From Twitter:

IanMBrowne: “If I’m Scioscia, I pitch Weaver in the ninth, not Fuentes.”
ESPN’s AmyKNelson, in response: “I think that’s a good call.”
DavidAllenEsq: “Angels looking good with Weaver too bad Fuentes is up.”
DeeEmmGee: “DON’T WANT FUENTES! DON’T WANT FUENTES! DON’T WANT FUENTES!”
RadioBlogger: “leave him in, sciosh! forget about fuentes. let the kid finish the 9th!”
MicSpecial: “As long as Fuentes doesn’t pitch, I’m good.”

And those are just the first five I picked.

Then there’s this, from Cowbellguy19: “I’d rather see Daisy Fuentes pitch than Brian Fuentes.”

Hunter on Fuentes’ fastball: ‘Noooo’

October 18th, 2009, 8:16 pm by BILL PLUNKETT, OCREGISTER.COM

arod-alcs

 

ANAHEIM

Angels centerfielder Torii Hunter has pretty good instincts out in center field and he didn’t like what he saw in the 11th inning of Game 2 when catcher Jeff Mathis set up for an 0-and-2 fastball up and away to Alex Rodriguez.

“Oh, man – I wanted to call timeout,” Hunter said. “I saw it and I said, ‘No.’
“I saw fastball away and I saw his (Mathis’) glove come up and I said, ‘Nooooooo’ in my head.”

Angels closer Brian Fuentes said he was trying to “elevate a fastball” but Rodriguez reached out and drilled it on a line into the front row of seats in right field. That tied the game 3-3 after the Angels had gone ahead in the top of the inning.

Given Rodriguez’s opposite-field power, Fuentes’ less-than-imposing fastball velocity (the home run pitch was clocked at 90 mph) and the easy-access hitters have to the right field wall in new Yankee Stadium, it might not have been a wise pitch selection.

“On any count, there’s a number of options a pitcher has,” Scioscia said. “One of the options Brian uses is to elevate his fastball. He obviously didn’t get that one up as much he’d like to.

“If Brian had tried to invent a knuckleball there and throw it, you might be second-guessing him. But that’s a pitch he makes all the time.”

Hunter indicated he might not have been as shocked by the pitch selection if it came at Angel Stadium.

“It was a line drive. At our park, that hits the wall or maybe not even hits the wall,” he said.

Rodriguez has done plenty of damage at Angel Stadium over the years (mostly with the Mariners and Rangers).

In 89 career games at Angel Stadium, Rodriguez has batted .335 (117 for 349) with 37 home runs and 82 RBI. The 37 home runs are the most he has hit in any visiting park and his .716 slugging percentage here is his highest at any park he’s played more than six games in.

However, he was hitless in three games at Angel Stadium during his only previous post-season visit (the 2005 ALDS).

Closer fail

October 17th, 2009, 9:16 pm by Sam Miller, The Orange County Register
Does Brian Fuentes ever get another save in an Angels uniform?
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Why it is so amazing the Angels are where they are

October 13th, 2009, 11:05 am by Earl Bloom, staff writer

new-bloom-mug-for-ocrcom4Not to go totally negative on some Angels fans in these hours of elation over the sweep of Boston, and anticipation of another showdown with the Yankees, but:

–  The Angels are where they are today, despite not firing Manager Mike Scioscia for the horrid lineup cards he writes, some of which include Jeff Mathis. And, horror of horrors, some of his lineups have Vladimir Guerrero batting fourth.

Mathis

Mathis

–  The Angels are where they are today, despite not firing hitting instructor Mickey Hatcher, who has apparently been holding the Angels back all these years (and playoff trips). They must not have listened to him this year.

– The Angels are where they are today, despite losing Mark Teixeira and Frankie Rodriguez to free agency, and Tony Reagins making those questionable signings of Brian Fuentes, Bobby Abreu, Darren Oliver and Juan Rivera.

– The Angels are where they are today, despite not trading for either a “big bat,” or Roy Halladay (by the way, which team that traded for a big bat is still in the playoffs?).

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Wrapping up the ALDS, not quite as neat as the Angels did

October 11th, 2009, 3:44 pm by Earl Bloom, staff writer

Just a few thoughts on the ALDS sweep the “experts” forgot to predict:

– The Red Sox’s attempt to evoke 1986, ominous-dave-henderson1by having Dave Henderson throw out the first pitch Sunday, was pretty creative.

Too bad for Boston that Henderson, right,  couldn’t have come on for Jonathan Papelbon about three hitters before Hideki Okajima finally got that last Angel out — even if Henderson was a center fielder.

–Speaking of omens, the last team to eliminate the Red Sox at Fenway Park was the Chicago White Sox in the 2005 ALDS. Ozzie Guillen’s team went on to win the World Series.

–Considering cash and production, if there were two better free-agent signings bobby-abreu-on-saturdaythan Bobby Abreu and Brian Fuentes by the Angels this season, I missed them. Closest I can find is the Dodgers’  addition of Randy Wolf and Orlando Hudson.

–One question: What do all the armchair managers who felt Vladimir Guerrero should bat sixth think now? No, I really don’t want to know.

–And, finally, my apologies to the Angels and their fans for picking the series to go five games.

Although I had the proper team winning, I had no idea it would not only be a turnaround for the Anaheim club, but total domination.

Colleague Jeff Miller had the correct number of games, at least.

Angels win Game 2, 4-1

October 9th, 2009, 9:50 pm by BILL PLUNKETT, OCREGISTER.COM

ANAHEIM

Cats and dogs living together. Vladimir Guerrero drawing a game-changing walk. The Angels leading the Red Sox in a playoff series.

After three post-season meetings when the Angels always seemed to be just one pitch away from heartbreak, they head to Boston one win away from eliminating the Red Sox and advancing to the American League Championship Series for the sixth time in franchise history – the first time when stepping over the Red Sox to do it.

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