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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 'Howie Kendrick' 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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Angels’ focus should be on Morales and Weaver

November 17th, 2009, 3:45 pm by Earl Bloom, staff writer

Interesting to hear the Angels aren’t entering the Matt Holliday race — not that, given the claiming price, it made any sense for them in the first place.

Holliday and Jason Bay might be the two best hitters out there, but they are left fielders, not likely Hall of Famers, and make much more sense in the current economy to the teams that play in Yankee Stadium and Fenway Park.Angels Red Sox Baseball

And neither one is Mark Teixeira, although surely that is how they will be portrayed on the market.

It is also interesting to learn the Anaheim club’s priority is to retain John Lackey and/or Chone Figgins, especially given the dollar amounts floated so far in the free agency “anything but money discussed” period that ends Friday.

If it’s true that $72 million was not enough for Lackey in the first place, and that Figgins is looking for a five-year, $50 million package, the Angels would be better served to look elsewhere. 

In the organization, for a start.

It would probably serve the franchise’s interests (and the fans’) better if multiyear yet cost-effective deals could be done with right-hander Jered Weaver and first baseman Kendry Morales, similar to the one that was struck before last season with right-hander Ervin Santana.

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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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Yankees eliminate Angels, 5-2

October 25th, 2009, 9:07 pm by BILL PLUNKETT, OCREGISTER.COM

NEW YORK

The Angels got the monkey off their backs – only to run into King Kong.

The New York Yankees, baseball’s $200 million gorilla, ended the Angels’ post-season run with a 5-2 defeat in Game 6 of the American League Championship Series Sunday night.

The win sends the Yankees into the World Series for the 40th time in franchise history, this time against the Phillies.

For the Angels, the loss sends them into a winter of uncertainty with the list of potential free-agent departures including key players like Vladimir Guerrero, John Lackey, Chone Figgins and Bobby Abreu.

In the end, the Angels were done in by an offense that couldn’t keep up with Yankees’ deep lineup. They were outscored 32-18 in the six games and at the end their best hitter was … Jeff Mathis?

Mathis led off the third inning Sunday with his fifth double in the series. Two outs later, Abreu drove him in with an RBI single to right when Yankees starter Andy Pettitte hung an 0-and-1 curveball.

That was just about the only mistake Pettitte made in the game.

The Angels’ only other scoring threat against him came in the sixth inning after Pettitte retired the first two batters, the slumping Figgins and Abreu once again failing to set the table for the middle of the order. Torii Hunter beat out an infield single and went to third when Guerrero hit a pitch nearly off the ground and dropped it into right field for a double.

But Kendry Morales bounced back to the mound, Pettitte knocking it down near his face and throwing Morales out at first to end the inning.

Already the all-time leader in post-season starts and innings pitched, Pettitte became the winningest pitcher in post-season history (breaking a tie with John Smoltz at 15) by holding the Angels to just that one run on seven hits and a walk in 6 1/3 innings.

Angels starter Joe Saunders walked a tightrope through three innings to match Pettitte, stranding six runners on base in that time. But he tripped up in the fourth and never made it out.

With Mathis and Morales having given him a 1-0 lead, Saunders walked Robinson Cano to start the fourth then gave up a ground-ball single to left to Nick Swisher (batting .103 in the post-season when the game started).

Melky Cabrera bunted the runners over and Saunders walked Derek Jeter to load the bases. Johnny Damon singled in two runs to give the Yankees the lead and Mark Teixeira reloaded the bases on an infield single.

Working carefully to Alex Rodriguez, Saunders fell behind in the count 3-and-1 then threw a fastball at the knees. But home-plate umpire Dale Scott called it ball four, forcing in another run.

The walk was Saunders’ fifth in the game and Angels manager Mike Scioscia pulled him.

The game stayed close into the eighth thanks to Darren Oliver and Ervin Santana and the Angels briefly made it a one-run game, 3-2, when Guerrero drove in his seventh run of the post-season with a two-out RBI single off Mariano Rivera in the eighth.

It was the first post-season earned run off the Yankees closer since Game 2 of the 2000 World Series against the Mets.

But the momentum didn’t last. The Angels misplayed two bunts in the bottom of the eighth – Howie Kendrick dropped one throw and Scott Kazmir threw the other over Kendrick’s head – leading to two more Yankee runs without benefit of a hit. The errors were the seventh and eighth of the series by the Angels (seven in the three games at Yankee Stadium).

Game 6 lineups look familiar

October 25th, 2009, 3:55 pm by BILL PLUNKETT, OCREGISTER.COM

NEW YORK

Given a night to sleep on their lineup decisions, neither manager veered from the plan he had yesterday before the rains came.

For Angels manager Mike Scioscia, that meant another vote of confidence for slumping leadoff man Chone Figgins.

“There’s as much negative that can happen when you try to rework a lineup as positive things that can happen,” Scioscia said. “At times when you go through a rough spell and a guy is comfortable in a spot and knows what his role is — I think more times than not, you’re better off playing it out and seeing if a guy can’t get into his game and start to contribute.

“Putting some guys who maybe the comfort level is not there and maybe they try to get out of their game and (you) end up having lessened yourself in a couple of spots as opposed to the one guy you’re trying to fix.”

Elimination-game lineups:

ANGELS

3B Chone Figgins (2 for 30 in the post-season)

RF Bobby Abreu (3 for 21 in the ALCS)

CF Torii Hunter

DH Vladimir Guerrero (team-high 11 hits in post-season)

1B Kendry Morales (team-high seven RBI in post-season)

2B Howie Kendrick

LF Juan Rivera

C   Jeff Mathis (6 for 10 in ALCS)

SS Erick Aybar (check out the haircut)

LHP Joe Saunders

YANKEES

SS Derek Jeter

LF Johnny Damon

1B Mark Teixeira (6 for 35 in post-season)

3B Alex Rodriguez (slugging .967 in post-season)

C  Jorge Posada

DH Hideki Matsui

2B Robinson Cano

RF Nick Swisher (3 for 29 in post-season)

CF Melky Cabrera

LHP Andy Pettitte

What should Mathis’ playoff run mean for next season?

October 23rd, 2009, 11:10 am by Earl Bloom, staff writer

new-bloom-mug-for-ocrcom9There is no ALCS game until Saturday, maybe longer, so let’s jump ahead.

When John Lackey leaves, who does Jeff Mathis catch next season?

Everybody.

The Angels might continue their current catching arrangement, splitting the duties between Mathis and Mike Napoli.

(Associated Press)

(Associated Press)

Unless Vladimir Guerrero comes back at a discounted contract — and haters, he will play somewhere in MLB next season — the Angels will have an opening at designated hitter.

Will Mike Scioscia plug Napoli in at DH, catch him maybe twice a week to give the outfielders a half-day off, and carry a third catcher (Bobby Wilson)?

That would also give  Gary Matthews a chance to play twice a week, which would be nice since the Angels still owe him $23 million for two years.

The Angels can’t bring back everyone. Guerrero, Lackey, Bobby Abreu, Chone Figgins and Darren Oliver are free agents. Jered Weaver, Maicer Izturis, Joe Saunders, Howie Kendrick, Erick Aybar, Napoli and Mathis will get arbitration money, which means they get raises one way or the other.

Kendry Morales has kind of a unique contract, but he might be arbitration-eligible, too. What was his monster season worth?

Faced with paying that bill, expect the Angels to use a lot of in-house solutions.

Getting back to the original point, how many games will Mathis start next season?

How many games should Jeff Mathis start next season?
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Is it time for Figgins to move down?

October 23rd, 2009, 12:27 am by BILL PLUNKETT, OCREGISTER.COM

ANAHEIM

With the Angels’ batting .201 as a team and having scored just 10 runs in the first four games of the ALCS,  Angels manager Mike Scioscia resisted the urge to make any major changes in his batting order for Game 5.

The only move he made was a minor one in his batting order. He moved Juan Rivera down a spot, to seventh against right-hander A.J. Burnett.

But he did admit a more significant shakeup was contemplated.

The time for that might come in Game 6 with Chone Figgins a prime candidate to be on the move.

 The Angels’ leadoff man is 2 for 30 in the post-season and has looked particularly overmatched when batting right-handed. When the Yankees start left-hander Andy Pettitte in Game 6, No. 9 hitter Erick Aybar (9 for 28 in the post-season) and Figgins could swap places.

“We’ll look at a couple things,” Scioscia said after Thursday’s game – phrasing that usually indicates a move is forthcoming. “We’re going to absorb this one. We’ll talk as a staff and see where we’re going to go.”

The Angels will also have a decision to make at catcher where Mike Napoli’s offensive edge over Jeff Mathis has disappeared. Look for Howie Kendrick to be back in the lineup at second base against Pettitte as well.

Howie moving up in the lineup — then out

October 20th, 2009, 3:16 pm by BILL PLUNKETT, OCREGISTER.COM

ANAHEIM

Responding to Howie Kendrick’s near-cycle three-hit Game 3, Angels manager Mike Scioscia has him batting sixth today with Kendry Morales moving down a spot against Yankees left-hander CC Sabathia.

Kendrick’s 9-for-15 career numbers against Sabathia (including one of the Angels’ four hits off the hefty lefty in Game 1 of this series) had something to do with it, too.

But Scioscia indicated Kendrick will be back on the bench in Game 5 Thursday when the Yankees are scheduled to start right-hander A.J. Burnett. Maicer Izturis has started at second base against right-handers, Kendrick against left-handers since Kendrick’s return from Triple-A in July and Scioscia doesn’t plan to change that now — even if Kendrick is 4 for 8 in the series.

“You never say never,” Scioscia said. “If it was a righty today, Izturis would be in there and he’ll probably be in there Thursday. Don’t forget, Izzy has had some big hits for us too.”

Yesterday’s hero, Jeff Mathis, is on the bench to start the game. Mike Napoli has caught all but one start by Scott Kazmir since the left-hander was acquired from the Tampa Bay Rays. Mathis will get the start in Game 5 with John Lackey scheduled to start.

The Game 4 lineups:

ANGELS

3B Chone Figgins

RF Bobby Abreu

CF Torii Hunter

DH Vladimir Guerrero

LF Juan Rivera

2B Howie Kendrick

1B Kendry Morales

C  Mike Napoli

SS Erick Aybar

LHP Scott Kazmir

YANKEES

SS Derek Jeter

LF Johnny Damon

1B Mark Teixeira

3B Alex Rodriguez

C  Jorge Posada

DH Hideki Matsui

2B Robinson Cano

RF Nick Swisher

CF Melky Cabrera

LHP CC Sabathia

Powerful Jeff Mathis evokes memories of … Brian Doyle

October 19th, 2009, 5:45 pm by Earl Bloom, staff writer

Jeff Mathis is the new Brian Doyle.

The Angels catcher, who now has three doubles in the ALCS, including Monday’s winning RBI shot hat scored Howie Kendrick from first in the 11th inning of Game 3, is doing a pretty good impression of Doyle,Angels Rockies Spring Baseball a 1978 World Series hero for the … New York Yankees.

Mathis (right) is a career .200 hitter. Doyle, who batted .438 in the WS against the Dodgers, batted .161 in the regular season in his major-league career.

Doyle had 9 hits in 23 postseason at-bats (.391) in 1978, getting the call after Willie Randolph was hurt.

I won’t compare Mathis to Gene Tenace just yet … the Angels catcher has to get the ball out of the ballpark first. But Mathis has certainly given the Angels life in this ALCS.

McCarver wrong (shock), Izturis right on this time

October 19th, 2009, 4:01 pm by Earl Bloom, staff writer

Fox analyst Tim McCarver just told us it was Maicer Izturis, not Erick Aybar, who missed the squeeze-bunt attempt against Boston in last year’s playoffs.

Izturis, pinch-hitting for Mike Napoli on Monday afternoon in ALCS Game 3, then drove home Howie Kendrick with the go-ahead run on a sacrifice fly.

McCarver then corrected himself during Aybar’s seventh-inning at-bat, first calling him Manny Aybar (?), then correcting himself again to say Erick, not his younger brother who plays for Tampa Bay.

Willy Aybar, Erick’s older brother, plays for the Rays.