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'Forgotten' Angels hoping to defy expectations in their post-Ohtani world

Mike DiGiovanna, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Baseball

And they shouldn't feel compelled to trade several of their precious few top prospects from one of baseball's thinnest farm systems to acquire marginal upgrades the way they did last summer in a last-gasp effort to seize a playoff berth, which eluded the Angels when they lost seven straight and 16 of 21 games to open August.

"When you lose a guy like Shohei, it's a big, big loss — what he brought to the team, you can't replace that," Trout said. "But if we have normal, healthy years, we might surprise some people. We have a lot of veteran guys and some young guys who are talented. You never know what could happen."

To have any chance of even finishing above .500, the Angels, under the direction of new manager Ron Washington, will need normal, healthy years from Trout and third baseman Anthony Rendon, the high-priced veterans who are so far removed from their last healthy years, it's hard to say what a "normal" season would even be for them.

Trout, 32, in the sixth year of a 12-year, $426.5-million contract, has been limited by injuries to 237 games in the last three seasons, and the perennially hobbled Rendon, 33, among baseball's biggest busts since signing a seven-year, $245-million deal before the 2020 season, has played only 148 games since the start of 2021.

Trout suffered a season-ending calf injury in mid-May 2021, sat out five weeks of July and August 2022 because of a back issue and sat out all but one game from July 4 to the end of 2023 because of a hamate fracture in his left wrist

"Last year was the best my body has felt in a long time until I broke my hand," Trout said earlier this spring, "but you can't control that."

The numbers didn't reflect how Trout felt. The center fielder hit only .263 with an .858 on-base-plus-slugging percentage, 18 homers and 44 RBIs in 82 games last season, well below his career .301 average and .994 OPS and well off his power pace of 2022, when he hit 40 homers and drove in 80 runs in 119 games.

But Trout says he believes he has identified a "bad habit" that he developed over the last year and a half in which he would "slide" into his swing instead of maintaining a firm base. That made it tougher to catch up to high velocity and caused him to swing under too many pitches.

"My head is moving too much, and when the head moves, the ball moves," Trout said. "I'm trying to slow everything down (this spring). It sounds simple, but it's a process. My swing hasn't felt right for the past year, year and a half, but I know I'm gonna get that feeling back."

 

The Angels aren't expecting Rendon to reprise his 2019 season, when he hit .319 with 1.010 OPS, 34 homers, 44 doubles and 126 RBIs to lead the Nationals to a World Series title, but with Ohtani no longer locked in at designated hitter, Rendon can be rotated through the DH spot to reduce the wear and tear on his fragile body.

But even with bounce-back years from Trout and Rendon, the Angels might not be playoff contenders.

They spent $49 million to rebuild their bullpen, with $33 million going to new setup man Robert Stephenson, but they made no significant additions to their rotation or lineup, with suddenly stingy owner Arte Moreno, perhaps feeling burned by so many nine-figure-deals-gone-bad, tightening his grip on the purse strings this winter.

The rotation features four starters — Sandoval, Reid Detmers, Tyler Anderson and Griffin Canning — who are coming off subpar 2023 seasons.

The Angels have one of the game's best young catchers in Logan O'Hoppe and two other promising youngsters in shortstop Zach Neto and first baseman Nolan Schanuel, but they did virtually nothing to fill Ohtani's void, passing on free-agent slugger Cody Bellinger, and they lack power from the left side.

They will need a lot to go right and very little to go wrong to make any kind of playoff push, but who knows? Maybe after being decimated by injuries for so many years, they're due for some good luck.

"The last two years, I thought we were gonna win the World Series, I really did, but obviously injuries and things happened," Angels left fielder Taylor Ward said. "So I'm not going to say anything now. I'm going to go in with no expectations — I think a lot of us are — and just see what happens."

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©2024 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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