Bullpen wastes three-run lead, Angels fall to Ranger 7-6

Written by Garrett Wilson on .

One of the prime theories we were operating under during the off-season was that Jerry Dipoto had knowingly built a shaky rotation. But to make up for the rotation's deficiencies, he had loaded up on bullpen reinforcements so that Scioscia could shorten the game for the starters. The problem with theories is that they don't always prove true. Take tonight for example.

Joe Blanton had his best start of his Angel career, but that is just damning him with feint praise. He wasn't very good at all having allowed 12 hits in six-plus innings of work without striking out a single batter. That he gave the Angels a chance to win the game was more a lucky side effect than anything else. But the Angels did get that chance, staking Joe to a three-run lead entering the seventh. This is exactly how the plan was supposed to work. Only it didn't.

Scioscia tried to steal a little bit of rest for the bullpen by letting Blanton start the seventh, presumably because the Halos are going to be forced to use Jerome Williams to start this Thursday with Tommy Hanson going on bereavement leave. That may not have been the smartest choice since the very hittable Blanton allowed a hit. That led to Michael Roth coming in and giving up a jamshot bloop single to Berkman. Oh, well. But it was not well because Dane De La Rosa was called upon next and he took that small spark of bad luck and fanned it into a real conflagration. Still, the Angels had a shot to get out of the inning with the lead, only a high-bouncer off the plate by Jeff Baker resulted the tying run scoring.

It was hardly the most egregious bullpen meltdown, but it was one brought about by Dipoto not building enough bullpen depth for his plan to actually work. He knew he was taking a risk on Ryan Madson, who has yet to throw a pitch for the team and he couldn't have planned for Jepsen to get hurt, other than someone always gets hurt. Even in a best case scenario, the bullpen always felt like it was one arm short. Tonight, the whole short-handed bullpen fell short up to and including Ernesto Frieri who failed to hold up his end of the bargain by failing to keep A.J. Pierzynski in the park.

This is isn't first time this has happened this season and it won't be the last. Sooner or later, Dipoto is going to need a new plan.

Rangers 7, Angels 6

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Angels Player Power Rankings - Week 4

Written by Garrett Wilson on .

Hey look! The Angels are good again. YAAAAY! Now our rankings can be fun again... at least until we start talking about the starting rotation...

RANK PLAYER CHANGE COMMENTS
1 -- 0
Last Week: 1
Albert Pujols - Just imagine how good he would be if he had someone hitting behind him who could actually hit.
2 -- 0
Last Week: 2
Mike Trout - Dear BBWAA, kindly take note of who wildly outplayed who when the Tigers and Angels played last weekend.
3 green arrow up+2
Last Week: 5
Mark Trumbo - Trumbo looks exceedingly comfortable at the plate and is really reducing the number of bad at-bats. The league should be scared.
4 -- 0
Last Week: 4
Ernesto Frieri - Just a thought, but maybe Ernasty should pitch more than once a week.
5 green arrow up+4
Last Week: 9
Garrett Richards - Jerry Dipoto trade Kendrys Morales and Jordan Walden and spent over $28 million only to find out that his second-best starter was a guy already on the team that had been forced into the bullpen.
6 green arrow up+4
Last Week: 10
Peter Bourjos - He still isn't walking, but he does lead the AL in infield and bunt hits. Hey, man, whatever works.
7 Red arrow down-1
Last Week:6
Chris Iannetta - He is feast or famine with the bat, this week was a feast.
8 green arrow up+3
Last Week: 11
Sean Burnett - Say hello to the only off-season acquisition by the Angels that is actually working out as well as expected.
9 green arrow up+4
Last Week: 13
Scott Downs - Slowly but surely he is beginning to resemble the Downs that was the glue of the bullpen for a season and a half.
10 Red arrow down-7
Last Week: 3
Howie Kendrick - I think we all knew clutch, situation hitting Howie was only going to last so long. It was nice having him around. He will be missed.
11 -- 0
Last Week: n/a
Luis Jimenez - Lucho not only finally gives the Angels some depth but he might even be giving the Angels a tough decision to make once Alberto Callaspo gets healthy.
12 Red arrow down-4
Last Week: 8
C.J. Wilson - Wilson is a walking, talking example of why the Quality Start stat is complete and utter bullshit.
13 green arrow up+2
Last Week: 15
Tommy Hanson - Only an Angel pitcher could shutout the powerful Tigers offense for six innings and still have it be a discouraging outing.
14 green arrow up+6
Last Week: 20
Dane De La Rosa - The Angels traded a prospect to Tampa for a 30-year old reliever that turned out to possibly be pretty decent. Isn't it supposed to work the other way around?
15 Red arrow down-3
Last Week: 12
Jason Vargas - Well, he didn't give up a homer in his lone start this week, so that's progress... right?
16 -- 0
Last Week: n/a
Michael Roth - It is only fair that an unorthodox pitcher like Roth be used in an unorthodox bullpen role. If Scioscia makes that happen, Roth might be my new favorite Angel.
17 green arrow up+4
Last Week: 21
Jerome Williams - For the week, Williams went 6.1 innings, allowed three runs on eight hits and two walks. That is a better line for a start than either Blanton or Vargas had. I'm just sayin'.
18 Red arrow down-11
Last Week: 7
Josh Hamilton - So, anyone else wondering if the Yankees might be willing to trade Vernon Wells for Josh Hamilton?
19 green arrow up+6
Last Week: 25
Brendan Harris - Look at li'l Brendan muscling up to show some power this week! His defense has been hit or miss, but his bat has done well enough to hold down the fort in Aybar's absence.

20
Red arrow down-3
Last Week: 17
Hank Conger - Anyone that can catch C.J. Wilson and prevent him from completely falling apart is A-OK in my book.
21 green arrow up+3
Last Week: 24
J.B. Shuck  - FUN FACT: Shuck leads the Angels with a 1.055 OPS.
22 green arrow up+1
Last Week: 23
Andrew Romine - Which happens first: Aybar comes off the DL or Romine collects another base hit?
23 -- 0
Last Week: n/a
Michael Kohn - We are now officially in the "throw stuff against the wall and see what sticks" phase of building a bullpen.

24
Red arrow down-6
Last Week: 18
Joe Blanton - [EXPLETIVE DELETED]
25 Red arrow down-3
Last Week: 22
Mark Lowe - Placed on the DL with a stiff neck that was brought about by constantly hanging his head after walking every other batter.

Dropped from rankings: Jepsen (blaming arm problems on forgetting how to pitch again), Callaspo (made obsolete by Lucho placed on DL)

Biggest Riser: Harris and De La Rosa, up six spots

Biggest Dropper: Hamilton, down 11 spots


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Halo Headlines: Madson suffers another setback, Callaspo and Lowe to the DL

Written by Garrett Wilson on .

The April 22nd, 2013 edition of daily news for the Los Angeles Angels including Madson suffers another setback, Callaspo and Lowe to the DL and much more...

The Story: Ryan Madson suffered yet another setback after throwing a simulated game over the weekend.

The Monkey Says: I even joked recently that he had been making so much progress that he was due for another setback. So, you know, my bad. This really sucks though as Madson seemed like he was about to head out on a minor league rehab assignment and maybe rejoin the Angels at the end of the month. Then, of course, there is the matter that the Halos desperately need som more talent in the bullpen right now. Ugh. Ugh. Ugh.


The Story: Alberto Callaspo was placed on the DL with RHP Michael Kohn called up to take his roster spot.

The Monkey Says: Beto just wasn't getting better fast enough and, frankly, Lucho has been playing so well in his absence that there was no need to rush him. Kohn had a strong sprign and then was lights out in Triple-A. He could earn himself a prominent role in a hurry if he impresses.


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Mercyful Fate; Angels walk off on Tigers 4-3

Written by Ryan Falla on .

In a game that looked like it was in the pooper early on the Angels managed to pull a hard, and I mean hard, fought victory. The Angels offense struggled through most of the game, failing to collect crucial hits in 7 of their 8 RISP opportunities. What really gets me excited is how the Angels battled against the such a heralded AL team, a team thought by many to play deep into the playoffs. The Angels lived dangerously off of Pujols' early 2-RBI double that carried the Angels all the way to the walk-off bomb by Mark Trumbo in the 13th.  

In a game where the starting pitching struggled intensely the bullpen came through fantastically, showing once again that it is now a huge strength in the ballclub instead of an incredibly vulnerable weak point. Now the Angels can take some serious heat to Texas this upcoming series and let them know who the real big daddy team of the AL West.

Angels 4 Tigers 3

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First Inning Beatdown; Angels demolish Tigers 10-0

Written by Jonathan Lyons on .

Last night it was tempting to treat the offensive explosion as a one game anomoly. But after the first inning of today's game, I think it is safe to say the Angel bats are wide awake. Nine runs in an innng doesn't happen very often and it also marked the second day the team has batted around in as many days. Alhough they didn't tear the cover off the ball in the inning, hits are hits and runs are runs. So the Angels win the first two of the series and are starting to turn things around.

Angels 10 Tigers 0

 

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Offense hits on all cylinders, Angels defeat Tigers

Written by Jonathan Lyons on .

Hey look, an offense!! It's about freakin' time the Angels hit and scored some runs. Add to that some Harry Houdini like pitching and, Voila!, the Halos get a victory. Now let's not get carried away; one win does not a division title make. However, there were a lot of positive signs to take away from tonight's game. Let the good times roll!!

Angels 8 Tigers 1

 

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It is now or never for Garrett Richards

Written by Garrett Wilson on .

When it comes to Garrett Richards, let's hope the third time is the charm. Even though he is just shy of his 25th birthday, Richards is now getting his third shot at securing a spot in the Angel rotation.

Despite a mid-nineties fastball and a wicked slider, Richards just hasn't ever been able to have the kind of success that many had forecasted for him. His previous stints in the rotation, which have only been a grand total of 12 starts, have been plagued by high ERAs, wimpy strikeout rates, concerning walk rates, ugly platoon splits and a few too many homers allowed. Given the small sample size, some of that can be forgiven, but there is enough evidence to suggest that Richards just may not be cut out for being a starter. He's now being given this one last four-to-six week stretch to audition for the gig. Despite his youth and promise, one has to figure that if he fails to impress once again, he's not going to get any other callbacks.

The pressure may be on Richards, but there are some real signs of hope stemming from Garrett's early work as a reliever in 2013. As a relief pitcher this season, Richards is finally flashing the peripherals the Halos had hoped to see from him in his previous work in the rotation. In the admittedly tiny sample of 4.1 innings of work, Richards has posted a 10.38 K/9, 2.50 BB/9 and completely shut down left-handed hitting. Again, I can't stress how small that sample is, but he has shown a smaller but similar spike in effectiveness in his previous stints of relief work. In a still small sample of 25.1 career relief innings, his K/9 is 3.5 strikeouts better in relief and he has shaved a full walk off his BB/9 rate.

What is more important that Richards' actual results though is how he is going about attaining them. One of the reasons that many failed starting pitchers are able to find success in relief is because they are able to simplify things. They can either reduce their repertoire, give more effort and focus or focus on one specialized pitch. It appears that the early success Garrett has achieved in 2013 has been a result of all three of those factors.

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