Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Angels pitchers showing progress

- From staff reports

Spring training is, in many ways, meaningles­s.

But for the Angels, this much is true: it’s better to pitch well in meaningles­s games than to pitch poorly in meaningles­s games.

After their first 12 games of the spring, the Angels are leading the Cactus League with a 3.23 ERA. The two teams with lower ERAS, the Washington Nationals and New York Mets, both play in the more pitcher-friendly environmen­t in Florida.

“That means that they are progressin­g,” manager Ron Washington said before Wednesday’s splitsquad games. “I don’t think you can put any more on it. They are progressin­g. The best ERA in the Cactus League is a big deal. You’ve got to start somewhere.”

In the lockout-shortened spring training in 2022, the Angels had the second-best Cactus League ERA. Although the Angels finished that season with 73 victories, the hitting was their primary problem. They finished the season with the ninth-best ERA in the majors.

The deeper number that might be the most encouragin­g is that the Angels have issued 2.63 walks per nine innings, which is the best ratio in the majors, in the Cactus League or Grapefruit League.

Washington said that’s a credit to new pitching coach Barry Enright and bullpen coach Steve Karsay.

“They deserve a pat on the back for the way they have taken this young pitching staff and got it believing that they can throw the ball over the plate with their stuff, instead of trying to run away from being touched with with a bat,” Washington said. “We’re going right at them.”

— Doug Padilla

Trout hits grand slam

Although Mike Trout hit a grand slam, the Angels still lost, 12-5, to the Oakland A’s in a split-squad game on Wednesday afternoon in Tempe, Ariz. The Angels also lost, 6-5, to the Chicago Cubs in Mesa, Ariz.

The slam was Trout’s first home run of the spring.

■ Veteran Jake Marisnick (Riverside Poly High) hit his first homer of the spring and also had a bunt single.

Rendon sidelined

Third baseman Anthony Rendon reported feeling “something in his groin,” on Sunday, Washington said before the Angels’ game Tuesday, noting the team would be cautious with Rendon.

Despite Rendon’s recent history, including injuries that cost him most of the past three seasons, Washington said he’s not concerned about this particular injury.

“It’s spring training,” Washington said. “Everybody goes through little aches and pains. Everybody goes through it. We all would be concerned if it would stop him from being in the season. But right now, everybody goes through it.”

— Jeff Fletcher

— Scottie Scheffler figures the best way to block out the noise — and there is endless chatter about his putting — is to channel his focus onto other matters.

Sports is always a good diversion. That hasn’t been working out very well of late, either.

Scheffler had just tied for 10th at the Genesis Invitation­al with his worst putting performanc­e of the young season — not a big surprise for someone who historical­ly struggles on the poa greens of Riviera — when he noticed a message on his phone.

“I get a notificati­on from ESPN after the tournament, and it was like, ‘Matsuyama wins, Scheffler struggles with putter.’ I thought I was going to get a notificati­on about a basketball game or something like that. I was like, ‘What is this?’ ” Scheffler said, breaking into laughter.

A reminder he doesn’t need. So be it. Scheffler is coming up on the one-year anniversar­y of his last official PGA Tour win, The Players Championsh­ip, where he became only the third winner at TPC Sawgrass with all four rounds in the 60s. He had five straight birdies in the middle of his round and won by five.

That doesn’t seem like a long time ago for a couple of reasons. Scheffler had his first real offseason in longer than he can remember. He went without competitio­n for two months, and then returned to win the Hero World Challenge against a 20-man field in the Bahamas. He seems to be in the mix just about every week.

A year ago, he went from January until the middle of July without finishing worse than a tie for 12th. He won twice last year and has been No. 1 in the world for the last 10 months. And it’s fair to wonder how much better his year could have been, how much distance he could have put between himself and Rory Mcilroy at the top of the ranking.

What stands out the most is the Memorial, where Scheffler gained 20.69 strokes against the field from tee to green, only to lose 8.5 shots to the field in putting. He missed a playoff by one shot at Muirfield Village.

The questions get tiring, at times annoying, though Scheffler understand­s that. He gets annoyed, too, particular­ly when he finds himself thinking too much about putting.

“I’ve done a good job of tuning it out at times, and I’ve done a bad job of tuning it out. I’m in a season now again where I think I’m doing a good job,” he said.

It’s not about tuning out the questions. It’s about quieting his mind.

“For instance, at times last year it would be a lot of what I would think about,” Scheffler said. “I don’t like not being good at something. Whenever I do something, I usually will just try and

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLA. >> figure out how to do it better. So having some struggles with the putter, it’s all I would think about.”

He was playing so well that it made the putting stand out even more. It’s one thing to struggle with one aspect of the game. It’s another to be the No. 1 player in the world and to be so good from tee to green that it makes the putter look even worse.

Jordan Spieth is among those who believe having a steady diet of 15-foot birdie putts on seemingly every hole can damage confidence with the flat stick.

“Putting is very, very mental,” Spieth said. “My best ball-striking year was 2017. I felt like I putted just as well as the previous couple of years and I ranked like 35th to 50th range, versus first or second. I don’t think it was any different. You look at that and say, ‘I have to change something’ or ‘I’m not as good of a putter.’ So maybe there’s a little bit of that.”

Scheffler spent Monday at the TPC Sawgrass going over memories from his win last year as the 50th edition of The Players approaches. He was having breakfast in the clubhouse when the television got his attention.

More sports, this time basketball. “The Warriors are not having their best season, and the highlight is the ‘Not So Splash Brothers.’ All they’re showing is Steph Curry missing shots,” he said. “The guy is the best shooter that ever was. And I’m thinking to myself, ‘That guy has shot a lot of baskets in his life, a lot in the NBA.’ That could go for hours if they want to show all his missed shots.

“It’s just the interestin­g story.” Scheffler can relate. There are more misses than makes at the moment. He said his putting stroke was an issue at one point last year, and he feels it is much better now. He sees a difference, even if all anyone else sees are missed birdie chances. A lot of them.

“That (make) percentage of 15 feet is so low,” Spieth said. “It starts to feel like you have to make more than half of them. And you just don’t. It probably feels worse than it is. But then also, you’re asked about it, and it’s talked about. It happens over the course of 6 months, 12 months, 18 months, and it’s hard to rebound.”

Scheffler is intelligen­t enough to have earned a degree from the Mccombs School of Business at Texas in four years without summer school while playing elite amateur golf. There also is a simplicity to him. He doesn’t dwell on the past or look too far into the future.

But this has caused a time of reflection.

“I feel like I’m learning a lot right now, which is good,” he said. “If I get asked constantly about putting, sometimes it feels like I’m not playing well. But I’m playing pretty darn good. I haven’t won in the last year, but it doesn’t feel like that.”

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