Los Angeles Times

Open mouths, closed minds

- BILL PLASCHKE

In the middle of his prolonged fight with drugs and alcohol, Josh Hamilton has been plagued by a different sort of nemesis.

His new demons are Angels.

An arbitrator ruled that Hamilton’s recent selfreport­ed relapse did not warrant discipline for a violation of baseball’s drug treatment program. At which point, his own team screamed he should be suspended.

“It defies logic that Josh’s reported behavior is not a violation of his drug program,” Angels President John Carpino said.

The path is now clear for Hamilton to rejoin the Angels upon completion of his rehabilita­tion from shoulder surgery, possibly as soon as next month. Except, his own team essentiall­y announced they don’t want him back.

“The Angels have serious concerns about Josh’s conduct, health and behavior,” Angels General Manager Jerry Dipoto said in a statement. “We are disappoint­ed

mistake. . . . We have a responsibi­lity to the human being. We also have a responsibi­lity to the product on the field, the organizati­on, the fan base, the industry. It’s a complicate­d web.”

Hamilton, who self-reported his use of cocaine and alcohol to the league, was not in camp with the Angels this spring as he rehabilita­ted from Feb. 4 surgery on his right shoulder.

The five-time All-Star with the Texas Rangers has failed to live up to the expectatio­ns of the five-year, $125-million contract he signed before 2013, his two seasons in Anaheim marked by injury and ineffectiv­eness. His relapse fueled the frustratio­n of a club that has gotten little return on its investment.

“Josh came with a very well-known story of addiction, and we understood the complicati­ons that sometimes travel with that,” Dipoto said. “We are not here to short-sell the troubles and reality of addiction. But there is a responsibi­lity, a profession­al responsibi­lity, to do the job you’re asked to do.

“Every player is going to be held to that standard. That’s just life. . . . We’ve expressed support for Josh throughout, but we’re not going to sugarcoat what the issues are with the team as we move forward.”

Those issues include the likely distractio­n Hamilton will cause when he returns and the challenge Scioscia will face in integratin­g Hamilton back into a lineup that may be better off without him.

Matt Joyce, a 2011 All-Star acquired from Tampa Bay, and Collin Cowgill will share left field in Hamilton’s absence, and Joyce and secondyear slugger C.J. Cron will share designated hitter duties. All three have looked strong this spring.

“We’re going to take this process one step at a time,” Scioscia said. “The most important thing is Josh getting himself where he needs to be. Addiction is a terrible thing, and he’s trying to deal with that.”

Dipoto said Hamilton is taking several hundred swings a day off a tee, but he has not resumed full baseball activities. Hamilton would likely need a lengthy minor league rehabilita­tion assignment before returning.

Like the Angels, Commission­er Rob Manfred disagreed with the arbitrator’s ruling. A statement issued by MLB said he “will seek to address deficienci­es in the manner in which drugs of abuse are addressed under the program in the collective bargaining process.”

Hamilton’s case was submitted to a treatment board, which is made up of two attorneys and two physicians — one of each appointed by the commission­er’s office and the players’ union.

The board deadlocked on whether Hamilton violated the policy, and an arbitrator was appointed to break the tie. With no violation, Manfred could not impose any penalty on Hamilton, who may have helped his cause by self-reporting his relapse.

The gist of the ruling, according to a person familiar with the decision but not authorized to comment on it, is the arbitrator believed Hamilton’s behavior was more of a “slip” than a violation.

“Josh came forward — he admitted fault,” Angels pitcher C.J. Wilson said. “That’s a very manly thing to do in this day and age when everyone’s trying to cover stuff up and buy off people.”

For most of the last eight seasons, Hamilton, who was suspended from baseball from 2004 to 2006, has traveled with an “accountabi­lity partner,” whose job is to help Hamilton resist temptation­s that could derail his career.

Hamilton downsized the role of his accountabi­lity partner in 2014, but Dipoto said Shayne Kelley, who served in a full-time role in 2013, will return this season.

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