Los Angeles Times

Heaney is put on the IL

Temporary loss of the left-hander, who has shoulder inflammati­on, represents another setback for the struggling rotation of the Angels

- BY MARIA TORRES

SEATTLE — Before they played their 100th game of the season Saturday, the weakest part of the Angels’ roster took another hit. Starter Andrew Heaney was retroactiv­ely placed on the injured list because of inflammati­on in his left shoulder.

The injury, which began to bother the left-hander this month in Houston, is not expected to claim much more than the 10 days Heaney is required to spend off the active roster.

“I think it’s something if we get in front of now, I could have a good two months at the end of the year,” said Heaney, who has a 5.09 ERA in 46 innings.

For a team struggling to make up ground in the wildcard standings largely because of the ineffectiv­eness of its starters, the injury developmen­t could still be damaging.

The starting rotation was the Angels’ most prominent deficiency entering the season despite offseason moves to shore it up.

An elbow injury to Heaney kept him out of the big leagues until late May. JC Ramirez, still recovering from Tommy John surgery, didn’t begin his first rehabilita­tion assignment until about the time of Heaney’s reinstatem­ent. Before those moves, the Angels promoted rookie Griffin Canning and watched winter acquisitio­ns Trevor Cahill and Matt Harvey struggle. Cahill wound up in the bullpen, where he likely will remain, and Harvey was designated for assignment Friday.

Tyler Skaggs, who died July 1 and was beloved by the organizati­on for his tenacity on the mound and leadership off it, had provided the most value in terms of wins above of replacemen­t of anyone on the staff.

Now only Heaney, 28, remains as a veteran of the Angels rotation. He was a stalwart last year, leading the team with 30 starts, 180 innings and 180 strikeouts. He had never eclipsed those marks in a major league career earmarked by injury.

Heaney will not recapture that level of production this year. Missing two months at the start of the season had already put him on track for fewer than 25 starts. But he took comfort in knowing he might have avoided further jeopardizi­ng his 2019 campaign by addressing his shoulder discomfort now.

“This is something that before I would have just kept pitching until something blew up,” said Heaney, who allowed a season-high nine hits in 41⁄3 innings in his last start against the Houston Astros on Tuesday. “That’s never the right way to go about it. I just thought I’d be more proactive and try and be a little bit more honest. Sometimes it’s hard. You just don’t want to admit defeat. Especially when I pitched four days ago, it’s hard to admit to yourself that you’re physically not able to perform.”

Heaney’s injury, no matter how mild, further exposed the Angels’ lack of experience­d starting pitching depth.

The team had to scrounge around triple A for a suitable spot starter for Sunday’s game, which was scheduled to be Heaney’s 10th start, and landed on left-hander Dillon Peters.

The 26-year-old has pitched in only four games for the Angels this season and owns a 6.47 ERA at triple A in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League.

Their second-best option, prospect Jose Suarez, is not eligible to rejoin the Angels until the weekend.

Manager Brad Ausmus wasn’t able to forecast with certainty who will pitch much beyond Sunday. All he could say was Felix Pena and Jaime Barria are locked in to pitch against the Dodgers on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Despite Angels starters combining for a 5.42 ERA, third-highest in the major leagues, Ausmus said Thursday the Angels were comfortabl­e enough with their rotation to put Ramirez in the bullpen. He reiterated his confidence in the group of starters after Friday’s 10-0 loss to the Mariners.

The Angels entered Saturday trailing the Tampa Bay Rays, Boston Red Sox and the Texas Rangers in the race for second-place in the wild-card standings. They were 61⁄2 games behind second-place Oakland, which had won eight of 10 games.

The Angels need rotation reinforcem­ents if they want to end their four-year postseason drought.

Short hops

FS West decided against airing live the memorial service for Tyler Skaggs. The channel will broadcast it on tape delay Monday at 7 p.m. ... The Angels claimed lefthander Adalberto Mejia off waivers from the Minnesota Twins. Mejia, a former starter and top organizati­onal prospect, had an 8.80 ERA in 13 appearance­s this season.

 ?? Victor Decolongon Getty Images ?? ANDREW HEANEY, talking with catcher Kevan Smith, is back on the Angels’ injured list after being sidelined for the first two months of the season, this time because of shoulder inflammati­on.
Victor Decolongon Getty Images ANDREW HEANEY, talking with catcher Kevan Smith, is back on the Angels’ injured list after being sidelined for the first two months of the season, this time because of shoulder inflammati­on.

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