Los Angeles Times

Rendon is no fan of fake crowd noise

- By Maria Torres

a 2½-hour intrasquad game this week, the Angels experiment­ed with piping artificial crowd noise through the stadium’s speaker system. Other teams around baseball have tried the same thing. They all wonder if piped-in ruckus can offset the absence of fans, who aren’t expected to attend many games this season, if any.

Anthony Rendon, the Angels’ top free-agent acquisitio­n last winter, didn’t need long to offer his opinion on the idea. “It was stupid,” he said. So playing in a silent ballpark might be better?

“Definitely. Without a doubt,” Rendon said Thursday. “It’s like you have two of your senses that aren’t coinciding with one another. It’s like you’re looking at a pizza, but you’re smelling a hamburger. You hear noise, but you know nobody’s in the stands. You don’t see anybody.

“I think it was dumb. I’d rather listen to music.”

In his first video conference with reporters since the outbreak of the coronaviru­s shut down spring training in mid-March, Rendon was all smiles. He joked about pawning his 2019 World Series ring, which he received via mail from the Washington Nationals that morning, and poked fun at himself for not doing much baseball activity during the hiatus.

“A lot of mental hacks, mental ground balls, mental throws. Not really too much,” said Rendon, whose wife gave birth to the couple’s second child in February. “I’d throw a tennis ball against the wall, maybe. I have a machine that I could put on and simulate some swings.”

But during his 20-minute virtual sit-down, the 30-yearold third baseman provided an introspect­ive look at the state of baseball. He took exception with the negotiatio­ns between the league and players being characteri­zed as a battle over salary. He said it was more important to players that appropriat­e health and safety protocols were establishe­d so they could protect the well-being of family, staff and team members.

“At this time, we have to be selfless toward everyone around us because we don’t know what everyone’s situation is,” he said. “And I think this is a good opportunit­y for us as a world to realize that selfishnes­s doesn’t go a long way, so we have to look out for one another.”

He also supported the statement made by his former teammate and current Colorado Rockies player Ian Desmond, who criticized MLB’s “puzzling lack of focus” in its attempts to improve minority representa­tion when he opted out of the 2020 season last week.

“I definitely felt for him,” said Rendon, who is of Mexican descent. “Black individual­s aren’t the only ones that are part of this racism. Brown people get frowned upon just as much as Black people do, or any other race, whatever other color that anyone says they are. Racism is still very much alive in this world, and it’s unfortunat­e. … If we stop it at the youth and we change it from the youngest generation, then it has no opportunit­y to grow. I loved his explanatio­n.”

On the baseball front, Rendon is not concerned about the little he did to prepare for the abbreviate­d season. He said he is roughly 80% ready to go with two weeks remaining until opening day.

“If you played a sport [as a kid], a coach always tells you that you can’t turn it on and off like it’s a light switch,” he said. “You can’t just decide to show up whenever you want. But I think as we get older, we know what we need to do to prepare ourselves for a game.”

Roster adjustment­s

Left-handed pitcher Patrick Sandoval and infielder Jared Walsh joined Angels camp after missing the first six days of workouts. The reasons for their absences were not disclosed. They were well enough to participat­e in baseball activities at Angel StaDuring dium and Blair Field in Long Beach.

Outfield prospect Brandon Marsh, pitchers Jose Suarez and Julio Teheran, and infielders Matt Thaiss and Luis Rengifo were still missing. The team did not say why.

Only veteran starter Teheran has publicly explained his whereabout­s, telling ESPN Deportes on Wednesday that he was awaiting the results of a coronaviru­s test.

In coming to grips with what could be lengthy absences from pitchers expected to play key roles, the Angels added right-hander Adrian De Horta and lefthander Adam Seminaris to their 60-man pool. Seminaris, from Chino Hills, was the Angels’ fifth-round pick in last month’s draft. He had a 3.58 ERA in 1732⁄3 innings at Long Beach State.

He shared on Twitter a photo of his new Angels jerseys in a locker at Blair Field.

Short hops

A hint of what to expect from home run celebratio­ns: air elbow bumps. Top prospect Jo Adell hit an opposite-field home run in a three-inning intrasquad game that featured primarily minor leaguers. As he crossed the plate, he lifted his arm parallel to the ground and mimed bumping elbows with the hitter on deck. … Manager Joe Maddon disagreed with Rendon’s assessment of piped-in crowd noise. “I liked it because I felt my focus was on the field. … I think you can be distracted by the quiet. I think you have a better chance of locking in with noise. It’s different. It’s not playing golf.”

 ?? Ashley Landis Associated Press ?? ANTHONY RENDON says he is about 80% ready for opening day.
Ashley Landis Associated Press ANTHONY RENDON says he is about 80% ready for opening day.

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