Los Angeles Times

Angels acquire another Iglesias

Team adds proven Cincinnati Reds closer for Ramirez and player to be named.

- By Maria Torres

The Angels found essential back- end bullpen help as the virtual winter meetings began Monday, acquiring closer Raisel Iglesias and cash from the Cincinnati Reds in exchange for right- handed reliever Noé Ramirez and a player to be named.

Iglesias, 31 next month, went 4- 3 with a 2.74 ERA and 31 strikeouts to f ive walks in 23 innings last season. He has a 2.85 ERA and 375 strikeouts to 104 walks over 3161⁄ innings since 2016.

3 Iglesias converted eight of 10 save opportunit­ies last season. He has 106 saves since switching permanentl­y to the bullpen in June 2016 and is one of only f ive major leaguers to collect 100 since 2017.

Although he is not the No. 1 starter fans hope new general manager Perry Minasian will add, Iglesias is a welcome addition to an Angels bullpen that blew a major league- worst 14 saves in 26 chances last season.

“There’s a lot of different ways to prevent runs, whether that be improve with the personnel on the mound, improve defensivel­y, improve in game planning and improve positionin­g,” Minasian said in a conference call. “But the bullpen was an area where we feel like we can make some adjustment­s there and add some personnel that really put us in a good spot.”

Iglesias, a native of Cuba, is due $ 9.125 million in 2021, his f inal season before becoming a free agent. The Reds will pay an undisclose­d amount to offset part of the contract’s burden on the Angels.

Entering Monday, the Angels’ 2021 payroll in relation to the competitiv­e- balance tax was estimated by

Fangraphs at $ 171 million. That meant Minasian had about $ 23 million before reaching preseason 2020 spending levels and $ 39 million before meeting next year’s luxury- tax threshold of $ 210 million.

Owner Arte Moreno said last month the team’s payroll would not be reduced. He declined to say how much he intends to invest in the Angels’ opening- day roster.

It doesn’t seem as though Minasian will be hampered f inancially. With an eye on maintainin­g budget f lexibility to address the rest of the roster, he traded last week for the cost- effective José Iglesias, a slick- f ielding shortstop who will replace Andrelton Simmons and coincident­ally was born in Cuba one day after the Angels’ new closer.

Ramirez, who is projected to earn around $ 1 million next season through arbitratio­n, had a 4.04 ERA in 141 appearance­s with the Angels since 2017.

He could be counted on to keep games close, but his arsenal, which features a fastball that averaged 89 mph the last two seasons, wasn’t well- suited to lategame scenarios.

Igelsias’ is. He throws a 96- mph fastball and a mid- 80s slider. The breaking pitch generated whiffs 48% of the time last season. Iglesias also frequently turns to a changeup, off which hitters batted .158 in 2020. A sinker complement­s the pitch mix.

Opponents last season made contact against Iglesias’ pitches on about 64% of their swings. Only 12 qualif ied relievers produced a lower contact rate. Righthande­r Mike Mayers, who drew higher- stakes assignment­s from manager Joe Maddon as the season drew to an end, was the only Angels reliever who came close to matching Iglesias. He held batters to a 65% contact rate; no other bullpen mate with more than 20 innings had a rate below 73%.

“With Raisel, it’s a combinatio­n of power, swing- and

miss, with a breaking ball and a changeup, with an elite fastball and his ability to throw strikes,” Minasian said. “The less traffic [ in the] late innings, the more years we put on Joe [ Maddon’s] life.”

There is more work to be done. The Angels have purged seven pitchers from their bullpen since the end of the season. Minasian said some currently in the organizati­on could take on major league relief roles but he didn’t rule out additional moves to shore up a group Moreno pointed out as the Angels’ biggest weakness in 2020.

“You look at the teams that are winning,” Moreno said during Minasian’s news conference last month, “they’re closing out their games and competing at a different level in extra- inning games. … You really can go through and nitpick different parts of the game. But at the end of the day, we were not f inishing games. Those Ls needs to turn into Ws.”

Minasian might still augment the starting rotation, but he suggested the group might not require too significan­t an overhaul.

 ?? Associated Press RAISEL I GLESIAS ?? Aaron Doster had a 2.74 ERA last season.
Associated Press RAISEL I GLESIAS Aaron Doster had a 2.74 ERA last season.

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