Los Angeles Times

Suddenly, a glut of arms on horizon

- By Zach Helfand zach.helfand@latimes.com Times staff writer Pedro Moura contribute­d to this report.

The Angels rotation was thin to begin with, but injuries to right-hander Garrett Richards and left-hander Andrew Heaney meant the team lacked arms in both quality and quantity.

Top-level pitching remains an issue, but soon, the Angels may have more depth. The roster could soon be replenishe­d by four fresh arms, which will require Manager Mike Scioscia to tinker with the rotation.

Right-hander Matt Shoemaker is already back. Once the worst pitcher in the league, statistica­lly, before he was sent to the minors, Shoemaker has been nearly unhittable in his last two starts.

On Saturday, righthande­r Tim Lincecum pitched in an extended spring training game for the first time this season and appears on his way to the majors by mid-June.

Left-hander Tyler Skaggs will pitch next week in extended spring training. Skaggs, who is returning from elbow surgery, made three starts at triple-A Salt Lake before being shut down with biceps tendinitis.

But left-hander C.J. Wilson suffered a setback. His scheduled rehab start on Monday has canceled after he was diagnosed with biceps tendinitis. He will undergo imaging this week.

It is not exactly an embarrassm­ent of riches. The Angels still lack firepower at the front end of the rotation. None of the returning arms will change that.

After Richards was hurt, the Angels patched together a rotation with Hector Santiago, Nick Tropeano, Jered Weaver and Jhoulys Chacin. Now, they will have decisions to make. Will Chacin be optioned? Will Wilson rejoin the rotation when he’s healthy? Scioscia didn’t commit. “We’ll take it one step at a time,” he said.

Who’s at short?

Despite the return of Cliff Pennington from the disabled list, Gregorio Petit started at shortstop on Saturday.

After shortstop Andrelton Simmons went to the disabled list with a thumb injury, Pennington served as his replacemen­t. Then Pennington, too, went down with a hamstring injury.

In his absence, Petit has excelled. The 31-year-old journeyman ranks ninth in the American League in wins above replacemen­t, despite appearing in just 15 games.

Asked whether he expects to regain his former role, Pennington deferred to Scioscia. “It’s his lineup card,” Pennington said.

Scioscia said Pennington will start Sunday.

Street’s road back

Closer Huston Street followed Lincecum to the mound in an extended spring training game against Seattle minor leaguers Saturday. With his fastball failing to surpass 85 mph, Street yielded two hits and a run in one inning. It was his first game action since he strained his oblique in pregame warmups April 27. Scioscia said he would rejoin the team this weekend, and the staff would evaluate when he will be activated.

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