Los Angeles Times

Angels ready to unleash ‘Thor’

With surgery behind him, new pitcher Syndergaar­d eager to show what he can do.

- By Mike DiGiovanna

There’s the muscular 6-foot-6, 242-pound frame, the long blond hair and the nickname that evokes images of a hammer-wielding god who can create thunder and lightning: Thor. New Angels pitcher Noah Syndergaar­d strikes an imposing figure, and not just on the mound.

“He can’t help but realize that when people talk to him, they’re gonna be intimidate­d by him,” Angels manager Joe Maddon said. “And he’s very taken aback by that, because he’s really a sweet guy. He can’t help how he looks.

“When you start talking to him, he’s really thoughtful, really bright, really wellread, really interestin­g. But you’ve got to get in there, because I think a lot of people are afraid to get in there just based on appearance.”

The Angels are betting $21 million that Syndergaar­d, limited by Tommy John surgery to two innings in the last two seasons, will strike a similar fear into opposing batters like he did from 2015 to 2018 with the New York Mets, when he was one of the most dominant pitchers in baseball.

Syndergaar­d, 29, will take the first major step in that process when he makes his highly anticipate­d Angels debut against Houston Astros right-hander Justin Verlander, who is also returning from Tommy John surgery, on Saturday night in Angel Stadium.

“Oh, everything,” Angels catcher Max Stassi said, when asked what a healthy Syndergaar­d could mean to the team. “You’re talking about a front-of-the rotation guy, a guy that’s proven in this game. He’s just an amazing talent, a huge addition in the clubhouse and obviously on the field, just an all-around pro.”

Syndergaar­d will take the mound looking to stop a season-opening, two-game losing streak.

Houston hit six homers, including two by Kyle Tucker, in the Astros’ 13-6 victory on Friday. Jose Al

tuve, Aledmys Diaz, Alex Bregman and Jeremy Peña hit solo homers and the Astros broke open the game with an eight-run, eight-hit seventh inning.

Altuve (first inning) and Diaz (fourth) homered off Angels starter Reid Detmers, Bregman homered off reliever Oliver Ortega for a 4-2 lead in the sixth, and Peña greeted Mike Mayers with his first career homer in the seventh for a 5-2 lead.

Houston tacked on seven more runs in the seventh on RBI doubles by Michael Brantley and Yordan Alvarez and RBI singles by Bregman and Diaz off reliever Jimmy Herget and Tucker’s three-run homer off Jaime Barria.

The Angels scored twice in the first when Shohei Ohtani and Anthony Rendon singled, Jared Walsh fisted a run-scoring single to shallow left and Rendon scored on a passed ball.

Syndergaar­d looked sharp in his final exhibition start Sunday, giving up one run and two hits, striking out seven and walking one in five innings against the Dodgers, mixing a fastball that averaged 94.8 mph and topped out at 97.8 mph with an 88-mph changeup, a 77-mph curve and an 85-mph slider.

“When he’s healthy, he’s up there with anybody,” Angels shortstop David Fletcher said.

“That’s obviously a big question for him, but I think he’s in a good place right now.”

Though he hasn’t regained the triple-digit fastball he possessed during his peak Mets years, Syndergaar­d said he believes his velocity will trend up as he gets more comfortabl­e in his delivery and the regular-season adrenaline starts flowing.

“He’s a big man with long levers, and he’s a strike-thrower,” Maddon said. “He’s a pitcher, he’s not out there just throwing. He’s not primal at all. I think that sustains him, and I think that’s why it could be good for years to come, because he’s not just living and dying on velocity.”

The Angels don’t have a plan to limit Syndergaar­d’s workload because the built-in guardrails of their six-man rotation will reduce his starts and innings and give him extra rest between games.

“I feel like the six-man [rotation] is gonna be huge,” Syndergaar­d said. “But I also take great pride in taking care of my body and treating it like an elite athlete should. So, I mean, I see no reason why we can’t push the limits.”

Syndergaar­d has made a seamless transition to a new coast, new league and new team, in part because of his budding relationsh­ip with his new manager.

“I’m able to go into his office and have a long conversati­on and just shoot the s—, just a couple guys being dudes,” said Syndergaar­d, who went 37-22 with a 2.93 ERA in 87 games from 2015 to 2018. “It’s a very profession­al relationsh­ip. I really value and respect that.”

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? THE ANGELS’ Shohei Ohtani (17) scores on a single by Jared Walsh in the first.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press THE ANGELS’ Shohei Ohtani (17) scores on a single by Jared Walsh in the first.

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