Los Angeles Times

Angels had no wiggle room for error, explaining why season went sideways

Despite improving roster and making deals at trade deadline, team ends with another losing campaign.

- By Sarah Valenzuela

It was during the chilly mornings at the spring training facility in Tempe, Ariz., that the Angels began to wax poetic about all that looked bright and beautiful for their 2023 season.

Shohei Ohtani was coming off a second historic season. Mike Trout was healthy and set in his new body maintenanc­e routine. Pitchers Reid Detmers, Patrick Sandoval and José Suarez were looking to build off their promising 2022. General manager Perry Minasian secured bona fide major league depth, picking up better hitters and veteran relievers.

On paper, the team was much improved. And it was not lost on anyone in the organizati­on that it could be the Angels’ last with Ohtani, who is slated to become a free agent after the World Series ends.

Yet, there were several aspects of the 2023 Angels that needed to go just right for them to play meaningful October baseball.

The roster underperfo­rmed. The injuries compounded those issues.

Trout and Ohtani were already on the injured list well before Sunday’s 7-3 win over the Athletics wrapped up a 73-89 season — the same record as 2022 and the Angels seventh consecutiv­e losing season.

The moves the Angels made, up until they put a handful of key players on waivers at the end of August, were in service of a push to the postseason and seemingly to impress Ohtani. But it turned out the margin of error was always slim, and now the Angels face an uncertain offseason.

That push for 2023 began after last year’s World Series, when they added starting pitcher Tyler Anderson, infielder Gio Urshela, outfielder Hunter Renfroe, infielder Brandon Drury, reliever Carlos Estévez, outfielder Brett Phillips and reliever Matt Moore.

Of all of those players, Drury and Estévez had the most successful seasons. Estévez won the closer job, finished his season with 31 saves in 35 opportunit­ies and earned his first All-Star selection. Drury finished his season batting .262 with an .803 on-base-plus-slugging rate.

The Angels banked on Anderson at least being an average pitcher, signing him for $13 million per season (three years). He managed just seven quality starts and finished with a 5.43 earned-run average in 27 games (25 starts).

Phillips was not with the big league team for most of the season, getting sent to triple A in mid May. Renfroe and Moore did not finish the season with the Angels, two of the five players put on waivers in a salary dump and claimed by other teams.

Urshela, the most necessary addition as a natural third baseman, saw his season come to an end in June because of a fractured pelvis.

Trying to fill out the Angels roster going into any season is tricky and requires a bit of creativity considerin­g about $75 million worth of salary per year goes to just two players, Anthony Rendon and Trout. This year, $105 million went to Trout, Rendon and Ohtani.

Team ownership has only once gone over the luxury tax threshold, in 2004, in which the Angels were assessed a tax bill of less than $1 million.

This year’s first luxury tax threshold is $233 million, which meant trying to fill out a major league roster with less than $130 million if the Angels wanted to stay under it.

Though only part of the equation, the Angels drafts of the last three years of Minasian’s tenure could shed some light on the limitation­s they have with roster constructi­on. This year, 16 of the 19 players they signed were drafted out of college. And drafted college players are typically more mature and closer to major league ready and don’t necessaril­y add too much to a payroll if called up.

And the Angels of the last three seasons have been known to fasttrack their prospects to the big leagues. Rookie shortstop Zach Neto and rookie fireballer reliever Ben Joyce were called up to the big league team this year after being drafted in 2022. Rookie first baseman Nolan Schanuel was drafted this past June.

The call-ups mostly benefited the Angels this year. Schanuel finished this season with a 29-game on-base streak, the third-longest to begin a career in MLB history. Neto was voted on by the Angels players as their Heart & Hustle award recipient this year.

As for that luxury tax, the Angels did not go closer to this year’s number until the middle of the season, when they became buyers at the deadline, trading for muchneeded pitching help with starter Lucas Giolito, relievers Reynaldo Lopez and Dominic Leone, muchneeded outfield help with Randal Grichuk and another infielder with C.J. Cron.

But after an attempted salary dump at the end of August, the Angels probably won’t be able to get back under, in part because of the number of injuries they have suffered.

A total of 35 Angels players landed on the injured list, the most in baseball, with some instances of Angels injuries happening in bulk, and many injured in the most bizarre of ways.

In a game against the Padres on July 4, Trout fractured his left hamate bone and Rendon fouled a pitch so hard off his shin that his tibia fractured (a diagnosis not revealed to members of the media until September).

Among the other unusual injuries: Taylor Ward suffered multiple facial fractures after taking a pitch to the face in Toronto at the end of July; Jo Adell, who was called back up to the majors to fill out the outfield with Trout down, strained his oblique days after coming up. Rookie pitcher Chase Silseth, who had begun to emerge as the Angels’ best starter, was hit in the back of the head by a crossfield throw during a game at Citi Field.

In September, utility player Luis Rengifo, who was on a 14-game hitting streak, ruptured his biceps tendon while warming up in the ondeck circle.

Ohtani was officially shut down from pitching on Aug. 23 after he tore his UCL for a second time in his career, but continued to serve as the team’s designated hitter until he injured his oblique during batting practice on Sept. 4.

He eventually landed on the IL on Sept. 16, and Rendon and Trout finished their seasons on the IL as well.

In hoping everything would go right, the Angels will face an offseason in which they will hope they did enough to convince Ohtani to return.

And they will either be known as the team that lost Ohtani for mostly nothing, or set a salary record to bring back one of the greatest players in baseball history.

 ?? Richard W. Rodriguez Associated Press ?? SHOHEI OHTANI, right, celebrates with Mike Trout after hitting a homer against the Rangers in June in Arlington, Texas.
Richard W. Rodriguez Associated Press SHOHEI OHTANI, right, celebrates with Mike Trout after hitting a homer against the Rangers in June in Arlington, Texas.

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