Showing posts with label Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2011

No California Teams this year























For the second time since the Wild Card was introduced in 1995, there will be no California teams in the post season.

In 1999 and this year, the West was represented by Arizona and Texas.
And the Wild Cards in 1999 were the Mets and Red Sox.
We're not sure who it is for this year.

Let's run them down.

In 1995, the Dodgers won the NL West crown. (The Angels lost a one game playoff to Seattle.)
In 1996, both the Padres and Dodgers were in.
In 1997, the Giants won the NL West.
In 1998, the Padres won the National League pennant.
1999 saw no California teams.
2000 had the A's and the Giants winning their Division.
In 2001, the A's won the Wild Card.
2002 was the greatest year for California. The A's won the AL West but the World Series was between the Giants and Angels.
2003 had the A's and Giants winning their Division again.
The 2004 Angels won the Division.
In 2005, the Angels won the Division and advanced to the ALCS. Meanwhile the Padres won the NL West.
2006 saw the Padres and Dodgers both in the National League playoffs and the Oakland A's making it to the ALCS.
The 2007 Angels won the Division.
The 2008 and 2009 Angels and Dodgers each won their Division. Both made the LCS in 2009, the closest we have seen to a Freeway Series.
And the 2010 Giants of course won the World Series.

But with the elimination of the Angels tonight, any California dream for the World Series was put to rest.

Good luck next year, Giants, A's, Dodgers, Angels or Padres.

I want some West Coast Bias next year.



Follow sullybaseball on Twitter

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Jered Weaver is worth every penny















































Jered Weaver said something in his post contract signing press conference that I think every sports fan in the world has thought at one point or another.


He basically said that if he can't make $85 million work over his life then he is just stupid.


Good for him.
Anyone who talks about the money he could have picked up in free agency being in a Boston and New York bidding war is not taking some things into account.


But the BIGGEST thing they are missing is that he gets to stay in the same quality organization, being managed by Mike Scioscia, have a shot at the post season every single year, play near his hometown and make more money than most of us will make in 85 life times!


Yeah. Big sacrifice.


When you get to the point where even after taxes and fees you can still blow a million a year for the rest of your life and leave your kids seven figures, then maybe you should take other things into account. Like "enjoying your situation."


If Weaver spends the entire 5 years with the Angels then he will be a 33 year old man who has spent 11 big league seasons with the same stable organization and be a quick drive from the town he grew up in.


Assuming he finishes in the top 5 of the Cy Young vote this year, he will already have 2 such finishes and 2 All Star berths and 3 trips to the post season.


It is safe to say that he will increase all of those totals after 5 seasons.


And oh yeah... have earned $85 MILLION!


After taxes that would come out to MORE MONEY THAN I WOULD ASK A GENIE!


As for missing the bidding war, ask A. J. Burnett how happy he is. Ask John Lackey if he'd rather be in Anaheim. Sometimes being happy and in a place you love with a good organization can trump that SECOND fortune to go with the first.


I wouldn't know. It just seems that way.


But there is another factor to consider.
Go back the length of his contract and look at recent Cy Young winners.


The 2006 winner was Johan Santana. He was 27 years old and won his second Cy Young Award. He was the best pitcher of the American League and putting together a Hall of Fame resume. Injuries have kept him off the big league roster for the entire season so far at age 32.


The other winner in 2006 was Brandon Webb. He was also 27 years old and putting together a brilliant career. He nearly won it again in 2008. He has pitched a single big league game since the beginning of the 2009 season and hasn't pitched this decade yet.


26 year old Jake Peavy won the Cy Young in 2007. Injuries riddled his 2009 and 2010 campaigns and his 2011 season has been spotty at best with a 5.06 ERA in Chicago.


A Cy Young caliber pitcher's career can derail pretty quickly. And who knows what happens in a year.


When you are playing Deal or No Deal and you open a suitcase that is filled with $85 million and the ability to work where you want to live... wouldn't you say "Take the deal"?


I would.
In fact someone offer me that right now.




He pitched 7 shutout innings for his 15 win tonight and lowered his league leading ERA to 2.03.



And oh yeah, helped the Angels get to 2 games back in the loss column of the Rangers.



It's a good deal. As I said in the Cliff Lee signing... it is easy to walk away from $60 million if you get to work where you WANT to work AND collect $85 million.





Follow sullybaseball on Twitter

Thursday, August 18, 2011

10 Reasons why the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim winning the World Series would be good for baseball

































My series of Why Each Team's Potential World Championship Would Be Good For The Game moves on with the California Angels.



OK Fine, The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

It's a stupid name. A great organization but a stupid name. There. I got that out of the way. And I won't make any more references to the silly name.



The organization is a damn good one and they could very well have a big time contender for years to come. I picked them to win the West and the pennant at the beginning of the season on the strength of their starting pitching. However their recent 5 game slide has put them a full week behind the Texas Rangers.



If the slide continues, I won't be able to include them as a contender. So let's knock this out.





10 Reasons why the

Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim

winning the 2011 World Series

would be good for baseball






1. Mike Scioscia's Hall of Fame resume would be undeniable



I would argue that Scioscia is the best manager in baseball today. Maybe even a notch about LaRussa and Leyland. He took over an Angels team in 2000 that had never won a playoff series.



By 2002 they were the World Champions. Players have come and gone but the Angels returned to October baseball as Division Champions in 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008 and 2009 and made it to the ALCS in '05 and '09.



He already has as many World Series titles as Leo Durocher and Earl Weaver. If he wins again, then he will have a completely different roster than the 2002 Champs. His resume is already impressive. Another title (plus the fact that he already has 12 years under his belt and doesn't seem close to retiring) would mean he would join his mentor Tom Lasorda in Cooperstown.









2. It would break Bobby Abreu's bad luck streak



Bobby Abreu has logged in 15+ solid and sometimes spectacular big league seasons. The former All Star, Silver Slugger and Gold Glove winner played 8 1/2 seasons in Philadelphia but was traded away before they won the World Series in 2008.



He spent a few more years with the Yankees but was in an Angels uniform when they won the 2009 World Series. He's played in the post season with three different organizations (the Astros, Yankees and Angels) and has yet to play in the World Series.



He has earned a long October.







3. A ring for Torii Hunter



I like Torri Hunter. There are a lot of reasons to like Torii Hunter. He plays with passion. He plays with respect for the game and its past.



And in his prime, he was the most dynamic defensive outfielder not named Jim Edmonds and could hit too.



He's outspoken and colorful, but isn't it nice to have a star who isn't bland?



And he sets up tons of college scholarships through his foundation. Do we really want him to finish his career RINGLESS?





4. The Age of Ace Pitchers will move to the American League



We could be in an age of having 1-2 ace tandems in for contending teams. Halladay-Lee, Lincecum-Cain, Lester-Beckett etc. You are hard pressed to find a better 1-2 punch than Jered Weaver and Dan Haren. Throw in Ervin Santana and the Angels would have probably the most lethal 1-2-3 of any American League staff.



Plus these aces winning would take away some of the sting of 2006. Dan Haren was a member of the Cardinals who was dealt away in 2005 for Mark Mulder. The Cardinals won the World Series that year but Mulder was injured and Haren was in Oakland. Mulder was replaced by Jeff Weaver, Jered's brother. Jeff was cut by the Angels to make room for Jered. It would be nice to see the Weaver brothers compare rings.







5. Old and Young Angels would be rewarded



The picture to the left shows 35 year old Torii Hunter high fiving 19 year old Mike Trout. This team can be a wonderful bridge between veterans fighting for their first title and young kids hoping to get their quest for a title over with early.



Vernon Wells, Abreu, Hunter and Joel Pinero know their window is closing. Players like Weaver, Trout, Tyler Chatwood, Jordan Walden, Peter Bourjos and Mark Trumbo all hope to be fixtures in Anaheim for a while. This year could be a wonderful bridge for two eras of Angels baseball.











6. FINALLY some tourists would discover Anaheim!



Seriously. I feel so badly for the Chamber of Commerce of Anaheim.



Without the Angels, why would any tourist come to Orange County. If only there was SOMETHING in Anaheim that could draw in tourism without being solely dependent on the fate of the Angels.



We've got to brainstorm about that.





7. It would be further humiliation for Frank McCourt... which is a good thing



The Dodgers actually play in Los Angeles and they have the deep rooted love and devotion of the city (even though they arrived in Los Angeles only 3 years before the Angels were formed.)



But with the Dodgers in disarray, losing in front of empty seats, dumping players and needing to be bailed out by baseball, one of the marquee franchises has become a laughing stock.



Having them not only endure this disastrous season but seeing their nominal neighbor win it all would only help getting McCourt and this whole mess out of the game.



As entertaining as it has been, it has run its course.









8. Arte Moreno is a great owner and great owners should have a title.



Moreno took over the Angels after they won the World Series under Disney. So he took over a quality team. But what has happened under his leadership is stability in management, a quality product on the field and class in the organization.



They have developed good players, traded and signed others and consistently contended. And their owner clearly cares to not only win but make the Angels a proud organization.



You think that's par for the course? Why not drive up the 5 and visit Chavez Ravine, then get back to me.



Like Mark Cuban in basketball, owners who really care and put their guts in the team deserve a title.





9. It's best that all teams that won in the Steroid Era win another title soon.



Look, we all had fun during The Steroid Era, but it would be best for the game that it goes away as soon as possible.



The teams that won during the peak would all be better off if they pick up another title so their last October heroes weren't sitting under a black cloud.



When 2002 World Series MVP Troy Glaus' name came up in the steroid investigations, a Giants friend of mine said "See! We should have won if they weren't juicing!" I pointed out that the Giants had Barry Bonds.



Seriously... let's put it all behind us.



10. Maybe another title will FINALLY make the Angels one of the cool marquee baseball franchises



A few years ago, I wrote about how everything was underrated with the Angels.



From Rod Carew and Nolan Ryan building up their Cooperstown credentials to Don Baylor and Fred Lynn launching homers to Reggie Jackson's last October hurrah and Jim Freaking Abbott, the Angels have always provided some great moments and likable stars. And they had Gene Autry owning the team and loving them until the day he died. (Why isn't the stadium called "Gene Autry Park?")



Maybe their lack of championships despite having star players hurt them in getting national exposure. Maybe playing in Orange County instead of in the city has given the Angels an aura of being a suburb franchise and not a cool city team.



But they ARE a model team and have given their fans lots of great baseball. They should be mentioned as one of the top tier teams. Maybe tying the Red Sox and Yankees with World Series titles this century will do just that!





Now as a Red Sox fan, I've never been a big Angels fan. But there is no denying lots of positives would come about from an Angels title.



If they lose a few more games, it would make this whole post moot. Then again, because I picked the Angels, I suppose I should be kind of rooting for them.



If you liked this then go ahead and read the entries for the other teams.



CHICAGO WHITE SOX

NEW YORK YANKEES

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS





Follow sullybaseball on Twitter

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

It is fun to see Mariano Rivera fail



























I have nothing personally against Mariano Rivera, but as a Red Sox fan it is special to see him lose.



Why?



Because with as incredible he has been since Clinton was up for reelection that ANY loss by Rivera seems like a shift in the time space continuum has occurred.



And it is also a reminder of that awkward moment that will EVENTUALLY happen to Yankee fans. At one point Mariano Rivera will not be the closer. And for the first time in decades Yankee fans will have to endure what all other 29 franchises had to deal with at one point or another:



The 9th inning NOT being a forgone conclusion.



And oh yeah, any time the Yankees lose a game that looked like it was in the bank... let's face it. That is a beautiful thing.



























Follow sullybaseball on Twitter



















Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The Most Recent No Hitter For Each Franchise (Updated for July 27, 2011)













Ervin Santana threw the first no hitter ever for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. The last no hitters for the franchise were for the CALIFORNIA Angels.

No hitters always look strange when the losing team scored a run... but not as strange as combined no hitters (which was the last no hitter the team had when Mark Langston and Mike Witt combined in 1990).

Great work Mr. Santana.


Let's update the list.

THE MOST RECENT NO HITTERS
FOR EACH FRANCHISE





LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
Ervin Santana - July 27, 2011.
3-1 over Cleveland.



DETROIT TIGERS
Justin Verlander - May 7, 2011.
9-0 over Toronto.


MINNESOTA TWINS
Francisco Liriano - May 3, 2011
1-0 over Chicago White Sox

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
Roy Halladay - October 6, 2010
4-0 over Cincinnati. (Playoff Game)


TAMPA PAY RAYS
Matt Garza - July 26th, 2010
5-0 over Detroit.

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS
Edwin Jackson - June 25, 2010
1-0 over Tampa Bay



OAKLAND A'S
Dallas Braden - May 9, 2010
4-0 over Tampa Bay. (Perfect Game.)


COLORADO ROCKIES
Ubaldo Jimenez - April 17, 2010
4-0 over Atlanta.


CHICAGO WHITE SOX
Mark Buehrle - July 23, 2009
5-0 over Tampa Bay. (Perfect Game.)


SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
Jonathan Sanchez - July 10, 2009.
8-0 over San Diego.


CHICAGO CUBS
Carlos Zambrano - September 14, 2008.
5-0 over Houston.


BOSTON RED SOX
Jon Lester - May 19, 2008.
7-0 over Kansas City.


FLORIDA MARLINS
Anibal Sanchez - September 6, 2006.
2-0 over Arizona.


HOUSTON ASTROS
Roy Oswalt, Peter Munro, Kirk Saarloos, Brad Lidge, Octavio Dotel and Billy Wagner -
June 11, 2003.
8-0 over New York Yankees.


ST. LOUIS CARDINALS
Bud Smith - September 3, 2001
4-0 over San Diego.


NEW YORK YANKEES
David Cone - July 18, 1999.
6-0 over Montreal. (Perfect Game.)


PITTSBURGH PIRATES
Francisco Cordova and Ricardo Rincon - July 12, 1997.
3-0 over Houston. (10 innings.)


LOS ANGELES DODGERS
Hideo Nomo - September 17, 1996.
9-0 over Colorado.


TEXAS RANGERS
Kenny Rogers - July 28, 1994.
4-0 over California. (Perfect Game.)

ATLANTA BRAVES
Kent Mercker - April 8, 1994.
6-0 over Los Angeles.


SEATTLE MARINERS
Chris Bosio - April 22, 1993.
2-0 over Boston.


KANSAS CITY ROYALS
Bret Saberhagen - August 26, 1991
7-0 over Chicago White Sox.

WASHINGTON NATIONALS (AS MONTREAL EXPOS)
Dennis Martinez - July 28, 1991.
2-0 over Los Angeles. (Perfect Game.)


BALTIMORE ORIOLES
Bob Milacki, Mike Flanagan, Mark Williamson and Gregg Olson - July 13, 1991.
2-0 over Oakland.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS
Dave Steib - September 2, 1990.
3-0 over Cleveland.


CINCINNATI REDS
Tom Browning - September 16, 1988.
1-0 over Los Angeles. (Perfect Game.)


MILWAUKEE BREWERS
Juan Nieves - April 15, 1987.
7-0 over Baltimore.

CLEVELAND INDIANS
Len Barker - May 15, 1981.
3-0 over Toronto. (Perfect Game.)

Bonus
WASHINGTON SENATORS
Bobby Burke - August 8, 1931
5-0 over Boston.

Padres... Mets... Nationals... get on it!


Follow sullybaseball on Twitter