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<title>Angels TopBuzz</title>
<pubDate>Sun, 25 Oct 2009 23:52:54 -0500</pubDate>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/</link>
<description>Angels Topbuzz</description>
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<webMaster>topbuzzsport&#115;&#064;&#103;mail.com</webMaster>
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<title>Angels fall in 6 to the Yanks</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-9.html</link>
<description> The Angels got the monkey off their backs – only to run into King Kong.

The New York Yankees, baseball’s $200 million gorilla, ended the Angels’ post-season run with a 5-2 defeat in Game 6 of the American League Championship Series Sunday night.

The win sends the Yankees into the World Series for the 40th time in franchise history, this time against the Phillies.

For the Angels, the loss sends them into a winter of uncertainty with the list of potential free-agent departures including key players like Vladimir Guerrero, John Lackey, Chone Figgins and Bobby Abreu.

In the end, the Angels were done in by an offense that couldn’t keep up with Yankees’ deep lineup. They were outscored 32-18 in the six games and at the end their best hitter was … Jeff Mathis?

Mathis led off the third inning Sunday with his fifth double in the series. Two outs later, Abreu drove him in with an RBI single to right when Yankees starter Andy Pettitte hung an 0-and-1 curveball.

That was just about the only mistake Pettitte made in the game.

The Angels’ only other scoring threat against him came in the sixth inning after Pettitte retired the first two batters, the slumping Figgins and Abreu once again failing to set the table for the middle of the order. Torii Hunter beat out an infield single and went to third when Guerrero hit a pitch nearly off the ground and dropped it into right field for a double.

But Kendry Morales bounced back to the mound, Pettitte knocking it down near his face and throwing Morales out at first to end the inning.

Already the all-time leader in post-season starts and innings pitched, Pettitte became the winningest pitcher in post-season history (breaking a tie with John Smoltz at 15) by holding the Angels to just that one run on seven hits and a walk in 6 1/3 innings.

Angels starter Joe Saunders walked a tightrope through three innings to match Pettitte, stranding six runners on base in that time. But he tripped up in the fourth and never made it out.

With Mathis and Morales having given him a 1-0 lead, Saunders walked Robinson Cano to start the fourth then gave up a ground-ball single to left to Nick Swisher (batting .103 in the post-season when the game started).

Melky Cabrera bunted the runners over and Saunders walked Derek Jeter to load the bases. Johnny Damon singled in two runs to give the Yankees the lead and Mark Teixeira reloaded the bases on an infield single.

Working carefully to Alex Rodriguez, Saunders fell behind in the count 3-and-1 then threw a fastball at the knees. But home-plate umpire Dale Scott called it ball four, forcing in another run.

The walk was Saunders’ fifth in the game and Angels manager Mike Scioscia pulled him.

The game stayed close into the eighth thanks to Darren Oliver and Ervin Santana and the Angels briefly made it a one-run game, 3-2, when Guerrero drove in his seventh run of the post-season with a two-out RBI single off Mariano Rivera in the eighth.

It was the first post-season earned run off the Yankees closer since Game 2 of the 2000 World Series against the Mets.

But the momentum didn’t last. The Angels misplayed two bunts in the bottom of the eighth – Howie Kendrick dropped one throw and Scott Kazmir threw the other over Kendrick’s head – leading to two more Yankee runs without benefit of a hit. The errors were the seventh and eighth of the series by the Angels (seven in the three games at Yankee Stadium).
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<pubDate>Sun, 25 Oct 2009 23:52:54 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Angels Sweep Red Sox; Will face the Yankees in the ALCS</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-8.html</link>
<description> Torii Hunter emerged from the visitors' clubhouse at Fenway Park to spray champagne over the fans and family gathered there. Erick Aybar did him one better, handing over bottles of bubbly to those who came from California to see the Los Angeles Angels go for the sweep.

History gave no reason to hope for such a celebration.

The Angels and Vladimir Guerrero shrugged off their postseason failures and swept away the Red Sox on Sunday, scoring three runs off Jonathan Papelbon in the ninth inning to beat Boston 7-6 and advance to the AL Championship Series.

It was the first postseason sweep in Angels franchise history. And they did it against the team that has knocked them out of the playoffs the previous four times they met.

&quot;I told you guys earlier: It's going to be a different scene,&quot; Hunter said in the clubhouse afterward. &quot;Vladdy came through. That's probably one of the biggest hits of his career. They've been waiting for him to do it, and he did it.&quot;

Papelbon was one strike away from extending the series with three different batters, but Aybar singled on a two-strike pitch, Chone Figgins walked after fouling off a full-count offering and Bobby Abreu fouled off three straight pitches before doubling in one run.

Hunter was walked intentionally before Guerrero singled the first pitch to center and Figgins and Abreu raced home to give Los Angeles a 7-6 lead. Major league saves leader Brian Fuentes pitched the ninth, and when Aybar caught Dustin Pedroia's popup to end the game, pumping his right arm even as he tracked the ball with his left, the Angels advanced.

&quot;It's nice to be going home and playing again, instead of going home and it's over,&quot; said pitcher John Lackey, who was part of the Angels teams that were eliminated by Boston in three times in the previous five years. &quot;This is the most fun for me, and I've got a ring. That says a lot.&quot;

An eight-time All-Star and former AL MVP, Guerrero has a .321 career batting average, 407 regular-season homers and 1,318 RBIs. But he'd managed only one extra-base hit in 69 at-bats going into Game 3, and he had one RBI in 19 playoff games since his grand slam against Boston in the 2004 division series.

And he came through against Papelbon, who had never before allowed a run in 27 postseason innings.

&quot;You're not going to get to him too often. But we did this afternoon,&quot; Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. &quot;And I felt great for Vlad. hopefully, that's a momentum-builder for him. ... I know he's relieved. He's excited about contributing. And hopefully it will be the start of something good.&quot;

For the AL West champion Angels, it was a chance to extend their tribute to pitcher Nick Adenhart, who was killed in an April car crash with a man who has been charged with drunken driving. As they streamed out of the dugout to celebrate, and Jered Weaver carried Adenhart's jersey onto the field.

&quot;When it comes down to honoring Nick Adenhart, and what happened in April in Anaheim, yes, it probably was the biggest hit [of my career],&quot; Guerrero said. &quot;Because I'm dedicating that to a former teammate, a guy that passed away.&quot;

The Angels open their first ALCS since 2005 on Friday against the New York Yankees, who beat the Twins 4-1 on Sunday night to complete a three-game sweep.

&quot;We're finally here,&quot; said Angels owner Arte Moreno, who bought the team in 2003, a year after they won their only World Series. &quot;I think that the fourth time's a charm. It's great for us, because we've been knocking on the door for a while.&quot;

Los Angeles trailed 5-1 early, was behind 5-2 after seven innings and still down 6-4 when Papelbon retired the first two batters of the ninth.

The crowd that just one inning earlier had been primed for a celebration quietly filed out of the ballpark for the last time in 2009, having seen the wild-card Red Sox beaten.

&quot;The season doesn't wind down. It just comes to a crashing halt,&quot; Boston manager Terry Francona said. &quot;You go into the top of the inning excited because you think you're going to keep playing. Half an inning later, you're going home. So it's disappointing.&quot;

The Red Sox had won 12 of 13 postseason games against the Angels heading into the series, including an 11-game winning streak that dated back to Dave Henderson's homer off Donnie Moore in the 1986 ALCS. Henderson, not coincidentally, threw out the ceremonial first pitch on Sunday, even adding a little jump and twist like the one he did after he helped propel Boston to within one strike of the '86 World Series title.

Hendu's shot in Game 5 sent the Red Sox to a win by the same 7-6 score.

Boston didn't win it that year, but they ended their 86-year championship drought in 2004 after sweeping Los Angeles in the first round. The Red Sox swept out the Angels again in '07 en route to a second title, and beat them in four games last year before losing to the Tampa Bay in the ALCS.

Darren Oliver earned the victory after getting one out in relief, and Papelbon took his first career postseason loss. The Red Sox closer had converted seven of his previous eight postseason save opportunities.

But after Billy Wagner put two on with two out in the eighth, the Red Sox were forced to bring Papelbon in with a 5-2 lead. He gave up a two-run single to Juan Rivera that made 5-4 before picking pinch-runner Reggie Willits off first base.

After Mike Lowell's RBI single made it 6-4 in the eighth, Papelbon got Maicer Izturis on a foul popup and Gary Matthews Jr. on a fly ball to center. Abreu lined a double off the Green Monster to cut the lead to 6-5.

The three runs Boston scored in the third inning were more than it had scored in the first two games of the series combined. In fact, Boston had scored a total of two runs in 32 postseason innings before taking a 3-0 lead on Sunday.

http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=291011102</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 14 Oct 2009 01:45:34 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Angels wrap up 5th West title in last 6 years</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-7.html</link>
<description>The Angels soaked the jersey in beer, champagne and tears, holding Nick Adenhart's No. 34 high in the middle of the celebration he missed.

Los Angeles is headed back to the playoffs for the sixth time in eight years, and the Angels intend to go with the memory of their late teammate alongside them. The 22-year-old pitcher's death in an April car accident roiled their season early on, but it couldn't sink this resilient team.

Kendry Morales homered and drove in three runs, and the Angels wasted no time clinching their third straight AL West title with an 11-0 victory over the second-place Texas Rangers on Monday night.

Ervin Santana pitched a seven-hitter for his fourth career shutout, while Maicer Izturis had three hits and two RBIs to wrap up the Angels' fifth division crown in six years. Los Angeles (92-64) will open at home in the best-of-five first round next week -- most likely against Boston, a familiar nemesis. The Red Sox need one win or a Texas loss to earn the AL wild card.

About 10 minutes into their clubhouse celebration, the players grabbed Adenhart's jersey and gave it a dousing. The Angels have taken Adenhart's jersey on every road trip and kept his locker intact in memory, and reliever Kevin Jepsen brought the shirt back to the clubhouse from the dugout for the celebration.

&quot;We remembered Nick before we started,&quot; manager Mike Scioscia said. &quot;We've played the whole year with heavy hearts. But it was never about us, and it isn't about us. It's all about supporting Nick's family in any small way, and we're going to bring Nick's memory forward.&quot;

Angels players returned to the field and several grabbed a hose from the grounds crew, using it to spray water on fans behind both dugouts. Then the Angels jogged to the outfield and reverently touched Adenhart's photo and No. 34 on the outfield fence. Players posed for a team photo in front of the image.

&quot;We had a rough start, lost a dear friend and teammate, and we didn't do much in the first half,&quot; outfielder Torii Hunter said. &quot;We made this a very special season, though. We're going to celebrate tonight, and then get ready for what's next.&quot;

Adenhart's death hours after his strong season debut was the most painful of several major obstacles for the Angels, who persevered through early season injuries, midseason lulls and a late-summer slump for their productive offense. Yet they passed Texas atop the division in mid-July -- and needing one victory in this four-game series to secure the division title, the Angels swiftly eliminated any suspense.

With Morales and Vladimir Guerrero propelling the offense, Los Angeles took a 7-0 lead in the third inning against rookie Tommy Hunter (9-5), who struggled mightily in the shortest start of his promising season. Erick Aybar and Guerrero drove in two runs apiece, while Bobby Abreu had three hits.

After the final out, the Angels formed a mob on the field around Santana (8-8), slapping his shoulders and rubbing his head. Although the right-hander is likely to be in Los Angeles' bullpen in the playoffs, Santana made sure Scioscia won't forget him, earning his first win in seven starts and second shutout this season.

The Angels made just three playoff appearances in the franchise's first 39 seasons before Scioscia took over in 2000. Los Angeles has been a postseason fixture during the former Dodgers catcher's decade in the dugout, winning the 2002 World Series in the Angels' only wild-card appearance.

And getting pushed by the Rangers down the stretch could benefit the Angels in October, if last season's performance is any guide.

Los Angeles clinched the AL West title with 17 games to play on the way to a major league-leading 100 victories in 2008, but that 2½-week stretch with little motivation was seen as a factor in Los Angeles' listless effort in its division series loss to Boston, the Angels' likely playoff foe for the third straight year.

&quot;After the last few years, everyone feels that it's time for us to go to the next level,&quot; said owner Arte Moreno, who partied with his players in the clubhouse. &quot;We had a meeting about a week or 10 days after the end of last season, and we talked about what we needed to do to get better. Basically, that was our goal. I tell people all the time, 'Why should I be owning a team if I'm not trying to win?'&quot;

Michael Young had two hits in his return from a hamstring injury for the Rangers, on the verge of elimination from the pennant race after fighting to stay in contention all summer despite several major injuries.

Texas (85-71) trails Boston (91-65), which lost to Toronto, by six games with six to play.

&quot;We didn't get it done, and that's not a good feeling,&quot; Young said. &quot;The Angels had a great year and overcame a tremendous amount of adversity, and they deserve a lot of credit. But from our side, it's not a good feeling. We've got to get better. It's as simple as that.&quot;

Young was back in the Rangers' lineup for just the second time since straining his left hamstring Sept. 1. The third baseman aggravated the injury against Oakland in an aborted return two weeks later, and his absence along with Josh Hamilton's lingering back problems seriously hurt Texas' playoff hopes.

&quot;I just told them to keep their heads up,&quot; manager Ron Washington said. &quot;We didn't get it done, but there's still games to be played. We didn't finish first, but I'd certainly like to win as many more games as we possibly can. We certainly don't want to be falling down to third or fourth, that's for sure.&quot;</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 29 Sep 2009 13:53:45 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Kazmir provides needed arm, hope for Angels</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-6.html</link>
<description>Scott Kazmir: Angel of October? The Angels continue attempting to out-run their pitching staff, which ranked 27th in the majors with a 4.88 ERA entering play Sunday. Worse yet, they've recently been forced to break into a sprint: The August team ERA is 5.46, highest of any month this season, and Angels pitchers have surrendered 40 homers in 28 games this month. 

Not a good trend, even if, as expected, the Angels remain in control and win the AL West for what would be the sixth time in eight years. Because, after that, you know who's next ... yep, as of today, a nice, ripe, first-round October rematch with Boston. 

The Angels need Scott Kazmir, acquired over the weekend from Tampa Bay, in September. And they especially need him in October. Boston has bounced the Angels from the playoffs in three of the past five years. Not that the Angels are developing a complex about that, but rumor has it that they've banned Cheers reruns and all Ben Affleck movies from the clubhouse flat-screens. 

Just given his Get Out of Jail Free card from the wicked AL East, Kazmir arrived in Anaheim on Sunday with some impressive credentials: Lifetime, he's 6-4 with a 3.05 ERA in Fenway Park over 13 starts (including 2-0 with a 3.27 ERA in two starts this summer). He's yet to face the Yankees in new Yankee Stadium, but he is 2-0 with a 2.63 ERA against them this summer in Tropicana Field. 

&quot;I kind of like that,&quot; Angels center fielder Torii Hunter says, smiling. &quot;That made me feel good.&quot; 

&quot;That's a very tough division, and he's handled it well,&quot; says Angels right fielder Bobby Abreu, an AL East alum after time in the Yankees' lineup from 2006-2008. &quot;It's very important for us that he comes from one of the toughest divisions, and that he came from one of the best teams.&quot; 

Now, understand: Nobody in the Angels' clubhouse is putting a potential playoff matchup against Boston, or the Yankees, or anybody else ahead of what they've got to do in September. Texas is a vastly different team than in past years, and the Rangers have whacked the Angels in nine of 12 games so far this year to prove it. Ask manager Mike Scioscia about how Kazmir might change things this October and you'll no doubt get a six-part dissertation on the dangers of the Seattle Mariners and starter Luke French in Monday's series opener there. 

That's fine. But we also know contenders must look a month or more ahead during these last few days of August, because no player acquired after Aug. 31 can play in the postseason. When the Angels acquired Kazmir, it was a move they desperately needed to make. Entering Sunday, the Angels ranked second in the majors with 727 runs scored, and they led the majors in batting average (.289) and batting average with runners in scoring position (.303). 

Offense, especially with first baseman Kendry Morales banging away, is no problem. 

Pitching, that's a problem. 

Kazmir is no Roy Halladay, whom the Angels attempted to acquire from Toronto last month. And he's no Cliff Lee, whom they attempted to nab from Cleveland. But. ... 

&quot;He's one of the best left-handers in the game,&quot; Hunter says. &quot;I don't like facing him. And if I don't like facing him, I think I'll take him.&quot; 

Though Kazmir has had a highly disappointing season (8-7 with a 5.92 ERA -- now below 6.00 for the first time all summer), he is 2-1 with a 3.20 ERA over his past three starts. And he's reunited with the pitching coach, Mike Butcher, who first helped get him going in 2006 and 2007 in Tampa. 

&quot;It feels like I'm a lot more comfortable now,&quot; Kazmir says. &quot;I'm attacking the strike zone, trying to get strike one. That's the main thing. Earlier in the year, I was battling from behind.&quot; 

As for his success against the dreaded Red Sox, Kazmir says: &quot;You really get a lot of adrenalin. I feel real comfortable in big situations facing the Yankees, facing the Red Sox in Fenway.&quot; 

The way things shape up now, he will get that opportunity. Even with only three starters needed in the first round, he could slide in behind John Lackey, for example, with either Jered Weaver or Ervin Santana following him (and the other working out of the bullpen, which currently ranks 12th in the AL with a 4.74 ERA. Or, Kazmir could give the Angels a left-handed long man out of the pen. 

Yes, there's still a long way to go until October. But it's also just around the corner. </description>
<pubDate>Fri, 04 Sep 2009 01:14:08 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Chone Figgins added to AL roster for All-Star Game; Joins teammate Fuentes</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-5.html</link>
<description>Chone Figgins made it to the All-Star Game after all. 

The Angels third baseman, who finished third at the position in last week's fan vote for the final roster spot, was added to the American League roster today when Tampa Bay third baseman Evan Longoria pulled out of the game because of an infected ring finger on his right hand. 

Tim Mead, the Angels vice president of communications who is in St. Louis, was at a breakfast function this morning when he received a call from Major League Baseball officials at about 9 a.m. CDT, informing him that Figgins had been added to the team.

&quot;We made numerous calls to Chone, but he wasn't answering his cellphone at first,&quot; Mead said by phone from St. Louis. &quot;We finally got a hold of him. Suffice it to say, he was very excited.&quot;

&quot;He was excited, and then you realize you have to do so many things,&quot; Mead said. &quot;He's trying to get his mother, father and stepfather to St. Louis for the game, and MLB officials and [Angels traveling secretary] Tom Taylor are trying to get him extra rooms.

&quot;It's definitely not the circumstances you want to make your first All-Star Game appearance under, but he's embraced it, and we couldn't be happier for him.&quot;

He joins teammate Brian Fuentes as the only Angels participating in the 2009 MLB All-Star Game. Hunter was also voted in, but had to turn it down due to his injury.
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<pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2009 15:52:04 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Adenhart's death shocks baseball</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-4.html</link>
<description> The baseball world will remember Nick Adenhart in eternal prospect mode -- easing into his smooth delivery, snapping off that hammer curveball and competing with a relentless edge that made him seem so seasoned and mature for one so young.

Teammates, of course, stockpile their own memories, and Brandon Wood's mind will flash back to a different image: That of Adenhart, his buddy, walking around the clubhouse with his headphones on, immersed in the latest hip-hop music that he'd just downloaded.

Last year, when the two players were teammates with Triple-A Salt Lake, Wood needed a &quot;walkout'' song to herald his arrival from the on-deck circle to the batter's box. He mentioned it to Adenhart, the human iTunes catalog, who immediately hooked him up with something from The Notorious B.I.G. selection. If that's not a bonding moment, nothing is.

Fate, injuries and the vicissitudes of roster management put some distance between the two players this spring. When the Angels broke camp out of Arizona, Adenhart traveled to Anaheim with the big club, and Wood left for Salt Lake to play third base for the Bees. He was watching on TV on Wednesday night when Adenhart threw six shutout innings against Oakland, and a little voice inside him told him he'd just witnessed something special.

&quot;I think [Wednesday] was the start of something that could have been great,'' Wood said. &quot;I actually went to bed thinking, 'Nick is never going to see the minor leagues again.'''

It was on the way to the gym Thursday morning that Wood received a text message from a friend in Arizona. 

&quot;Have you heard about Adenhart? Is it true?'' the message read. 

When Wood connected to the Internet through his cell phone, it didn't take long to confirm his sense of foreboding.

The tragic reality: Nick Adenhart was killed along with two other passengers in a hit-and-run traffic accident in Fullerton, Calif., early Thursday. And the sense of shock and numbness that Wood felt in the aftermath had very little to do with Adenhart's promise on the ballfield.

&quot;It's hard to even believe,'' Wood said. &quot;I never met a person who didn't like Nick.''

As news of Adenhart's passing spread, tributes and condolences rolled in from throughout the game. There were words of sympathy from the Players Association, Davey Johnson and Paul Seiler of Team USA baseball, commissioner Bud Selig and numerous big league clubs.

But the despair was particularly acute in Anaheim, where owner Arte Moreno has prided himself on the kind of continuity that fosters a family atmosphere.

&quot;I've never had this kind of pain in my stomach,'' said Angels scouting director Eddie Bane. &quot;Tears come down your face and they just don't stop. As adults, we think we're bulletproof sometimes, and we're not. It hurts, that's all.''

The postmortems in coming days will inevitably focus on Adenhart's baseball skills and seemingly limitless future in pro ball. He had cracked the big league roster at age 22, and seemed destined for a long, successful run at the front of the Angels' rotation.

He had come so far already, in part because of an almost dual persona off the field and between the lines. Nick Adenhart the person loved to laugh and he embraced the banter and camaraderie of the clubhouse. Nick Adenhart the pitcher was supremely confident and took no prisoners.

Alan Matthews, a scout for the Colorado Rockies, was covering high schools for Baseball America magazine in the spring of 2004 when Adenhart, a product of Williamsport High in Maryland, emerged as one of the top prep prospects in the nation. Adenhart, Mark Rogers of Maine and Jay Rainville of Rhode Island made for an unusually abundant pitching crop from the Northeast.

&quot;He had a remarkable mound demeanor,'' Matthews said of Adenhart. &quot;He was always very calm and collected regardless of the number of scouts who were behind the plate. He was very laid-back and kind of quietly confident when you talked to him. But he would cut your heart out when he was on the mound and he needed to make a pitch or get an out.''

At the high school showcases, Adenhart was polite and respectful to the scouts, and intent on proving he was the best. He warmed to the big stage and the scrutiny that resulted from his status as an elite prospect.

That was never more evident than in Jupiter, Fla., at the Perfect Game World Wood Bat Championships. Adenhart was going head-to-head with Eric Hurley, another highly touted prospect, and one particular incident made a big impression on the scouts. It also stuck with University of North Carolina recruiting coordinator Chad Holbrook, who was working hard to make Adenhart a Tar Heel.

&quot;Some kid tried to show him up, and the next pitch was 95 right by his ear hole,'' said Holbrook, now associate head coach at South Carolina. &quot;When you talked to Nick, you didn't have the sense he had that in him. But there were 100 scouts there watching, and when he buzzed that poor kid, they were like, 'Whoa.' You knew who was in control.''

Adenhart, a 3.2 grade point average student with 1240 SAT scores in high school, planned to attend North Carolina, where he would have joined a rotation with pro prospects Andrew Miller and Daniel Bard. He visited the Chapel Hill campus during his senior year, attended a UNC-Duke basketball game and met the Tar Heel players, who warmed to him immediately.

Adenhart blew out his right elbow in May of his senior year and underwent Tommy John surgery before his 18th birthday, but that didn't scare off the Angels. Bane and area scout Dan Radcliff were convinced Adenhart would recover and be a front-of-the-rotation guy, and the Angels selected him in the 14th round and gave him a $710,000 signing bonus to dissuade him from attending college.


Holbrook still remembers the day when Adenhart called with the bittersweet news that he would be forsaking a UNC scholarship to turn pro.

&quot;He was sort of sad to call me,'' Holbrook said. &quot;He was worried what I would think, or if we would be mad at him. He had this dream of being a major league pitcher, but he didn't want to let anybody down. As hard as it was for him to call and tell us he was going to sign a professional contract, he did it the right way.''

There would be fits and starts to Adenhart's professional career. While the Angels exercised patience, Adenhart was intent on moving quickly through the chain. Last season was particularly challenging, with too many walks, a 9-13 record and a 5.76 ERA in Salt Lake.

But certain things remained constant. Adenhart's demeanor suggested a laid-back, Southern California &quot;dude'' in the clubhouse. Then the game began, and he was all business.

&quot;He had these puppy dog eyes,'' Bane said. &quot;But on the mound, he was an assassin.''

If this brings even a smidge of comfort, Adenhart's performance in a 6-4 loss to Oakland marked a fitting epitaph to his baseball career. In the early innings, he fell behind several A's hitters and struggled with his command. But somewhere around the 60-pitch count, he developed a feel for his changeup and began mowing through the Oakland batting order.

&quot;He battled his way through,'' said an American League scout who was at the game. &quot;It was a testament to his toughness.''

Adenhart's friends and former teammates in the Angels' organization might need a bit of that toughness to get through this ordeal. His close friends in Salt Lake include outfielder Brad Coon, who invited Adenhart to be a groomsman at his wedding this offseason, and Wood, who was Adenhart's roommate during the Olympic qualifying team's trip to Cuba in 2006.

&quot;Our beds were like three inches apart, and we were the only guys who didn't move them away from each other,'' Wood said. &quot;We were like, 'Hey, this must be how it works.'''

Wood laughed at the memory, then braced for what's to come.

&quot;There are a lot of people who are going to feel pretty down going to the park today,'' he said. &quot;This is going to hit home in all the clubhouses.''

More than words can say.
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<pubDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2009 19:46:12 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Is Mark Teixeira The Bat the Angels Have Been Looking For?</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-3.html</link>
<description> The Angels have been looking for the bat that adds the kind of power necessary to take the pressure off of Big Daddy Vladdy.  Last year they added Gary Matthews but he turned out not to be the guy.  Then before the season they added Torii Hunter and he is finally starting to come through after a slow start.  Torii has raised his BA to 284 and now has 18 HR's and 60 RBI's. Guerrero after a slow start is now at 19 HR's and 60 RBI's.  The other highlights in the batting order include Garrett Anderson who now has 11 HR's and 60 RBI's.  But the Angels only have one batter hitting over 300 which is unusal for them with Howie Kendrick batting 331.  But the averages are rising after a blistering July and the power numbers are up as well.   Then last week, in comes Mark Teixeira. The Angels traded their young first baseman Casey Kotchmen who still had 3 years left on his contract for Teixeira who is in the last year of his contract.  Mark has proven power numbers in excess of the already good numbers that Casey was displaying.  But now the Angels can put power hitters in front of and behind Vlad Guerrero, making the lineup the scariest to face in all of baseball.  Mark comes aboard with the best power numbers on the Angels lineup with 21 HR's and 84 RBI's.  The Angels now have plenty of speed at the top with Figgy, Kendrick and Izturiz able to set the table.  Then they have power throughout the lineup.  Moreover, they have surrounded Vladdy with power hitters and teams can no longer pitch around him.  Which is a good thing because he swings at everything.  Now if we can only sign Mark to a long term deal.  SlamFan </description>
<pubDate>Tue, 05 Aug 2008 10:02:31 -0500</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Vladimir Guerrero Says No Way To DH</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-2.html</link>
<description> Big Daddy Vladdy doesn't want any part of a platooning DH role.  In a recent interview at the beginning of spring training, he didn't even wait for the translation to the question before he answered with a big NO!    Big Daddy has DH'd at times while suffering or returning from injuries, including the playoffs last year.  Now, with the addition of Torii Hunter this year and Gary Mathews last year, we have a very crowded outfield that also includes Reggie Willits, Juan Rivera, and Garret Anderson.  When the Angels added Torii Hunter they floated the idea of rotating Garret and Vladdy on the DH to keep everybody fresh and lessen Garret's exposure to another injury.   So when Vladdy arrived at spring training this was the first issue he was asked about.  We have not heard any complaints as of yet from Garret but he is older and has suffered a lot from injuries.    In a separate interview, Gary Mathews was asked about whether or not he would be willing to move to left or right field to make room for Torii and he indicated that he would not have any problem with that.  But when he plays in left or right that means that either Garret or Vladdy is either sitting on penciled in as the DH.   My take on all this is that Garret will DH more than Vladdy.  I also believe that Willets and Rivera are going to have a hard time getting playing time unless they end up at first base.  Of course, injuries during the season can loosen things up and give everyone an opportunity to play.  One thing seems obvious.   Big Daddy Vladdy will be roaming right field more often than not.   SlamFan</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 24 Feb 2008 13:34:13 -0600</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Angels 2008 Spring Training Schedule</title>
<link>http://angels.topbuzz.com/a-1.html</link>
<description>Here is the Los Angeles Angels 2008 Spring Training Schedule.  The first game starts in a little more than a week on February 28th, and the final Spring Training game is set to take place on March 29.

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Thursday, Feb. 28  	RANGERS  	TEMPE  	1:05    TV: MLB.TV
Friday, Feb. 29 	Rangers 	Surprise 	1:05
Saturday, March 1 	CUBS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Sunday, March 2 	Brewers 	Maryvale 	1:05
Monday, March 3 	ATHLETICS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Tuesday, March 4 	White Sox 	Tucson (TEP) 	1:05
Wednesday, March 5 	Mariners 	Peoria 	1:05
Thursday, March 6 	GIANTS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Friday, March 7 	WHITE SOX 	TEMPE 	1:05
Saturday, March 8 	GIANTS (ss) 	TEMPE 	1:05
Saturday, March 8 	Rockies (ss) 	Tucson (Hi Corbett) 	1:05
Sunday, March 9 	RANGERS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Monday, March 10 	ATHLETICS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Tuesday, March 11 	Padres 	Peoria 	1:05
Wednesday, March 12 	ROYALS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Thursday, March 13 	Cubs 	Mesa 	1:05
Friday, March 14 	Cubs 	Mesa 	1:05
Saturday, March 15 	DIAMONDBACKS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Sunday, March 16 	Cubs (ss) 	Mesa 	1:05
Sunday, March 16 	Giants (ss) 	Scottsdale 	1:05
Monday, March 17 	OFF DAY 	  	 
Tuesday, March 18 	Athletics 	Phoenix 	7:05
Wednesday, March 19 	BREWERS 	TEMPE 	12:00
Thursday, March 20 	GIANTS 	TEMPE 	1:05
Friday, March 21 	Rangers 	Surprise 	6:05    TV: KCOP
Saturday, March 22 	Royals 	Surprise 	1:05
Sunday, March 23 	MARINERS 	TEMPE 	1:05    TV: PRIME
Monday, March 24 	PADRES 	TEMPE 	1:05    TV: FSN
Tuesday, March 25 	Diamondbacks 	Tucson (TEP) 	1:05
Wednesday, March 26 	CUBS 	TEMPE 	1:05        TV: FSN
Thursday, March 27 	ROCKIES (ss) 	TEMPE 	12:05
Thursday, March 27 	Dodgers (ss) 	Anaheim 	7:05    TV: FSN
Friday, March 28 	Padres 	San Diego 	7:05    TV: KCOP
Saturday, March 29 	Padres 	Anaheim 	6:05    TV: FSN

TEP = Tempe Stadium
ss = split squad game
All times Pacific</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 19 Feb 2008 12:48:17 -0600</pubDate>
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