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Saturday, June 04, 2005

The Ideal Runner: Angels 13, Red Sox 6

I came into this one in the top of the seventh -- a ten-o'clock start time? -- so I mainly got to see the good (for the Angels) parts. Unfortunately I missed Bartolo's performance featuring a season record for single-game strikeouts, but he didn't keep the Sox off the board, and so his ERA baloons to ... 3.10? Damn, I'll take it.

But the fun part. There was a lot to love here from an Angel fan's perspective, particularly the hitting, but damn if the Angels didn't make the Red Sox pay for some bad fielding. In particular:

So, today's outing represents the acme of Scioscia's planned game -- aggressive baserunning, and capitalizing on the limited number of baserunners wherever they may fall. And though Scioscia himself got ejected in the seventh, the rest of the game worked out pretty much as he would have done it, even down to the questionable use of Scot Shields, who desperately cries for some time off.

Both of Erstad's hits were just badly fielded up-the-middle singles. Finley's 2-6 afternoon, one of which turned into a triple, gave new hope to Angels fans who need to believe his bat hasn't atrophied from age. And any hitting from Kennedy -- especially two extra-base hits, his first game with multiple extra-base hits all year -- is welcome, but I look up and see AK's .304 average and begin to sense that perhaps Scioscia's trust in his bat is perhaps not, ultimately, misplaced. The day, however, belonged clearly to Anderson, whose masterful offensive performance vaulted him into the club's RBI leader. While I like Anderson, I've never been a big fan of his contract; toward its end, I expect Garret will be mostly useless, and so it becomes a sop for organization, an enormous tip for services already rendered. Days like today make up for some of that, but ask me how I feel about it in two years.

Shields -- in again, and giving up a solo homer? Believe it. Give the kid a day off and let Joel Peralta pitch. Did he mow down the fearsome heart of Boston's order, in order? You bet, and in so doing he passed a huge test. I won't be surprised -- or feel terribly nervous -- giving Peralta the ball in a tight situation when one comes up, and you can believe Scioscia's going to give him that chance in coming weeks.

From the Boston viewpoint, the Sox' bullpen came unglued, and uncharacteristically so. Of the thirteen runs scored, eight came against their relief corps, and with the exception of Mantei, who had a 3.00 ERA coming into the game, the Angels benefited from weak showings by guys the Red Sox should have had more confidence in.

Update: As David Pinto notes, Brendan Donnelly had a baseball in his back pocket, which the umpires made him remove. Why was it there? Considering the possibility for confusion on the field, I'm surprised they didn't eject him or something like that.

Recap


Comments:
What you missed int he early innings was some amazing defense by the Red Sox. Many good/great catches. Meanwhile Figgy was unconscionably bad in RF.
 
AK will do fine thank you
 
The Angels may not be as strong as last year,but agressive base running will win games for you. There relief pitching is letting them down right now. If Frankie comes back strong,and gives Shields and Donneley some rest.What might hurt the Angels this year is Percy,they will miss him.As you all know pitching is the name of the game pitching and fielding,I will take that any time.
 

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