Scioscia has Angels' machine running smooth
Injuries? Contract issues? None of it seems to matter in Anaheim
![]() | Mike Scioscia once again has his Angels quietly contending in the American League. |
Mark J. Terrill / AP |
Video: Baseball from NBC Sports |
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No problem. The Angels swept the series anyway, burying the Mariners — who some thought could challenge them — even deeper into American League West cellar. Ho-hum, just another series with manager Mike Scioscia’s team, which continues to succeed no matter what obstacles get in its way.
Entering Thursday's games, the Angels are 41-26 and have won nine of their past 11 games to take a five-game lead in the American League West.
And besides the already-mentioned, the Angels have gotten to where they are in the standings despite the extended absences of emerging hit machine Howie Kendrick (back after missing 42 games with a hamstring injury), ace John Lackey (who was out until May 14th due to a triceps injury), and a slow first two months from Guerrero.
It just doesn’t seem to matter who’s in the lineup; the Angels just play and win, abiding by manager Scioscia’s formula of dominant pitching, excellent defense and offensive production from everybody on the roster.
They win on the road — at 21-12, they have the game’s best away record, and nobody else in the AL is above .500. They win the close ones — in a recent streak of 13 consecutive games in which they scored four runs or less, they went 9-4. And they are winning enough to remove any doubt about their ability to go deep into October — doubt that lingered this spring with the injuries to their two top starting pitchers.
No problem — while Lackey and Escobar (who is throwing on flat ground) were out, underrated Joe Saunders and talented Ervin Santana stepped up to the top of the rotation. Saunders, a poised left-hander with a better-than-you-think fastball, is tied for second in the league with nine victories. Santana and his electric stuff is one win behind, the two a combined 17-5.
Lackey quickly has regained ace form, with a 1.83 ERA, and with Jered Weaver and Jon Garland making solid contributions, there is no need for Escobar to rush back.
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A modified delivery that has eased some of his herky-jerky mechanizations and leaves him in a better fielding position obviously has taken hold. And we’ll see what happens this winter, when K-Rod will be targeting something along the lines of the three-year, $45-million deal Mariano Rivera received.
But really, there never seems to be a major issue or problem on a Scioscia-led team. And when you look around at his peers, other than three future Hall of Famers named Cox, La Russa and Torre, and two-time champ Terry Francona, you can’t find a better track record. A second World Series title would elevate Scioscia up another notch, and his current team has a chance to give it to him.
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