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Angels spring preview: Did they improve enough in the offseason to be a contender?

Raisel Iglesias delivers during a game between the Cincinnati Reds and Pittsburgh Pirates in September. Iglesias
Raisel Iglesias, who pitched for the Cincinnati Reds last season, should bring a high level of stability to what was an often unreliable Angels bullpen in 2020.
(Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press)
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The Angels upgraded their roster with a flurry of winter moves that bolstered the starting rotation, revamped the bullpen and added a new shortstop and right fielder, but are they demonstrably better than the team that went 26-34 last year and failed to reach the playoffs for a sixth straight season?

That’s debatable.

Veteran starters José Quintana and Alex Cobb were acquired to bring much-needed depth to the rotation, but the group still lacks a proven ace.

New closer Raisel Iglesias should stabilize the back of a bullpen that had a major league-high 14 blown saves in 26 chances last season, and Mike Mayers solidified a setup spot with a breakout 2020, but the relief corps tails off from there.

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New shortstop José Iglesias is a reliable defender who could add more offense to the position, but he’s not as spectacular in the field as the departed Andrelton Simmons, who has an MLB-high 123 defensive runs saved since 2015.

The Angels are exploring ways to improve their vetting of potential employees after sexual harassment allegations were made against Mickey Callaway.

New right fielder Dexter Fowler will allow highly touted prospect Jo Adell to get more minor league seasoning after his rocky rookie debut, but Fowler, 34, hit only .233 with four homers and 15 RBIs in 31 games for St. Louis last year.

The 2021 forecast seems cloudy, at best, even for a team that sports a three-time American League most valuable player in center fielder Mike Trout, an elite third baseman in Anthony Rendon and plays in one of baseball’s weakest divisions.

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But two prominent prognosticators remain bullish on the Angels, Baseball Prospectus projecting them to finish second behind Houston in the AL West with an 87-75 record, and Fangraphs predicting a second-place finish and 84-78 mark, which might be a reflection of perennial division power Oakland’s decline as much as any Angels rise.

“I don’t get too caught up in any type of projections,” new general manager Perry Minasian said. “There’s so much unknown — who’s healthy, who’s not? How will they perform? Some guys have incredible years, some guys struggle. Let’s play the games and see what happens.”

The real games are six weeks away. With pitchers and catchers beginning spring training workouts Wednesday in Tempe, Ariz., let’s take a closer look at the roster:

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Starting rotation

Jose Quintana delivers for the Chicago Cubs against the Pittsburgh Pirates in September.
(Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press)

As much as the Angels could use a top-of-the-rotation hammer like Gerrit Cole or Jacob de Grom, Minasian did not acquire one for a staff that ranked second to last in the majors with a 5.52 ERA last season, choosing instead to focus on the fourth and fifth starters.

The numbers back him up. The team’s top three starters — Dylan Bundy, Andrew Heaney and Griffin Canning — combined to go 18-16 with a 3.91 ERA in 34 games; the other starters went 8-18 with a 9.22 ERA in 26 games.

Quintana, a 32-year-old left-hander with a funky, four-pitch mix, and Cobb, a 33-year-old right-hander whose 53.1% career ground-ball rate pairs well with the team’s stout infield defense, should help.

Quintana missed most of because of injuries but went 26-20 with a 4.35 ERA in 64 games for the Chicago Cubs in 2018-19. Cobb, acquired from Baltimore, rebounded from an injury-marred 2019 to go 2-5 with a 4.30 ERA in 10 starts.

The wild card is Shohei Ohtani, the two-way star who, because of elbow injuries, has pitched four innings since June 2018. Minasian said Ohtani is “pretty much done” with rehabilitation from Tommy John surgery and “ready to go” for camp.

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If the hard-throwing right-hander can stay healthy and regain his early 2018 form, when he went 4-1 with a 3.10 ERA in nine starts before tearing his elbow ligament, he would add an ace-caliber starter to the staff.

“I don’t know if a rotation is ever done in this game,” Minasian said, “but right now, we feel like we’re in a pretty good spot.”

Bullpen

Reliever Alex Claudio throws during a game between the Milwaukee Brewers and Chicago Cubs in September.
(Morry Gash / Associated Press)

Seven relievers, including erstwhile closers Hansel Robles and Keynan Middleton, are gone from a bullpen that combined for a 4.63 ERA.

The most prominent addition is Raisel Iglesias, 31, the former Cincinnati closer who mixes a 96-mph fastball with a mid-80s slider and changeup and has a 2.85 ERA with 375 strikeouts and 104 walks in 316-1/3 innings since 2016.

Mayers emerged as a force last year, going 2-0 with a 2.10 ERA in 29 games, striking out 43 and walking nine in 30 innings, but right-hander Ty Buttrey regressed, slipping to a 5.81 ERA in 27 games after posting a 3.98 ERA in 72 games in 2019.

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The Angels will need all of camp to sort out the rest of their bullpen, with left-hander Alex Claudio, right-handers Felix Pena, Jaime Barria and Junior Guerra and 100-mph-throwing Rule 5 pick Jose Alberto Rivera figuring into the mix.

“We feel pretty good with the back end,” Minasian said. “There is competition in the middle. There’s a lot of talented arms here, and we’ve been able to add a couple of veteran guys who have been a big part of successful bullpens.”

Catcher

This is not an area of strength, but the Angels could be adequate if Max Stassi recovers from hip surgery and builds on a breakout season in which he hit .278 with an .886 on-base-plus-slugging percentage and seven homers in 31 games.

Kurt Suzuki, the 37-year-old who signed as a free agent, is known more for his offense (.812 OPS from 2017-20) than defense. Anthony Bemboom provides a left-handed bat in reserve.

Infield

Angels third baseman David Fletcher throws during a game against the Dodgers on Sept. 27.
(Kyusung Gong / Associated Press)

A talented group led by Rendon, who had a .915 OPS, nine homers and 31 RBIs in the first year of a seven-year, $245-million deal, and productive leadoff man David Fletcher, who will be anchored at second base after moving around the infield last year, could be even better if first baseman Jared Walsh slugs like he did in September.

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The left-handed-hitting Walsh batted .337 with a 1.113 OPS, nine homers and 26 RBIs in 86 September at-bats, pushing first baseman Albert Pujols, 41 and in the final year of a 10-year, $240-million deal, into an even more diminished role.

Rendon and Fletcher are Gold Glove-caliber defenders. Jose Iglesias, acquired from Baltimore, is reliable and coming off a season (albeit abbreviated) in which he logged career bests in average (.373) and OPS (.956) and had 17 doubles and 24 RBIs in 39 games.

Will the Padres deny the Dodgers a repeat? Can two players named Iglesias get the Angels to the postseason? And what about those dastardly Astros?

Luis Rengifo, Franklin Barreto, Matt Thaiss and Phil Gosselin will compete for utility roles.

Outfield/Designated hitter

After finishing in the top four of AL MVP voting in each of his first eight seasons, Trout, 29, slipped all the way to fifth last year, when he hit .281 with a .993 OPS, 17 homers and 46 RBIs in 53 games. He is the least of the team’s concerns.

For Trout to win his first-ever playoff game, the Angels will need consistent production from left fielder Justin Upton, who rebounded from a dismal July/August (.522 OPS, four homers in 23 games) to hit .284 with a .936 OPS and five homers in 19 September games, and Ohtani, the DH who slumped to a .190 average and .657 OPS .

The switch-hitting Fowler was much better from the left side (.260 average, .801 OPS) than right (.118, .284) last season, so he likely will platoon with Taylor Ward or Adell at some point. Though Trout covers plenty of ground in center, the group is below average defensively.

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