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Mike Trout’s on fire, sure, but a lot of other things are going right for Angels too

Mike Trout starts running toward first after hitting a double against the Toronto Blue Jays.
Angels outfielder Mike Trout is batting .386 and slugging .750 with four home runs and 10 RBIs this season.
(Mike Carlson / Associated Press)
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After a couple of unexpected off days this weekend following the postponement of two games against the Minnesota Twins, the Angels return to action Monday night against the Texas Rangers.

The team begins the day with an 8-5 record, its second-best 13-game start to a season since 2012.

Here are five observations from their opening two-plus weeks.

Trout’s scorching start

By his standards, Mike Trout’s 2020 season was a slight disappointment.

His start to 2021 has been anything but.

Entering Monday, Trout is batting .386. He’s reached base more than half the time. He’s slugging .750 with four home runs and 10 RBIs. And he’s trailing only Ronald Acuña Jr. in Fangraphs’ version of wins-above-replacement.

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The Angels can articulate many reasons why they’d like to reach the postseason, and high on the list is getting superstar Mike Trout on that stage.

He hasn’t been perfect, striking out in close to a third of his plate appearances and whiffing on swings at a similar rate. But when he’s connecting, he is crushing the ball. According to Baseball Savant, he has a 64.3 hard-hit percentage on batted balls with an exit velocity of 95 mph or more.

Trout has also been more aggressive than usual, swinging at the first pitch of an at-bat 24.6% of the time (his career average is 15.9%). His defense, an area he focused on improving during this offseason, has also looked better.

The last time he started a season this well was in 2019, when he had five home runs, 12 RBIs and a 1.475 OPS after 13 games. That year, he went on to win his third MVP Award. If the past few weeks have been any indication, he looks primed to contend for a fourth — a feat never before accomplished in the American League.

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Three-headed monster

Trout isn’t the only Angels hitter near the top of MLB leaderboards.

Designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (.333 average, 1.076 OPS, four homers, 12 RBIs) and first baseman Jared Walsh (.341 average, 1.133 OPS, four homers, 13 RBIs) have also been among the most productive batters in baseball.

In Fangraphs’ all-encompassing wRC+ metric, Trout ranks second; Walsh, seventh; and Ohtani, ninth. The Angels are the only team with three players in the top 10. Only one other club has even two hitters in the top 20.

Shohei Ohtani hollers while rounding the bases.
Shohei Ohtani celebrates after scoring on a single by Mike Trout during the sixth inning against the Minnesota Twins on April 16 at Angel Stadium.
(Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press)
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Ohtani has credited much of his success to a healthy offseason that allowed him to rebuild strength in his lower half. But he also has attacked more pitches over the plate (he is swinging at a career-high 84% of pitches in the zone) and barreled up the ball much more frequently.

Walsh, meanwhile, is continuing his hot finish to 2020. Since the start of September, he ranks fifth among all MLB positions players in WAR. And after recent injuries to several Angels outfielders, he’s made several impressive plays defensively in right field.

Improved pitching

Although 13 games are a small sample size, there have been positive early trends from the Angels’ pitching staff.

Their team ERA is slightly better than last year, 4.73 compared with 5.09 in 2020. And their FIP (a pitching measurement that removes the role of defense and batted ball luck) has improved markedly, currently ranking seventh-best in MLB at 3.46 after finishing 17th last year with a 4.49 mark.

The Angels are getting more strikeouts and ground balls, especially among their starting rotation, which ranks second in MLB with a 30.5% strikeout rate.

Their relievers are performing better in close games, highlighted by a 1.93 ERA in “high leverage situations,” according to Fangraphs (last year, they had an abhorrent 10.30 ERA in that category).

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And they’re doing a better job pounding the strike zone, getting either a called strike or swing-and-miss on 30.6% of their pitches, the third-best rate in MLB.

Dylan Bundy delivers a pitch on the mound.
Dylan Bundy has been the Angels’ most consistent starter, with a 3.32 ERA in three outings.
(Orlin Wagner / Associated Press)

Dylan Bundy has been the team’s most consistent starter with a 3.32 ERA in three outings. Andrew Heaney, Alex Cobb and Griffin Canning have largely been solid, lasting at least five innings in six straight combined starts. And Ohtani is set to return to the mound Tuesday after a two-week pitching layoff because of a blister.

In the bullpen, new closer Raisel Iglesias has a 6.75 ERA but has converted two of three save opportunities. Mike Mayers, the lone returning reliever from last year’s team, has permitted just one run in his first eight innings, pitching in crucial spots. And no other pitcher with multiple appearances has an ERA over 4.50.

Clutch hitting

The Angels’ early hitting stats aren’t too different from last year.

Although their team batting average is up — they are hitting .265 this year after posting a .248 mark in 2020 — other metrics including on-base percentage, slugging percentage, strikeout rate, walk rate and weighted on-base average have all remained close to the same.

The one noticeable difference in the season’s early weeks has been their performance in key moments.

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With runners in scoring position, the Angels have a .910 OPS, third-best in MLB. Last season, they had a .774 mark.

Former Angels GM and self-described ‘Boys Club kid’ Tony Reagins is committed to ‘real programs with real young people that have real impact.’

In the seventh inning or later, the Angels are batting .303 with an .859 OPS, ranking top-five in MLB in each category. Last season: .212 and .666, respectively.

After going 2-26 when trailing after seven innings last year, the Angels already have three such wins this season.

Quality opponents

Of the Angels’ eight wins thus far, seven have come against teams that made the playoffs last season — a fact that made manager Joe Maddon smile.

“You always want to play the best, beat the best,” Maddon said. “I love it.”

Maddon also noted the early bunched standings in the AL West, where all five teams finished the weekend within three games of one another. The Angels, who are in second place and a half-game behind the Seattle Mariners, begin a stretch of 13 straight division games Monday.

“Our division’s already stacking up pretty tightly,” Maddon said. “I don’t think you’re gonna see that wane. I think it’s gonna be a tightly knit group.”

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