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Posted: Monday October 12, 2009 12:42PM; Updated: Monday October 12, 2009 4:35PM
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DAILY SCOOP

There's certainly a lot to love about the Angels; more notes

Story Highlights

The tight-knit Angels have overcome more than any other team in 2009

What is wrong with Red Sox closer Jonathan Papelbon?

There are rumors the Astros might try to hire Tony La Russa and Dave Duncan

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Torii Hunter
Torii Hunter celebrates the Angels' ALDS win over the Red Sox on Sunday.
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BOSTON -- The Angels, classy organization that they are, voted to give late pitcher Nick Adenhart a full postseason share, clubhouse sources confirmed. So Adenhart's former teammates are honoring the Adenharts with both their pay and their play.

No team should ever have to confront such a tragedy. Shortly after Adenhart was killed by a drunk driver in April (the very same night he threw six shutout innings in his season debut), manager Mike Scioscia gathered the team for a secret meeting at Angels Stadium. And on Sunday, in the afterglow of the Angels' three-game Division Series sweep of the Red Sox, Angels star Torii Hunter recalled that confab. Hunter said, "Mike just told us to go out and play. And to go out and play for Nick Adenhart. He's looking down on us."

If so, perhaps he's tipping a cap to easily the best story left in the playoffs.

There's a lot to love about this bunch, such as ...

The Angels are a tough lot. Beyond overcoming the death of their beloved and talented young teammate, they also overcame more mundane setbacks, such as the simultaneous injuries to starting pitchers John Lackey, Ervin Santana and Kelvim Escobar, plus a slow start that had them well behind the upstart Rangers for months. Angels owner Arte Moreno said of his troops, "They never quit." They also had a bad draw in the playoffs, being rewarded for their 97-win season by having to play their decades-long postseason nemesis, the Red Sox. And that didn't distract or deter them, either.

The Angels are serene. If they were feeling the burden of past playoff defeats to Boston, they didn't show it, sweeping the demons right out of Fenway Park with their rousing 7-6 come-from-behind Game 3 win. "This team is focused," GM Tony Reagins said. "The atmosphere among the players is much more relaxed. They have a calmness about them." The celebration was fairly sedate, considering the demons that had been excised. "We've got business to take care of," Hunter explained.

They are a clutch bunch. They won Sunday's game by scoring five runs in the last two innings off Billy Wagner and Jonathan Papelbon, one of the best closers in the game. "We're always pushing," Bobby Abreu said. "We're never surrendering. We're always trying to attack."

They are patient. A quartet in their clubhouse had waited 23 years for this moment. Folks all over recalled that the Angels had lost 12 of their last 13 postseason games against the Red Sox, though few Angels people were around to see the first three of those defeats, back in 1986, encapsulated by Dave Henderson's game-tying Game 5 home run off Donnie Moore. Longtime public relations man Tim Mead said his glee was being felt "in a way you can't describe." Mead also said, "It goes back to 1986 for some of us." They did a head count, and it turned out to be just those four -- Mead, plus team doctor Lewis Yocum and trainers Ned Bergert and Rick Smith, who huddled together by the trainers room and celebrated the victory.

They are a candid and realistic group. When asked about their LCS matchup Sunday evening, they invariably started talking about the Yankees. I mentioned to some that the other series wasn't quite over. "The Twins?" one Angel said. "They make too many mistakes." (They are right about that. Smarts don't always accompany toughness.)

They don't take stuff for granted. The Angels don't consider themselves heavy favorites just because they've beaten the Yankees three straight times in the playoffs. "They are having a lot of fun with guys like CC [Sabathia] and [Nick] Swisher," Hunter said. "They're totally different. They used to be all business."

They aren't revenge-minded. Though the Yankees signed both of the Angels' top free-agent targets (their own Mark Teixeira plus Sabathia) for more than they could offer (it's believed that the Angels bid around $260 million for the pair, about $81 million less than the Yankees), Reagins said, "It's business. We took a run at both, and it wasn't meant to be. We try to stick to our philosophy. If it makes sense, we're very aggressive." Aggressive is one thing, beating the Yankees at the marquee free-agent game, well, that shouldn't be tried at home.

They are a homegrown group. Hunter was one marquee free-agent pickup who chose to go there rather than play at home in Texas, and so were Vladimir Guerrero, Abreu and Brian Fuentes. A few others came via judicious trades. But the vast majority of the team was drafted and developed by the Angels. "There are so many homegrown players. They all went through the bushes together," gushed owner Moreno. "We really have good people in the organization."

They are classy from top to bottom. Moreno, consistently and fairly cited as one of the best owners in sports, is called "tough but fair" by his subordinates. And let's not forget this is the only owner whose first order of business was to lower the beer prices. (He also knows something about baseball.)

They are a modest, discreet squad. None of their players would admit to voting a full share for Adenhart, which was first reported in the Orange County Register. But they did. And of course it's the right thing to do.

Papelbon's problem: straight fastballs, few splitters

The Angels danced all over Jonathan Papelbon in Sunday's Game 3 win. And afterward Reagins said what everyone was thinking: "I was more confident against Papelbon than Daniel Bard." Bard, clocked at 97 on the Angels' slowish gun in Anaheim, broke Juan Rivera's bat for a ground-ball double play.

 
 

Meanwhile, Papelbon was tattooed, surrendering a two-run single to Rivera in the eighth and an RBI double to Abreu and a game-winning two-run single to Guerrero in the ninth. A lot of Angels observers agreed that the Red Sox did right by intentionally walking the hot and clutch Hunter to load the bases ahead of Guerrero, who's had postseason difficulties -- and that includes Hunter, who opined, "If I was the manager, I would have walked me, too. I was locked in. I'm talking trash, of course. But that's the natural thing to do, to create a force play at every base."

Perhaps, but that intentional walk may be a tipoff to how Papelbon was feeling, because the best closers always want to feel that they can get anyone out. Mariano Rivera once became uncharacteristically irate when he was ordered to issue even one intentional walk. Another tipoff that Papelbon might not be right may have been an unintentional walk to slumping (no hits this series) non-power threat Chone Figgins.

Papelbon said his problem was a lack of location. But Papelbon was also throwing straight fastballs at 95/96 mph and practically no splitters (he threw one early in the count to Abreu). As one longtime Red Sox expert observed, perhaps there would have been more variety if Jason Varitek had been catching him instead of Victor Martinez. Of course, we'll never know the answer there.

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