Pujols leads another successful charity golf tourney

May 21, 2013 Leave a comment

RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif. — It was a glorious morning at the Trump National Golf Club of Los Angeles, site of the Pujols Family Foundation’s marquee event. But Albert Pujols, face of the charitable organization that annually raises about a million dollars for local kids with Down Syndrome and impoverished families in the Dominican Republic, was feeling a little bummed.

His sore right knee and his ailing left foot has kept him out of the Angels’ starting lineup just once through the first seven weeks of this trying season. But better judgment prevailed on this Monday off-day, and Pujols decided to leave the golf clubs inside.

“This is probably the first time I haven’t golfed in the 11 years that I’ve had this event,” the $240 million first baseman said. “But my foot’s a little sore, and I don’t wanna tweak my knee, either. I don’t want to take the chance. That’s a lot of torque. I think people understand. The most important thing is that the people are here, supporting.”

Twenty-eight foursomes and dozens of other celebrities — from ex-superstars like Roger Clemens and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, to actors like Rob Riggle and Dennis Haysbert, to current Angels like Mike Scioscia and Mike Trout — played 18 holes at Pujols’ Celebrity Golf Classic, the biggest earner for the slugger’s cherished Foundation.

This is the 11th such event the Pujols Family Foundation (PFF) has put together, but only the second in a Southern California area he and his family are still getting acclimated to.

Pujols’ five children still live in Missouri with his wife, Deidre. Once school is out, they’ll migrate to Orange County. And after that, they’ll probably be home-schooled so the entire Pujols family can be together again.

The last 17 months, since Pujols signed his gargantuan contract with the Angels, have been quite the adjustment.

“You know what’s funny is most of Major League Baseball has a schedule like this, where they live somewhere and they play baseball somewhere else,” Deidre said. “We didn’t have to do that because we lived in St. Louis, where he played, so it’s definitely a new take on things for us. Right now, it’s just a matter of being where we need to be.”

Foundation-wise, Albert and Deidre had to “learn it all over again” when Pujols signed with the Angels in December 2011, Deidre said. But they’re adapting.

Last year, PFF went national, expanding their reach to Southern California, Kansas City and Nashville, Tenn., in addition to the headquarters in St. Louis. And in early July, when the Cardinals are in town, they’ll partner with the ESPN Zone in Downtown Disney to introduce a new family event benefiting kids with Down Syndrome.

The golf tournament brought in $284,000 last year. This year’s event, which includes an auction and a helicopter ball drop, should easily top that.

For Pujols, that’s as important as helping the Angels rebound from a 17-27 start — except it’s hardly talked about.

“God has given more than what I deserve,” Pujols said, “so I always try to give back as much as I can.”

“There’s a light that comes on in Albert when he sees these kids,” PFF executive director and CEO Todd Perry added. “It’s his heart; it’s his passion.”

Perry approached Deidre in 2004 about starting a foundation to benefit children with Down Syndrome, the genetic disorder Pujols’ stepdaughter Isabella suffers from. One year later — on May 5, 2005, in honor of Pujols’ uniform number — PFF launched. And ever since then, it has perpetually evolved.

“After he realized what we had the capacity to do and the way of changing lives, he was all over it,” Deidre said. “It’s grown. It really has grown.”

Pujols isn’t the most congenial of ballplayers, but he’ll light up any time you bring up his organization. It means a lot to him. More than most, really. Because unlike most athletes of his stature, he doesn’t just write a check to a charitable organization and forget the rest. He immerses himself in it; believes God has given him this platform for the sole purpose of helping those who are less fortunate.

His goal now is to see PFF expand — mainly, West.

“We don’t want to get stuck in one place,” Pujols said. “We want to keep growing. You probably won’t be able to reach everybody in this world, but you want to make a difference in people’s lives. At the end, that’s what it’s all about — it’s about giving back.

“It’s not like we have one foot out and one foot in; we’re all in on this.”

Article source: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130520&content_id=48108000&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlb

Categories: Pujols News

The man who no longer matters

May 20, 2013 Leave a comment

The thing that’s strange – the thing that’s sad – is how little excitement there is now when he comes to the plate. Let’s go to a moment in Sunday’s Angels-White Sox game. The count is 3-0, and Albert Pujols has the green light. There should be an electrical charge buzzing the air. Only … really … there isn’t a buzz. There isn’t a charge. There isn’t anything at all. The thrill-o-meter is at zero.

So strange. So sad. It used to be one of baseball’s great thrills to watch Albert Pujols hit. Whether you were a Cardinals fan or not, you would find yourself marking the pace of games by Albert Pujols’ at bats.

Pujols just hit, so he probably won’t come up for another two innings, let’s get a hot dog.

St. Louis is down two, but Pujols is scheduled to hit fourth in the eighth.

Hey, the Cardinals avoiding the double play means Pujols will get up one more time before the game’s over.

More from Joe PosnanskiImage: File photo of Manchester United's manager Ferguson holding the English Premier League trophy following their English Premier League soccer match against Blackpool at Old Trafford in ManchesterReuters

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Stuff like that. Here are the top five players in baseball history after 10 years in Batting Wins Above Replacement – so, perhaps, the five best hitters after 10 seasons (the slash statistics are batting average/on-base percentage/slugging percentage):

Ted Williams: .347/.484/.633 with 366 doubles, 323 homers, 1,261 RBIs, 1,273 runs, 83.7 WAR.

Albert Pujols: .331/.426/.624 with 426 doubles, 408 homers, 1,230 RBIs, 1186 runs, 81.1 WAR.

Babe Ruth: .346/.477/.701 with 271 doubles, 305 homers, 932 RBIs, 969 runs, 78.8 WAR.

Stan Musial: .347/.431/.584 with 373 doubles, 206 homers, 923 RBIs, 1,044 runs, 74 WAR.

Lou Gehrig: .343/.440/.640 with 321 doubles, 267 homers, 1,143 RBIs, 1,075 runs, 65.6 WAR.

Now, Ruth was a pitcher for much of his early career, and Pujols played in a better offensive era than many, but let’s not get too technical about all this. In his first 10 years, Albert Pujols hit more homers than any player ever, and also more doubles.

But the thing that was most striking about Pujols is that he was always exactly as good as he had been the year before. He never had a bad year. He never had anything RESEMBLING a bad year. They called him “The Machine.” If you take the WORST statistical totals he had those first 10 years – that is, the lowest batting average he had over those 10 years, the fewest home runs he hit, etc. — you STILL come up with this season:

.312 average, .394 on-base, .561 slugging, 33 doubles, 34 homers, 117 RBIs, 99 runs.

Repeat: Those are his WORST numbers in those first 10 years. The guy was a first-ballot Hall of Famer on his worst day.

And he was thrilling to watch hit. He stood at the plate with that wide stance – he looked so sturdy and immovable, like he was magnetically connected with the batters’ box. He was like a marble statue up there.

The pitcher would throw a ball just off the plate, and Pujols would not only refuse to swing, he would look down and kick at the dirt as if the pitch had never happened, as if it was not even worthy of his disdain. Then, when the right pitch came, his pitch, he would unleash with such ferocity you could almost see the cartoon exclamation points dancing around the collision of bat and ball. Everyone has a Pujols example. He was always one swing away from inspiring awe.

That made him exciting, riveting, one of those athletes who could stop time … and now it’s just gone. It isn’t just that Albert Pujols is hitting .241, slugging about 200 points below his career average and striking out more than he’s walking again. By now, we must have gotten used to Pujols slow starts.

Through May 3, 2011: .231/.298/.419 with seven homers.

Through May 14, 2012: .197/.255/.275 with one homer.

Through May 19, 2013: .241/.313/.418 with seven homers.

Each of the last two seasons, he hit well enough the last four-plus months of the season to end up with strong numbers. Last year, for instance, after May 14 he hit .312/.374/.589 with 42 doubles and 29 homers. You have to believe that he will start hitting again at some point.

But, even assuming he does again find the range, even assuming he has a few more productive years, the truth is that Pujols has entered a different phase of his career. After years of being the best player in baseball, Pujols is now sort of beside the point.

Look: He is 33 years old, just beginning a $240 million contract, and he’s playing for an overpriced and kind of dreadful team that looks like it was built by a rotisserie baseball beginner who ran out at the last minute and bought three fantasy baseball magazines. He looks hurt. He looks tired. He looks out of place. He looks … well, truth is, who is even looking anymore?

Miguel Cabrera, who for years had to deal with being kind of a poor-man’s Albert, won the Triple Crown, something Pujols could never quite do. He’s the one who inspires awe now. St. Louis, the team and town he had come to represent, has gone on without him, and the Cardinals have the second-best record in baseball. And Pujols is not even the most exciting or interesting player on his own team.

You tell me: If you are a young Angels fan, who will you associate with and whose jersey will you buy – Albert Pujols or Mike Trout?

It wasn’t supposed to happen like this. Few players in baseball history have worked as hard as Albert Pujols to achieve greatness. He was doubted every step of his life. He moved to Kansas City from the Dominican Republic when he was young, and everyone always whispered that he was older than he said. As a high schooler, he hit legendary home runs his average topped .500 … but he was not even on the Kansas City’s Star’s all-metro first team, and he was not drafted. He went to Maple Woods Community College and crushed the ball with such ferocity that no self-respecting scout could possibly miss it … he hit .461 with 22 homers in 40 games and, according to legend, did not strike out a single time. But scouts did miss it. Pujols was not drafted until the 13th round by the Cardinals.

Eighteen months later, Cardinals manager Tony La Russa got his first good look at Pujols. His mind was utterly blown. Pujols played every day in St. Louis and had one of the greatest rookie years in baseball history. He was better every year after that.

He was driven by the doubters, spurred by the skepticism, galvanized by people’s pessimism. He talked often about his faith and how God awakened and strengthened him. He spent hours swinging bats in the cage. He cut out anything at all that might be a distraction. And he became the best player in baseball. Then, he became the best player in baseball again. Then he became the best player in baseball again.

It was a never-ending cycle for him. They said he was slow – he stole 16 bases the next year. They said he struck out too much – he started to annually appear in the Top 10 for fewest strikeouts per at-bat. They said his defense was a liability – he won two Gold Gloves and almost certainly deserved a few more.

Then, two years ago, he was a free agent and, he did not think the Cardinals respected him enough. Their first offer to him was insultingly low (well, relatively speaking, it was a five-year deal for $130 million). The Cardinals seemed to want him on the cheap (well, relatively speaking, $210 million with a bunch of it deferred). There’s no way to get into Pujols’ mind but you suspect he thought that, as the best player in baseball, he deserved the most money in baseball.

He got $240 million. He will be getting an average of almost $28 million a deal for the next eight years. Other than Alex Rodriguez’s insane contracts – which brought their own pain – it was the highest baseball deal ever signed.

But, there’s a cost too. And the cost is … well, back to Sunday’s game. It is Angels and White Sox, a couple of sub-.500 teams, and the count is 3-0. The Angels announcer points out that Pujols does not often swing 3-0, but this is a good time to swing if the pitch is right. Sure. Swing away! The air is warm, meaning the ball will travel if hit right. The Angels re up comfortably. Here is a chance for Albert to break out of a slump, to get a little greedy, to give the fans a thrill.

The pitch is right. Pujols unleashes the swing. There are no cartoon exclamation points. Instead, he pops up to the shortstop, completing his 0-for-4 day. There will be better days, of course. But the big thing, is nobody really seems to notice. Nobody really seems to care. That’s the cost.

Joe Posnanski is the national columnist for NBC Sports. Follow him on Twitter @JPosnanski. Click here to subscribe to Joe’s stories.

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Categories: Pujols News

Bernthal – I Don’t Miss Albert Pujols; Do You?

May 16, 2013 Leave a comment

ST. LOUIS, MO (KPLR) – I don`t know why but every once in a while I will check to see how Albert Pujols is doing.

I`ve always wished him nothing but the best – but for some strange reason I take delight in seeing his new team is one of the worst in baseball while his old team, the Cardinals has been one of the best.

And Albert has not been fairing very well.

I don`t know if you ever saw the movie, Moneyball, it`s about how a math guy who knew nothing about baseball figured out a formula to put together a team that would win.

That formula worked better then teams that spent millions more.

I`m not sure what the Cardinals secret formula is but it`s working.
I`m sure Albert will still hit his shares of home runs I just hope the day comes when we don`t care anymore.

I`m JB and that`s the way it oughta be.

Article source: http://kplr11.com/2013/05/16/bernthal-i-dont-miss-albert-pujols-do-you/

Categories: Pujols News

Upon Further Review: I was wrong about Pujols

May 16, 2013 Leave a comment

In this episode of Upon Further ReviewPost-Dispatch columnist Bryan Burwell says he was wrong – the Cardinals actually knew what they were doing in letting Albert get away. 

Watch the show now: http://cinesport.stltoday.com/saint-louis-post-dispatch-upon-further-review/

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Copyright 2013 stltoday.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Article source: http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/upon-further-review-i-was-wrong-about-pujols/article_d73c15c6-3f06-11e2-b464-0019bb30f31a.html

Categories: Pujols News

Pujols not blaming balky knee, foot for dip in power

May 16, 2013 Leave a comment

Moreno dismisses speculation regarding Scioscia’s job

ANAHEIM — Angels owner Arte Moreno publicly defended Mike Scioscia on Wednesday, telling FOXSports.com from the Owners Meetings in New York that there is “zero” chance he’ll dismiss his 14-year manager amid a 15-24 start to a much-hyped season.

“Arte has always been very supportive,” Scioscia said when asked for his reaction prior to Wednesday’s game. “Arte knows how hard I take the non-performance of this team and how we need to get there. It hits me as hard as it hits Arte and it hits Jerry [Dipoto, the general manager,] and I know Arte realizes that. We’re going to take this challenge and hopefully start moving forward and getting the wins that we need to get ourselves in the position we want to. That’s the bottom line is winning, and we’re going to work towards that.”

The Angels once again came into the season with grand expectations after the offseason signing of Josh Hamilton, which came almost a year to the day since the club added Albert Pujols. But they got off to a slow start in 2013, after starting 6-14 in 2012, and now sit 10 1/2 games back of the first-place Rangers in the American League West while sporting the fourth-worst run-differential in baseball.

But Moreno, who also dismissed speculation regarding Dipoto’s job status, said he has “no questions about Mike.” Scioscia came on board in 2000, three years before Moreno purchased the Angels from the Walt Disney Company, but it was Moreno who signed Scioscia to the 10-year extension that runs through 2018.

“Mike has zero problems, OK?” Moreno told FOXSports.com. “This is his 14th year. Mike goes beyond what he does on the field. He’s a good person. He’s a good person in the community, a very good baseball guy. You don’t have to ask me. You just ask other managers, other baseball people.

“I try not to live with that victim mentality that I want to blame everyone. If you’re going to blame anyone, you’ve got to blame me. I’m the one at the end of the day that has the final call.”

Scioscia has been on the proverbial “hot seat” before, going way back to the slow start of 2002 (when he eventually brought the franchise its first and only World Series title). Now, Scioscia’s team is in danger of missing the playoffs for a fourth straight season despite sporting the sixth-highest payroll in baseball.

If nothing else, Moreno’s comments could help quell outside speculation.

“The outside speculation is neither here nor there; the chatter is neither here nor there,” Scioscia disputed. “Going on 14 years, this isn’t the first time you deal with this kind of chatter. It happens; it’s happened before. It certainly doesn’t affect what we need to do on a day-to-day basis with our team, and that’s what we’re going to focus on.”

Article source: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130515&content_id=47663378¬ebook_id=47667712&vkey=notebook_ana&c_id=ana

Categories: Pujols News

Pujols, Kendrick, Hamilton and Trout homer off Guthrie in Angels’ 6-2 win over …

May 15, 2013 Leave a comment

“As you saw tonight, up and down the lineup, we’re capable of doing that,” Hamilton said. “When you look at what he’s been doing as of late, he’s been throwing the ball well. So it’s encouraging to know you’ve had good at-bats against a guy like that. It’s just good to create a little bit of fuel to the fire. The guys were smiling and having fun.”

Guthrie (5-1) yielded five runs and 11 hits over seven innings. He held the franchise record for consecutive starts without a loss while winning his previous 10 decisions. It was his first defeat since Aug. 3 last year, when Texas beat him 5-3 at Kansas City.

“The streak was because of 25 guys that played well behind me every time I was on the mound, and they really picked me up. That’s how a streak like that happens,” Guthrie said. “Tonight they tried to battle for me, and I couldn’t get any momentum on our side. It was one of those nights where I didn’t have a good feel and wasn’t able to execute pitches.”

Hamilton, who batted .212 with 11 RBIs in his first 38 games with the Angels after signing a five-year, $125 million contract in December, drove Guthrie’s first pitch to him in the sixth inning far beyond the trees in center field with two outs to increase the lead to 4-2.

“I went back and looked at (some tape from) 2010 — the end of May and early June, because I struggled the first month and a half of that season,” Hamilton said. “I looked at what kind of adjustment I made then and tried to simulate that in BP today and in the game. As the game went on, I saw more pitches and felt good.”

The Angels’ right fielder, who was the AL MVP in 2010, made his fourth start at designated hitter after being removed from Monday night’s series-opening 11-4 loss in the seventh inning because of lightheadedness caused by sinus congestion.

“It was good in Houston and it felt OK in Chicago. Today it felt better,” Hamilton said. “I felt like I was seeing the ball better and had a little better pitch selection throughout the game. I felt OK while I was hitting. But like last night, once I would run, I’d kind of feel a little off. So we’ll give the medicine a couple of days and see if it kind of works its way out.”

Trout ended the scoring in the seventh with his seventh homer, a towering drive over the double-decker bullpen in left field. It was the first time in Guthrie’s 10-year career that he allowed four homers in a game.

Jason Vargas (2-3) gave up five hits in seven-plus innings and struck out seven. Both runs against the left-hander were knocked in by the suddenly hot Billy Butler, who had an RBI double in the fourth and a homer in the sixth.

“He mixes speeds well, locates, and he just knows how to pitch,” Butler said. “Over the years he’s gotten better and better. He knows what he has, knows his stuff and basically knows how to approach hitters. He’s a lefty and he throws in the upper 80s (mph), so you have to make him come to you and bring the ball up. That’s easier said than done.”

Butler opened the scoring with an RBI double. But the Angels responded with two runs in the bottom half, as Pujols launched his sixth homer over both bullpens leading off the inning and Kendrick hit his sixth of the season with two outs.

Trout made it 3-1 in the fifth with a sacrifice fly after the Angels put runners at the corners on singles by J.B. Shuck and Erick Aybar, who returned to the lineup after missing four games because of tightness in his right hamstring.

“It just shows you how fragile a streak like that is and how impressive it is,” Butler said. “Jeremy’s going to pitch well all year, and he’s pitched well to this point. We all have confidence in him, and we know when he goes out there we have a great chance to win every time.”

NOTES: Los Angeles got two runners thrown out at third base by catcher Salvador Perez in the third. … The Angels are 4-0 when Hamilton is the DH. He is 8 for 25 against Guthrie with three home runs. … The last pitcher to give up four homers against the Angels in a game was Oakland’s Dan Straily on Aug. 8, 2012, in his second big league start. … Angels LHP C.J. Wilson will match up against LHP Chris Sale of the White Sox for the second time in six days on Friday night. Sale outpitched Wilson with a one-hitter Sunday at Chicago, beating the Angels 3-0.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Article source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/nationals/pujols-kendrick-hamilton-and-trout-homer-off-guthrie-in-angels-6-2-win-over-royals/2013/05/15/9f49e890-bd1a-11e2-b537-ab47f0325f7c_story.html

Categories: Pujols News

Pujols goes yard for a solo homer in fourth

May 15, 2013 Leave a comment
Categories: Pujols News

ANGELS NOTEBOOK: Albert Pujols hampered by foot issue

May 14, 2013 Leave a comment

ANAHEIM – With the Angels off to their worst start since 1988, the spotlight has been on the offensive struggles of Albert Pujols and Josh Hamilton.

Manager Mike Scioscia is certain that Hamilton will find his hot streak, but also noted Pujols’ return to form could encounter some potholes along the way because of his injured foot.

“Josh is really probably a little more frustrated because he knows the pitchers, he knows the league, he’s just not in a comfort zone,” Scioscia said. “He doesn’t have the same swing path yet that he does when he’s hitting well and he’s working toward that.

“He’s working hard. He hit early before the road trip, hit early several times on the road trip. There’s no doubt he’s aggressive in the batter’s box, he’s attacking the ball. Now he’s got to merge that with getting a good pitch to hit and not missing. Some of that has to do with getting his swing plane, comfort zone. There’s a lot of buzzwords, but he needs to find that and he will.”

Hamilton entered Monday’s game with a .203 average with four home runs and 11 RBIs.

Pujols, of course, found his stride last season after a slow start, but plantar fasciitis in his left foot likely would require a lengthy rest to properly heal.

However, he’s making a go of it trying to play through the soreness.

“With Albert, there’s no doubt that he’s been impacted by some issues to his lower body to be able to leverage the ball the way he can,” Scioscia said. “There

are times he feels good and times that are holding him back from what he wants to do.

“Our preference right now is to get Albert healthy. And if he can nurse his way through it and be productive, that’s the optimum. But if he can’t, we’ll consider other things.”

Scioscia also noted it’s a “Catch-22″ for Pujols, who has talked about playing first base to keep loose, though his foot grows sore as the game wears on. But when he’s designated hitter, Scioscia said, it’s tougher for him to get loose between at-bats.

“We’ve tried a lot of different things to get him better,” Scioscia said. “I think now you just want to manage it where he can go out and do the things he needs to do, particularly in the batter’s box.”

Aches and pains

Jered Weaver, on the mend from his fractured left elbow, played catch Monday and Scioscia said Weaver could throw a bullpen session today.

Left-hander Sean Burnett figures to throw a session in the bullpen later this week and Kevin Jepsen is throwing off the mound. Ryan Madson, on the comeback trail from Tommy John surgery, is close to being ready to make rehab appearances in the minors.

“Hopefully we’ll look at two weeks from now we’re talking about a different look to our bullpen,” Scioscia said. “We’ll see how these guys continue to progress.”

Incidentally, the bullpen suddenly has turned into one of the more promising parts of the club. On the Angels’ 3-3 road trip to Houston and Chicago, Angels relievers allowed no runs in 15 2/3 innings to run their scorless streak to 17.

Shortstop Erick Aybar, who left Thursday’s game with hamstring tightness, was deemed available to play Monday by Scioscia, who added his return likely would be today.

phil.collin@dailybreeze.com

Article source: http://www.sbsun.com/ci_23236702/angels-notebook-albert-pujols-hampered-by-foot-issue

Categories: Pujols News

ANGELS NOTEBOOK: Albert Pujols hampered by foot issue

May 14, 2013 Leave a comment

ANAHEIM – With the Angels off to their worst start since 1988, the spotlight has been on the offensive struggles of Albert Pujols and Josh Hamilton.

Manager Mike Scioscia is certain that Hamilton will find his hot streak, but also noted Pujols’ return to form could encounter some potholes along the way because of his injured foot.

“Josh is really probably a little more frustrated because he knows the pitchers, he knows the league, he’s just not in a comfort zone,” Scioscia said. “He doesn’t have the same swing path yet that he does when he’s hitting well and he’s working toward that.

“He’s working hard. He hit early before the road trip, hit early several times on the road trip. There’s no doubt he’s aggressive in the batter’s box, he’s attacking the ball. Now he’s got to merge that with getting a good pitch to hit and not missing. Some of that has to do with getting his swing plane, comfort zone. There’s a lot of buzzwords, but he needs to find that and he will.”

Hamilton entered Monday’s game with a .203 average with four home runs and 11 RBIs.

Pujols, of course, found his stride last season after a slow start, but plantar fasciitis in his left foot likely would require a lengthy rest to properly heal.

However, he’s making a go of it trying to play through the soreness.

“With Albert, there’s no doubt that he’s been impacted by some issues to his lower body to be able to leverage the ball the way he can,” Scioscia said. “There

are times he feels good and times that are holding him back from what he wants to do.

“Our preference right now is to get Albert healthy. And if he can nurse his way through it and be productive, that’s the optimum. But if he can’t, we’ll consider other things.”

Scioscia also noted it’s a “Catch-22″ for Pujols, who has talked about playing first base to keep loose, though his foot grows sore as the game wears on. But when he’s designated hitter, Scioscia said, it’s tougher for him to get loose between at-bats.

“We’ve tried a lot of different things to get him better,” Scioscia said. “I think now you just want to manage it where he can go out and do the things he needs to do, particularly in the batter’s box.”

Aches and pains

Jered Weaver, on the mend from his fractured left elbow, played catch Monday and Scioscia said Weaver could throw a bullpen session today.

Left-hander Sean Burnett figures to throw a session in the bullpen later this week and Kevin Jepsen is throwing off the mound. Ryan Madson, on the comeback trail from Tommy John surgery, is close to being ready to make rehab appearances in the minors.

“Hopefully we’ll look at two weeks from now we’re talking about a different look to our bullpen,” Scioscia said. “We’ll see how these guys continue to progress.”

Incidentally, the bullpen suddenly has turned into one of the more promising parts of the club. On the Angels’ 3-3 road trip to Houston and Chicago, Angels relievers allowed no runs in 15 2/3 innings to run their scorless streak to 17.

Shortstop Erick Aybar, who left Thursday’s game with hamstring tightness, was deemed available to play Monday by Scioscia, who added his return likely would be today.

phil.collin@dailybreeze.com

Article source: http://www.sgvtribune.com/sports/ci_23236702/angels-notebook-albert-pujols-hampered-by-foot-issue

Categories: Pujols News

ANGELS NOTEBOOK: Albert Pujols hampered by foot issue

May 14, 2013 Leave a comment

ANAHEIM – With the Angels off to their worst start since 1988, the spotlight has been on the offensive struggles of Albert Pujols and Josh Hamilton.

Manager Mike Scioscia is certain that Hamilton will find his hot streak, but also noted Pujols’ return to form could encounter some potholes along the way because of his injured foot.

“Josh is really probably a little more frustrated because he knows the pitchers, he knows the league, he’s just not in a comfort zone,” Scioscia said. “He doesn’t have the same swing path yet that he does when he’s hitting well and he’s working toward that.

“He’s working hard. He hit early before the road trip, hit early several times on the road trip. There’s no doubt he’s aggressive in the batter’s box, he’s attacking the ball. Now he’s got to merge that with getting a good pitch to hit and not missing. Some of that has to do with getting his swing plane, comfort zone. There’s a lot of buzzwords, but he needs to find that and he will.”

Hamilton entered Monday’s game with a .203 average with four home runs and 11 RBIs.

Pujols, of course, found his stride last season after a slow start, but plantar fasciitis in his left foot likely would require a lengthy rest to properly heal.

However, he’s making a go of it trying to play through the soreness.

“With Albert, there’s no doubt that he’s been impacted by some issues to his lower body to be able to leverage the ball the way he can,” Scioscia said. “There

are times he feels good and times that are holding him back from what he wants to do.

“Our preference right now is to get Albert healthy. And if he can nurse his way through it and be productive, that’s the optimum. But if he can’t, we’ll consider other things.”

Scioscia also noted it’s a “Catch-22″ for Pujols, who has talked about playing first base to keep loose, though his foot grows sore as the game wears on. But when he’s designated hitter, Scioscia said, it’s tougher for him to get loose between at-bats.

“We’ve tried a lot of different things to get him better,” Scioscia said. “I think now you just want to manage it where he can go out and do the things he needs to do, particularly in the batter’s box.”

Aches and pains

Jered Weaver, on the mend from his fractured left elbow, played catch Monday and Scioscia said Weaver could throw a bullpen session today.

Left-hander Sean Burnett figures to throw a session in the bullpen later this week and Kevin Jepsen is throwing off the mound. Ryan Madson, on the comeback trail from Tommy John surgery, is close to being ready to make rehab appearances in the minors.

“Hopefully we’ll look at two weeks from now we’re talking about a different look to our bullpen,” Scioscia said. “We’ll see how these guys continue to progress.”

Incidentally, the bullpen suddenly has turned into one of the more promising parts of the club. On the Angels’ 3-3 road trip to Houston and Chicago, Angels relievers allowed no runs in 15 2/3 innings to run their scorless streak to 17.

Shortstop Erick Aybar, who left Thursday’s game with hamstring tightness, was deemed available to play Monday by Scioscia, who added his return likely would be today.

phil.collin@dailybreeze.com

Article source: http://www.dailybulletin.com/ci_23236702/angels-notebook-albert-pujols-hampered-by-foot-issue

Categories: Pujols News