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In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
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BASEBALL PREVIEW '03: Angels out to prove '02 not a fluke
Saturday March 29, 2003
By JOSH DUBOW AP Sports Writer
Darin Erstad and the Anaheim Angels haven't even gotten their
World Series rings yet and they already know the skeptics doubt
whether they can repeat as champions.
That shouldn't be surprising, considering the Angels had never
won a playoff series before their shocking run through October last
year, they play in baseball's toughest division, and they're
competing in a league with the high-paid All-Star team known as the
New York Yankees.
``I'm sure people don't think we'll be the team to beat,''
Erstad said. ``The Yankees have the whole history and everything,
while we did it just one year. But we feel like we can do it
again.''
Getting out of AL West could be a problem for Anaheim, which won
the Series as a wild-card team last year.
Oakland has made three straight postseason appearances;
Seattle's 209 wins the past two seasons are the most in baseball;
and Texas is improved under new skipper Buck Showalter.
The Angels will try to repeat with essentially the same roster
as last year backup outfielder Eric Owens is the most noteworthy
addition.
``The fact that we will have a pennant flying over our stadium
is a nice decoration to have,'' general manager Bill Stoneman said.
``But what's important is what's ahead. We have to play well if
we're going to have a shot to win our division.''
The Athletics, led by aces Barry Zito, Mark Mulder and Tim
Hudson, are the pick to repeat in the West, finally make it past
the first round and all the way to the Series.
``We're tired of watching other people play later on in the
year,'' Mulder said.
But if they don't get off to a good start, there's a chance they
could trade MVP Miguel Tejada instead of losing him to free agency
at the end of the season.
They'll also have to get by the Yankees and their nearly $150
million payroll. For the first time since 1998, the Yankees don't
enter the season as defending AL champions after being eliminated
in four games by Anaheim in the first round.
``It's something you should remember,'' shortstop Derek Jeter
said. ``You should remember how it feels when you lose. You should
not want to experience that again.''
Owner George Steinbrenner clearly doesn't.
He spent the offseason criticizing Jeter's nightlife, the work
ethic of Joe Torre's coaching staff and outspending everyone for
Japanese slugger Hideki Matsui and Cuban pitcher Jose Contreras.
New York will edge out Boston in the East, but the age of the
pitching staff will catch up in October.
The Red Sox greatly improved their depth and will make it back
to the playoffs as the wild-card team after falling short the past
three years.
The Central will be a two-team race between Minnesota and the
White Sox, who added 20-game winner Bartolo Colon. The Twins will
edge out Chicago at the end.
A look at the AL in predicted order of finish:
^EAST=
^New York Yankees=
Led by 2B Alfonso Soriano (.300, 39, 102) and Jason Giambi
(.314, 41, 122), the Yankees should have the best offense in the
game no matter how well Matsui adjusts.
The potential problems for New York are on the deep pitching
staff, with closer Mariano Rivera and setup man Steve Karsay
starting the year with injuries. Despite an overabundance of
starters, many of them come with questions.
Roger Clemens (13-6, 4.35) turns 41 in August and David Wells
(19-7, 3.75) turns 40 in May. Mike Mussina (18-10, 4.05) was
inconsistent last year, Andy Pettitte needs to stay healthy for the
entire year, and Jeff Weaver has to show he can succeed in New
York.
Juan Acevedo (28 saves for Detroit) proved to be a smart pickup
and will close until Rivera returns from his groin injury.<
^Boston Red Sox=
Pedro Martinez, Derek Lowe, Manny Ramirez, Nomar Garciaparra and
Johnny Damon provide as talented a core as any team in baseball.
Manager Grady Little is counting on Tim Wakefield (11-5, 2.81
ERA) to have another good season and LHP Casey Fossum (5-4, 3.46)
to show why the Red Sox refused to give him up for Colon.
2B Todd Walker and 1B Jeremy Giambi bring more patience to the
lineup.
The Red Sox will go without a traditional closer. Alan Embree,
Ramiro Mendoza, Mike Timlin and Bob Howry will share the duties.<
^Toronto Blue Jays=
The improving Blue Jays can't compete with the high-spending
Yankees and Red Sox for the division title and appear destined for
a sixth straight third-place finish.
Roy Halladay (19-7, 2.93) has developed into an ace and 3B Eric
Hinske (.279, 24, 84) was the Rookie of the Year. CF Vernon Wells
(.275, 23, 100) is emerging as a force in the middle of the lineup
with 1B Carlos Delgado (.277, 33, 108).
2B Orlando Hudson and SS Chris Woodward are a young, talented
duo in the middle of the infield and Shannon Stewart (.303, 103
runs) is one of the better leadoff hitters.
Cory Lidle (8-10, 3.89) needs to be more consistent as a No. 2
starter in Toronto than he was as a No. 4 in Oakland.<
^Baltimore Orioles=
The Orioles spent the spring dealing with the aftermath of the
death of minor league pitcher Steve Bechler.
After going 4-32 to finish last year, the Orioles need lots of
help especially on offense. Marty Cordova was the team's leading
hitter at .253, and Jay Gibbons (28 HRs) and Tony Batista (31 HRs)
are the only real power threats.
RHP Rodrigo Lopez (15-9, 3.57) and closer Jorge Julio (5-6,
1.99, 25 saves) excelled as rookies. Omar Daal gives Baltimore its
first lefty starter in five years.<
^Tampa Bay Devil Rays=
New manager Lou Piniella is in for a long season. Piniella has
never lost 90 games in a season and is taking over a team that has
lost more than 90 in all five of its seasons including at least
100 the past two years.
Piniella got his wish to move closer to home but ended up about
as far away in the standings as he could be after leaving Seattle.
The Devil Rays are committed to a youth movement but it will
take time to develop those players.
Carl Crawford, Rocco Baldelli and Josh Hamilton could provide an
exciting outfield of the future, although Baldelli is being rushed
to the majors and Hamilton hasn't made it past Class A.
LH Joe Kennedy (8-11, 4.53) is the most dependable starter.<
=
^CENTRAL=
^Minnesota Twins=
The Twins overcame contraction attempt to make it all the way to
the ALCS as one of the best feel-good stories in 2002. One of
baseball's youngest teams could be even better this year.
LHP Kenny Rogers was signed in spring training to replace
injured Eric Milton. Brad Radke (9-5, 4.72) and Joe Mays (4-8,
5.38) were slowed by injuries and need to be healthy this season
for the Twins.
CF Torii Hunter (.289, 29, 94, Gold Glove) is one of the most
exciting players in baseball but needs more help from the right
side of the plate from youngsters Dustan Mohr and Michael Cuddyer.
Eddie Guardado had a team-record 45 saves in first full season
as a closer.<
^Chicago White Sox=
The addition of Colon to a staff that already includes 19-game
winner Mark Buehrle makes the White Sox a legitimate contender.
Jon Garland (12-12, 4.58) provides depth and Billy Koch (11-4,
3.27 ERA, 44 saves), on his third team in three years, can be
overpowering but is also inconsistent.
The lineup is formidable with five 25-homer hitters last season.
Magglio Ordonez (.320, 38, 135) and Paul Konerko (.304, 27, 104)
are dangerous hitters and Frank Thomas (.252, 28, 92) could be
poised for a bounce-back season.<
^Cleveland Indians=
After a decade of dominance in the AL Central, the Indians are
rebuilding and should be in good shape within a year or two.
They have some good pieces to start with, including 2B Brandon
Phillips, 1B Travis Hafner and RHP Ricardo Rodriguez.
Slugger Jim Thome will be missed, leaving Ellis Burks (.301, 32,
91) as the only proven power bat in the lineup.
C.C. Sabathia (13-11, 4.37) needs to develop into an ace and
Danys Baez has to show that he can be a legitimate closer.<
^Kansas City Royals=
After losing 100 games for the first time in franchise history,
this is a rebuilding year.
OF Carlos Beltran (.273, 29, 105, 35 SBs) and 1B Mike Sweeney
(.340, 24, 86) are top-notch hitters but there's little else there
for manager Tony Pena. Beltran might not last the season if the
Royals decide to trade him instead of losing him to free agency.
Closer Roberto Hernandez and top starters Paul Byrd and Jeff
Suppan are gone, leaving Runelvys Hernandez as the No. 1 starter.<
^Detroit Tigers=
The biggest names on this team will be in the dugout new
manager Alan Trammell and coaches Kirk Gibson and Lance Parrish.
The stars of the Tigers' 1984 championship team would have a
hard enough time making Detroit a contender again even if they were
in their prime as players.
Moving in the fences at Comerica Park will help the game's most
anemic offense. Unfortunately for Detroit, the opposition will
benefit even more by the change.
LHP Mike Maroth and RHP Jeremy Bonderman lead a rotation that
has only 56 career starts.
=
^WEST=
^Oakland Athletics=
After falling short in Game 5 of the opening round of the
playoffs the past three years, the A's will finally break through
this season under new manager Ken Macha.
Cy Young winner Zito (23-5, 2.75), Mulder (19-7, 3.47) and
Hudson (15-9, 2.98) are the biggest reasons why Oakland should be
the favorite in the division.
Tejada (.308, 34, 131) and 3B Eric Chavez (.275, 34, 109) form
the best left side of the infield in baseball and DH Erubiel Durazo
and CF Chris Singleton are good additions to the lineup.<
^Anaheim Angels=
A relentless offense, overpowering bullpen and the Rally Monkey
led the Angels to the World Series title last season but might not
be enough in 2003.
World Series MVP Troy Glaus (30 HRs, 111 RBIs) looks poised for
a breakout year and Garrett Anderson (.306, 29, 123) can no longer
be considered underrated. Pesky David Eckstein makes the offense
go.
The starting rotation was good enough in the postseason but
doesn't have an overpowering pitcher.
Jarrod Washburn (18-6, 3.15 ERA) and John Lackey (9-4, 3.66)
lead the staff, but Ramon Ortiz (40 HRs allowed) is inconsistent
and Kevin Appier and Aaron Sele don't strike fear in anyone.
Troy Percival and Francisco Rodriguez can be unhittable at times
in the bullpen.<
^Texas Rangers=
After two straight last-place finishes with Alex Rodriguez, the
Rangers are hoping Showalter can return Texas to the team that won
three division titles in four years.
Hitting won't be a problem even with C Ivan Rodriguez gone to
Florida. Rodriguez (.300, 57, 142) is the best player in the
league, and is joined by 1B Rafael Palmeiro (.273, 43, 105) to form
a fearsome duo in the middle of the lineup.
RF Juan Gonzalez is looking to bounce back from an
injury-plagued year and INFs Hank Blalock and Mark Teixeira are two
of the top young hitting prospects in baseball.
Ugueth Urbina (40 saves) and Esteban Yan (19 saves) upgrade the
bullpen and John Thomson, Ismael Valdes and Ryan Drese should help
the rotation.<
^Seattle Mariners=
Seattle went from 116 wins in 2001 to 93 last year, one of the
biggest drops in baseball. Another big fall could come again for an
aging team that lost Piniella.
Bob Melvin has a tough task in his first managerial job.
Melvin's NL-style play should fit well in spacious Safeco Field
with speedy Ichiro Suzuki (.321, 111 runs, 31 SBs) and Randy Winn
(27 steals) at the top of the lineup.
Edgar Martinez, the 40-year-old DH, is showing signs of aging
and batted .277 last season, his lowest average since 1993.
Freddy Garcia (5-5, 5.65 ERA in final 2{ months) needs to be
more consistent.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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