Angels-Mariners takeaways: Angels' playoff push in serious peril

Los Angeles Times
 
Angels-Mariners takeaways: Angels' playoff push in serious peril

In the wake of being swept by the Seattle Mariners amid a six-game losing streak, the Angels continue to raise questions about whether they’re capable of making the postseason.

Chief among them: Can they win their upcoming series with the San Francisco Giants and make up ground in the standings with key division matchups against the Houston Astros and Texas Rangers looming?

After their 3-2 loss to the Mariners in 10 innings Sunday, the Angels are 56-57.They are 7 games behind the Toronto Blue Jays for the final American League wild-card spot and 10½ gamesbehind the AL West-leading Texas Rangers.

The Angels remained confident they still have time to win games and challenge for a playoff spot.

“I know everyone’s now done with us, counted us out,” manager Phil Nevin said after Sunday’s loss. “That’s fine. I got 26 guys in there, plus staff that know we haven’t. They know we’re still there.”

Added Mickey Moniak: “We focus on San Francisco. I think it’s all we can do. Like I’ve said a million times, we know what we have in here, and it’s gonna take all of us and just try to look to get back on track tomorrow.”

Here are three takeaways from the Angels’ series with the Mariners:

Unlike their last road series, the Angels didn’t have a problem with runners in scoring position against Seattle. Their offense simply fell flat when it was needed the most.

The Angels don’t have to put up insane run totals, like they did against the Colorado Rockies during a 25-1 blowout in June, to win. And the Angels have shown throughout the season they are capable of overcoming one- or two-run deficits.

On Friday, the Angels came back from deficits of four and two runs but still lost. On Saturday, they were 90 feet away from tying the game in the ninth. On Sunday, the Angels had chances to score more than two runs throughout the game, though blown calls on pitches outside the strike zone, particularly in the 10th inning, didn’t help.

No ‘I’ in team

One of the Angels’ biggest strengths has been their camaraderie.

“I think it’s everything,” Moniak said. “Going through a tough stretch like this, you gotta stick together. No one’s having fun right now, that’s for sure. But we show up to the yard every day ready to put in the work and ready to put our best effort forward [at game time], and that’s what we just try to do every day.”

Added Chad Wallach: “It’s a pretty close-knit group of guys, and it’s helped get us through those tough situations.”

It’s one thing to lose a game. It’s another to lose a game and lose faith in one another.

What odds?

The Angels entered Sunday with just a 3.7% chance at making the playoffs, according to Fangraphs. Baseball Reference gave them a 3.4% chance at making the postseason before Sunday.

Although these numbers are mostly arbitrary, the odds are not in their favor after their recent losses.

Still, as Nevin pointed out Saturday, anything can happen.

“We’ve seen a lot of messed up baseball stuff happen in the last 50 games in the season, the last 30, if you will,” Nevin said.

The potential for “messed up baseball stuff” going in the Angels’ favor is one thing. The team also needs to help itself.