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Inside Baseball Posted: Tuesday May 21, 2002 3:13 PMTim Salmon has broken out of his slump and led Anaheim's reversal of fortune By Stephen Cannella
Much of that potential resides in the pitching staff. The rotation has flourished with a combination of three solid young starters -- lefthanders Scott Schoeneweis and Jarrod Washburn, and righty Ramon Ortiz -- and veteran righthanders Kevin Appier and Aaron Sele, who were signed during the off-season. Led by lefty Dennis Cook and righty Lou Pote (combined 1.62 ERA in 28 appearances), the underrated bullpen had the AL's fourth-lowest ERA (3.73) at week's end. Mostly, though, the Angels have scrapped their way back into the playoff race -- through Sunday they were four games behind the Mariners in the AL West and 3 1/2 in back of the Yankees for the wild card -- with as much subtlety as Chris Matthews interviewing a Greenpeace activist. During that 18-3 tear Anaheim outscored its opponents 161-65. Salmon's hot streak has been his first meaningful contribution to the offense since 2000, when he hit 34 homers and drove in 97 runs. His surge has been matched by another key member of the lineup who is coming off a terrible year. Centerfielder Darin Erstad battled a strained right knee throughout 2001 and spent much of the year fighting the bad mechanics he developed trying to ease the pressure on his front leg. Erstad is healthy now, though he too got off to a slow start this season. That changed after he sustained a concussion while chasing a fly ball into the wall against Texas in mid-April and sat out for a week. Before the injury he was batting .242 with a .284 on-base percentage. Since his return on April 28 he had hit safely in 15 of 18 games at week's end and raised his average to .313. "Now everyone who struggles here is going to bang their heads against a fence," says manager Mike Scioscia. Hey, for the surging Angels, no solution is too off the wall. Issue date: May 27, 2002
For more Inside Baseball see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, May 22. Click here to subscribe to SI.hey
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