{"id":40665,"date":"2022-06-07T17:36:09","date_gmt":"2022-06-07T17:36:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/how-the-angels-mike-trout-slipped-off-path-to-playoffs\/"},"modified":"2022-06-07T17:36:09","modified_gmt":"2022-06-07T17:36:09","slug":"how-the-angels-mike-trout-slipped-off-path-to-playoffs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/how-the-angels-mike-trout-slipped-off-path-to-playoffs\/","title":{"rendered":"How the Angels, Mike Trout slipped off path to playoffs"},"content":{"rendered":"
\n

The Los Angeles Angels were playing their best baseball since 2015. Blessed by the talents of Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani, but cursed to never showcase them in October, the Angels have spent years desperately grasping for enough supporting talent to get over the hump and make the playoffs.<\/p>\n

This spring, it finally looked like they had done it. Infused with some new blood and a lot of surprise contributions, the Angels started 27-17. It was their best 44-game stretch of any kind since the summer of 2015, the year after their last postseason appearance.<\/p>\n

On the morning of May 25, they were one game behind the Houston Astros in the AL West, and firmly atop the AL wild-card hunt – which this season will admit three teams, instead of two, into the decisive tournament. Things have gone abruptly bad since then. That night, they lost to the Texas Rangers, and have yet to return to the win column.<\/p>\n

The Angels’ losing streak now stands at 12 games. They lost four more games to the Toronto Blue Jays to close their homestand. They lost every game of a six-day swing through New York and Philadelphia. They lost to the Boston Red Sox on Monday night, in their return home.<\/p>\n

Red Sox starter Michael Wacha twirled a three-hit shutout to hand them their latest loss and it is arguably not the best pitching performance they have enabled during the run of futility (Jameson Taillon took a perfect game into the eighth in New York).<\/p>\n

Now 27-29, the Angels – and Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani – would miss the playoffs if the season ended today. Their lowest lows are, once again, overpowering the highs.<\/p>\n

Mike Trout hits the skids<\/h2>\n

It feels almost unfair that Trout’s mightiest struggles have a 1: 1 correlation with an 0-12 Angels collapse while his perennial excellence has seemed to have no bearing on winning whatsoever, but here we are. Trout has a .409 OPS during the streak, the worst 12-game stretch of his career since his rocky cup of coffee in 2011. He’s batting .114 (5 for 44), with 17 strikeouts and just three walks.<\/p>\n