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词条 2011 Los Angeles Angels season
释义

  1. 2010–11 Offseason

  2. Regular season

     March/April  May 

  3. Schedule and results

     Regular season 

  4. Standings

     Divisional standings  Record vs. opponents  Roster 

  5. Player statistics

     Hitting statistics  Pitching statistics 

  6. Farm system

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2013}}{{Infobox MLB yearly
| name = Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
| image = Angels50.svg
| imgwidth = 200
| alt = The 50th anniversary logo of the Angels
| caption = The 50th anniversary logo of the Angels
| misc =
| season = 2011
| current league = American League
| y1 = 1961
| division = West Division
| y2 = 1969
| ballpark = Angel Stadium of Anaheim
| y4 = 1966
| city = Anaheim, California
| y5 = 1966
| record = 86–76 (.531)
| divisional place = 2nd
| owners = Arte Moreno
| general managers = Tony Reagins
| managers = Mike Scioscia
| television = FSN West
KCOP (My 13)
(Victor Rojas, Mark Gubicza)
| radio = KLAA (AM 830)
KSPN (AM 710)
(Terry Smith, José Mota)
Spanish: KWKW (AM 1330)
| espntn = laa
| brtn = LAA
}}

The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim' 2011 season was the franchise's 51st season and 46th in Anaheim. The Angels began the season following a disappointing 2010 campaign where they missed the postseason for the first time since 2006, after winning the American League West three times in a row from 2007–2009. During the 2011 season, the Angels celebrated the franchise's 50th anniversary and because it was the "golden Anniversary", a gold trim was added to the uniforms including the halo on both the cap and uniform (the halo from 1993–1996, 2002–2010 was silver and gold prior to that).[1] The date of the franchise's actual 50th anniversary is December 6, 2010.[2]

{{TOClimit|limit=2}}

2010–11 Offseason

After an incredibly disappointing 2010 season, the Angels' priority in the offseason was to fix what went horribly wrong so the team can return to the postseason in 2011. Owner Arte Moreno has gone on record saying that money will not be an issue, and that he is willing to spend as much as possible to put a winning product on the field.[3] Going into the offseason, the Angels had both Hideki Matsui and Scot Shields eligible for free agency with Kendrys Morales, Jered Weaver, Erick Aybar, Howie Kendrick, Kevin Frandsen, Alberto Callaspo, Reggie Willits, and Mike Napoli being arbitration eligible. As of December 3, 2010, the Angels have declined to offer Matsui arbitration, tendered contracts to Morales, Weaver, Aybar, Kendrick, Callaspo, Willits, and Napoli.[4] The Angels also declined to tender a contract to Frandsen, who would become a free agent, and Shields, who would retire from baseball.[5][6]

The Angels expressed interest in Rays outfielder Carl Crawford, Red Sox third baseman Adrián Beltré, Rays closer Rafael Soriano, Phillies outfielder Jayson Werth, and were considered a wildcard in the Cliff Lee sweepstakes.[7][8][9][10] On December 2, 2010, the Angels signed former Mets reliever Hisanori Takahashi in their first move of the offseason.[11] then signed Blue Jays reliever Scott Downs, and also acquired outfielder Vernon Wells from Toronto in exchange for outfielder Juan Rivera and catcher Mike Napoli.

Regular season

See the game log below for detailed game-by-game regular season information.

The season for the Angels began Thursday, March 31 with a road game against Kansas City. Their first home game was Friday, April 8 against Toronto. Their longest homestand will be from June 27 – July 10 (13 home games), and their longest road trip will be June 13–26 (12 road games). Their final game of the regular season will be on Wednesday, September 28 at home against Rangers.

March/April

After winning the first game of the season against Kansas City, the Angels stumbled dropping their next three games against that same Royals team. The Halos led at one point in each of those three losses and the suspect bullpen was a large reason why they dropped those three in a row. After the Kansas City series, manager Mike Scioscia shook up the bullpen by demoting Fernando Rodney from the closer's role and giving Jordan Walden that position. The Angels proceeded to sweep the Tampa Bay Rays in St. Petersburg and win and go 4–2 on their opening homestand against the Blue Jays and Indians. The Angels winning ways continued into their second road trip of the season sweeping the Chicago White Sox and taking 2 of 3 from division rival Texas and taking sole control of first in the American League West. However, the Angels hit a wall when they returned home to Angel Stadium being swept by arch-rival Boston in a four-game series and only scoring a total of five runs over that four game stretch. Texas, in the mean time took back the top spot in the AL West. After their abysmal showing against Boston, the Angels rebounded slightly by taking 2 of 3 from division rival Oakland finishing out the homestand 2–5. Going back to Tampa Bay, the Angels took the series 2–1 only losing the second game of the series on a wild pitch by relief pitcher Fernando Rodney in the 10th inning. The second game of the series also featured Joel Piñeiro's first start of the season where he only gave up one run over 7 innings pitched.

May

The Angels started out the month of May by finishing off a series with Tampa Bay that they won 2–1. After that series, the Angels flew to Boston to take on the team that swept them in Anaheim just a week prior. The Halos ended up dropping the first two games of that series, but ended up winning the third game of the series in a marathon 13 inning game that lasted 7 hours and 35 minutes thanks to a 2-hour and 35 minute rain delay. In the fourth game, the Angels pounded out 8 runs off of their former ace John Lackey and ended up winning the game 11–0 to earn the series split 2–2. Returning home to Anaheim where the Angels had a 6–7 mark, they were to face the red-hot Cleveland Indians in a three-game series. They won the first game in extra innings behind an excellent outing by rookie Tyler Chatwood and the bullpen, however the Angels then proceeded to drop the second game of the series. They did win the rubber game of the series on Mother's Day in a game that saw the lead change many times. The win against the Indians on May 8, marked manager Mike Scioscia's 1,000th career victory (all of which were with the Angels).

Schedule and results

Regular season

2011 Game Log
Final games legend
Angels WinAngels LossAll-Star GameGame PostponedEliminated
"GB" Legend
1st (AL West)Not in Playoff Position1st (AL Wild Card)Tied for 1st (AL West and/or Wild Card)
Regular Season Schedule (calendar style)
Regular Season Schedule (sortable text)

Standings

Divisional standings

{{2011 AL West standings|team=LAA}}

Record vs. opponents

{{2011 AL Record vs. opponents|team=ANA}}

Roster

2011 Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
Roster
Pitchers
  • {{MLBplayer|22|Trevor Bell}}
  • {{MLBplayer|17|Jason Bulger}}
  • {{MLBplayer|38|Bobby Cassevah}}
  • {{MLBplayer|52|Tyler Chatwood}}
  • {{MLBplayer|37|Scott Downs}}
  • {{MLBplayer|24|Dan Haren}}
  • {{MLBplayer|40|Kevin Jepsen}}
  • {{MLBplayer|19|Scott Kazmir}}
  • {{MLBplayer|58|Michael Kohn}}
  • {{MLBplayer|32|Matt Palmer}}
  • {{MLBplayer|35|Joel Piñeiro}}
  • {{MLBplayer|49|Horacio Ramírez}}
  • {{MLBplayer|43|Garrett Richards}}
  • {{MLBplayer|56|Fernando Rodney}}
  • {{MLBplayer|45|Francisco Rodríguez}}
  • {{MLBplayer|54|Ervin Santana}}
  • {{MLBplayer|21|Hisanori Takahashi}}
  • {{MLBplayer|63|Rich Thompson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|51|Jordan Walden}}
  • {{MLBplayer|36|Jered Weaver}}
  • {{MLBplayer|57|Jerome Williams}}
Catchers
  • {{MLBplayer|16|Hank Conger}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 5|Jeff Mathis}}
  • {{MLBplayer|46|Bobby Wilson}}
Infielders
  • {{MLBplayer|4,28|Alexi Amarista}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 2|Erick Aybar}}
  • {{MLBplayer|39|Russell Branyan}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 6|Alberto Callaspo}}
  • {{MLBplayer|13|Maicer Izturis}}
  • {{MLBplayer|47|Howard Kendrick}}
  • {{MLBplayer|19|Efren Navarro}}
  • {{MLBplayer|73|Andrew Romine}}
  • {{MLBplayer|44|Mark Trumbo}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 3|Gil Velazquez}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 3|Brandon Wood}}
Outfielders
  • {{MLBplayer|53|Bobby Abreu}}
  • {{MLBplayer|25|Peter Bourjos}}
  • {{MLBplayer|48|Torii Hunter}}
  • {{MLBplayer|55|Jeremy Moore}}
  • {{MLBplayer|27|Mike Trout}}
  • {{MLBplayer|10|Vernon Wells}}
  • {{MLBplayer|77|Reggie Willits}}
Other
  • {{MLBplayer|33|Chris Pettit}}
Manager
  • {{MLBplayer|14|Mike Scioscia}}
Coaches
  • {{MLBplayer|23|Mike Butcher}} (pitching)
  • {{MLBplayer|12|Dino Ebel}} (third base)
  • {{MLBplayer|60|Tom Gregorio}} (bullpen catcher)
  • {{MLBplayer| 4|Alfredo Griffin (first base)}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 7|Mickey Hatcher (hitting)}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 9|Rob Picciolo (bench)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|61|Steve Soliz}} (bullpen)

Player statistics

Hitting statistics

PlayerPos.GABRH2B3BHRRBITBBBSOSBCSOBPSLGAVG
Bobby|Abreu}} DH 142 502 54 127 30 1 8 60 183 78 113 21 5 .353 .365 .253
Alexi|Amarista}} 2B 23 52 2 8 3 1 0 5 13 2 8 0 0 .182 .250 .154
Erick|Aybar}} SS 143 556 71 155 33 8 10 59 234 31 68 30 6 .322 .421 .279
Peter|Bourjos}} OF 147 502 72 136 26 11 12 43 220 32 124 22 9 .327 .438 .271
Alberto|Callaspo}} 3B 141 475 54 137 23 0 6 46 178 58 48 8 1 .366 .375 .288
Hank|Conger}} C 59 177 14 37 8 0 6 19 63 17 37 0 0 .282 .356 .209
Torii|Hunter}} OF 156 580 80 152 24 2 23 82 249 62 125 5 7 .336 .429 .262
Maicer|Izturis}} SS 122 449 51 124 35 0 5 38 174 33 65 9 6 .334 .388 .276
Howie|Kendrick}} 2B 140 537 86 153 30 6 18 63 249 33 119 14 6 .338 .464 .285
Jeff|Mathis}} C 93 247 18 43 12 0 3 22 64 15 75 1 2 .225 .259 .174
Chris|Pettit}} - 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000
Mark|Trumbo}} 1B 149 539 65 137 31 1 29 87 257 25 120 9 4 .291 .477 .254
Vernon|Wells}} OF 131 505 60 110 15 4 25 66 208 20 86 9 4 .248 .412 .218
Reggie|Willits}} OF 22 22 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 4 7 0 0 .192 .091 .045
Bobby Wilson C 57 111 5 21 8 0 1 8 32 10 16 0 2 .252 .288 .189
Brandon|Wood}}‡ SS 6 14 1 2 1 0 0 0 3 0 8 0 0 .143 .214 .143
Note: Pos. = Position; G = Games Played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; TB = Total Bases; 2B = Doubles; BB = Base on Balls; SO = Strike Outs; SB = Stolen bases; CS = Caught Stealing; OBP = On Base Percentage; SLG = Slugging; AVG = Batting average

Traded/Released/DFA mid-season.

Pitching statistics

PlayerWLERAGGSCGSHOSVSVOIPHRERHRHBPBBSO
Trevor Bell 1 1 3.41 19 0 0 0 0 1 34.1 39 14 13 2 1 10 17
Jason|Bulger}} 0 1 0.96 5 0 0 0 0 0 9.1 6 4 1 2 0 10 7
Tyler|Chatwood}} 6 11 4.75 27 25 0 0 0 0 142.0 166 81 75 14 6 71 74
Scott|Downs}} 6 3 1.34 60 0 0 0 1 4 53.2 39 11 8 3 0 15 35
Dan|Haren}} 16 10 3.17 35 34 4 3 0 0 238.1 211 91 84 20 5 33 192
Kevin|Jepsen}} 1 2 7.62 16 0 0 0 0 1 13.0 21 11 11 2 1 9 6
Scott|Kazmir}} 0 0 27.00 1 1 0 0 0 0 1.2 5 5 5 1 2 2 0
Michael|Kohn}} 0 1 7.30 14 0 0 0 1 2 12.1 14 10 10 6 1 9 9
Matt|Palmer|Matt Palmer (baseball)}} 1 1 5.74 3 3 0 0 0 0 15.2 19 11 10 0 1 4 7
Fernando|Rodney}} 3 5 4.50 39 0 0 0 3 7 32.0 26 18 16 1 3 28 26
Francisco Rodríguez 0 0 4.61 10 0 0 0 0 0 13.2 13 7 7 2 0 5 7
Ervin|Santana}} 11 12 3.38 33 33 4 1 0 0 228.2 207 95 86 26 8 72 178
Hisanori|Takahashi}} 4 3 3.44 61 0 0 0 2 5 68.0 58 30 26 7 0 25 52
Rich Thompson 1 3 3.00 44 0 0 0 0 1 54.0 46 18 18 5 0 20 56
Jordan|Walden}} 5 5 2.98 62 0 0 0 32 42 60.1 49 22 20 3 1 26 67
Jered|Weaver}} 18 8 2.41 33 33 4 2 0 0 235.2 182 65 63 20 3 56 198
Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games played; GS = Games started; CG = Complete games; SHO = Shutouts; SV = Saves; SVO = Save opportunities; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; HBP = Hit by pitch; BB = Base on balls issued; SO = Strikeouts

Farm system

{{See also|Minor League Baseball}}{{MLB Farm System|level15=AAA|team15=Salt Lake Bees|league15=Pacific Coast League|manager15=Keith Johnson
|level16=AA|team16=Arkansas Travelers|league16=Texas League|manager16=Bill Mosiello and Bobby Mitchell
|level17=A|team17=Inland Empire 66ers|league17=California League|manager17=Tom Gamboa
|level18=A|team18=Cedar Rapids Kernels|league18=Midwest League|manager18=Brent Del Chiaro
|level19=Rookie|team19=AZL Angels|league19=Arizona League|manager19=Tyrone Boykin
|level20=Rookie|team20=Orem Owlz|league20=Pioneer League|manager20=Tom Kotchman
}}

See also

{{Commons category|2011 Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim season}}
  • Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
  • Angel Stadium of Anaheim

References

1. ^Angels to kick-off 50th Anniversary Celebration
2. ^1960 in baseball
3. ^Arte Moreno is mad, and he's going to do something about it
4. ^Angels decline to offer arbitration to Matsui
5. ^Halos opt to let Frandsen become free agent
6. ^Angels reliever Scot Shields likely to retire
7. ^Could Carl Crawford be Angels' first $100-million man?
8. ^Closer Rafael Soriano is on Angels' wish list
9. ^2011 Top 50 Free Agents
10. ^"Half-Dozen Teams In The Mix" For Cliff Lee
11. ^Angels sign Takahashi to two-year deal

External links

  • 2011 Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim Official Site
  • [https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/LAA/2011.shtml Baseball Reference]
{{Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim}}{{2011 MLB season by team}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2011 Los Angeles Angels Of Anaheim}}

3 : Los Angeles Angels seasons|2011 Major League Baseball season|2011 in sports in California

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