For the first time in years, I can look at an Angels team, look at pretty much every position and go '...yeah, these are the answers'.
There's maybe one or two elements that can be retooled over time, like Jo Adell, and the back half of both the rotation and the bullpen, but a lot has suddenly clicked into place. The infield of Schanuel-Paris-Neto-Rengifo has fully arrived, with all four healthy and on the right track. Neto and Rengifo are recovering from injuries and heading back on track, but Schanuel is hitting .273 with 7 RBIs so far. Karen Paris, meanwhile, is the revelation, and after a brief major league run last fall, he seems to be a mainstay for the Angels, hitting .288 with 8 RBIs, 5 homers and 5 steals. He's also been excellent defensively, and he's really versatile as a hitter. He's young, he's ferocious, and he's making the most of the opportunity. Him, Neto and Schanuel together and surging will be a very good thing for this lineup, even with Trout and Ward still doing their thing.
The one worrying detail for the Angels has been Mike Trout's average, as he's only hitting .184. 8 of his 14 hits have been home runs. Now, unlike last year, Trout's RBIs haven't been on solo homers, as he's got 16 RBIs compared to his 8 homers. But he's just been less accurate than usual, and this is the most human he's ever been while healthy. Of course it's likely he'll go on a tear eventually and bring the average up, but this is perhaps a clue to the possible reality that Trout's peak may have passed during the injury-shortened years. Which is kind of awful. The Griffey comparisons have already been made, but this may be even more heartbreaking. This year he can still do something great, but that hot streak had better come soon.
The Angels, so far, have gotten great starting performances out of Tyler Anderson, Yusei Kikuchi and Jose Soriano. The Kikuchi deal was something of an odd one for the Angels, as it was based mostly off of his Astros numbers, but it's been paying off, with a 3.38 ERA and 28 Ks in 5 starts, despite no wins yet. Anderson has embraced his 2020s boom, with a 2.08 ERA through 4 starts. And Soriano's got a 3.16 ERA with 2 wins so far. This is a pretty strong core, even with Kochanowicz struggling, Caden Dana on mop-up duty [in the minors[ and Ian Anderson looking like an odd investment after all. I see this looking a ton fuller by the end of the year, I'm just not sure what exactly will happen for that to come to fruition.
The Angels look good right now, and while they're not breathing down the necks of the Rangers quite yet, they could factor heavily into the AL West this season, which would be pretty cool after all this time. Kyren Paris is looking like the real deal right now, and he could be the missing link this team needed.
Coming Tonight: The Yankees gave him up for a guy they couldn't even keep, and so he gave his new team the strikeout god they needed.