ANAHEIM -- If you're wondering about the most likely scenario for Jered Weaver to pitch in the Angels' playoff series with Boston, think extra innings, or at least the potential for them.
"I think our intent right now," said manager Mike Scioscia, referring to Weaver and Jon Garland, the two starters working in the bullpen for the Division Series, "is to use them if we get in a situation of extra innings, or possibly late in the game on the road where they could take it for a fresh inning and go as long as they could.
"I think it gives us a nice option with those two guys with so much length, to really get matchups early on and not have to save anybody for extra innings."
Scioscia figures Weaver and Garland might need a little more time to warm up than pitchers used to working out of the bullpen, but in the scenario he envisions, "it won't be much of an issue."
Other pregame notes:
-- Although a number of pitchers have done extremely well pitching on just three days of rest in the playoff races, Scioscia doesn't see a return to the four-man pitching rotation that was common as recently as the 1970s -- and was last used by Bob Boone with the 1995 Kansas City Royals.
"I don't think it's any problem going once or twice around a rotation on three days' rest," he said. "A whole season, I think that's going to be a cultural change in where baseball is right now.
"It's going to have to start in minor league development and it's going to have to carry us up to the major leagues if you're going to go that route. There is a reason, I think, teams went to a five-man rotation at some point, and it probably has helped to lengthen some careers. ...
"I think there are very few pitchers in Major League Baseball that could handle that, just for how they've been stretched out and trained for most of their careers."
-- Predictably -- both because it can be significant and because there's no storyline that can't be beat to death in the wait for a series to begin -- much is being made of the injuries to Red Sox players J.D. Drew, Mike Lowell and Josh Beckett.
Drew and Lowell were both in the Game 1 starting lineup, with Red Sox manager Terry Francona reiterating that Drew, in particular, had looked good in the workout leading up to the series opener.
"I think J.D. had probably his best day in a while yesterday," Francona said. "Mikey Lowell -- I don't want to speak out of turn, but I think he actually did better than we thought."
Which is not to say Lowell is feeling healthy.
"This really hurts, I'm sure it's painful what he's gone through," said Francona. "His willingness to play, he deserves a chance here. ... We're proud of his efforts."
Scioscia, whose own team had injury problems in the postseason a year ago -- Gary Matthews Jr., Vladimir Guerrero, Garret Anderson and Bartolo Colon either played through health problems or missed the sweep at the hands of Boston -- wasn't exactly going out of his way to sympathize when asked about the Red Sox' situation.
"I think at this point, every team is banged up," said Scioscia. "I think what Boston is dealing with, you've got some professional players that know what it's about, and know what they have to do."








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