WORLD Magazine Sept. 21, 2013 Vol. 28 No. 19

Page 64

Falling Angel The JOSH HAMILTON saga, part three BY ZACHARY ABATE

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WORLD • SEPTEMBER 21, 2013

19 SPORTS and MONEY.indd 62

way out thanks to his faith in Christ. (See “Second chance,” March , , and “Dramatic swings,” July , .) Angels coaches and scouts around the league have watched hours of video, trying to decipher how one of baseball’s most feared sluggers became the Angels’ disappointing  million man. Hamilton’s fly balls don’t travel as far as they did last year, and his patience at the plate has never been a strength—he’s swung at  pitches out of the strike zone this season. And of course, there’s the Juice Lady diet. The popular theory regarding Hamilton’s decline centers on a gluten-free diet, consisting mostly of fruit and vegetables juices, that helped Hamilton lose  pounds during the offseason. Perhaps Hamilton lost the

  The National Football League agreed to a 

million settlement with , former players who say the league concealed research showing the effects of head injuries. In what some called a victory for the NFL, the league will pay no more than  million to players who have been diagnosed with a cognitive illness (Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, etc.) and no more than  million to families of players who committed suicide. The settlement also includes funding for medical exams and concussion-related research.

HAMILTON: BRANDON WADE/GETTY IMAGES • HELMET: JASON LUGO/E+/GETTY IMAGES

D   stood in line outside a downtown Disney restaurant in December, waiting to get a glimpse of newly signed slugger Josh Hamilton, and maybe even get an autograph from the  MVP. Sitting next to his wife, Katie, and their four young daughters, Hamilton donned the red Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim jersey and faced a crowd of reporters. “I’m so excited to hear an organization say we’re happy we got you, no matter what the risk is,” said Hamilton. The comment was a thinly veiled jab at his former team, the Texas Rangers, who shied away from re-signing the outfielder. Instead, the Angels offered Hamilton a five-year,  million deal—the second highest annual average salary in baseball. Now, as Hamilton’s first full season with the Angels comes to an end, the Rangers’ reluctance to offer a mega-contract appears wise. Hamilton is batting just . and is on pace for a career low in home runs for a full season. It’s been a miserable year for the player who after years of battling addictions to drugs and alcohol, found his

body mass that allowed him to muscle the ball over ballpark walls. Or maybe the problem is simply Los Angeles. The -year-old enjoyed support in Texas from teammates who kept him away from temptation—when the Rangers won the  ALCS, the team celebrated with ginger ale instead of champagne—to a manager, Ron Washington, who spent hours talking over issues with Hamilton. Regardless of the reason for his decline this season, Hamilton has joined a long list of players who have failed to live up to their mega-contracts and lofty expectations–this year the names of first basemen alone include Albert Pujols, Ryan Howard, and Mark Teixeira, all whom have been injured at various times. But not all mega-deals have proven a disaster for their teams— at least not yet. Joey Votto ( years,  million) has performed very well for the Cincinnati Reds; Joe Mauer ( years,  million) is the heart of the Minnesota Twins; and the Detroit Tigers’ Miguel Cabrera ( years,  million) has been the best hitter on the planet for the last two years. The wide range of success and failure by players signed to mega-deals illustrates just how difficult it is to predict the future in sports. Teams that have made serious mistakes may now be less willing to spend hundreds of millions on one player, no matter his talent level. If small changes—like a fruit juice diet—can make such an enormous impact on a player’s performance, why should a team gamble its future on  million-plus contracts?

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