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Angels call on trio of relievers to bolster bullpen

Right-handers Jacob Webb and Reyes Moronta are called up and left-hander Aaron Loup is activated, while right-handers Jimmy Herget, Andrew Wantz and Zack Weiss are sent to Triple-A

Relief pitcher Reyes Moronta, then with the Arizona Diamondbacks, sits in the dugout after a loss to the Dodgers Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022, at Dodger Stadium. Moronta is now in the Angels organization and was has been called up Sunday, May 21, 2023. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)
Relief pitcher Reyes Moronta, then with the Arizona Diamondbacks, sits in the dugout after a loss to the Dodgers Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022, at Dodger Stadium. Moronta is now in the Angels organization and was has been called up Sunday, May 21, 2023. (Photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)
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ANAHEIM ― The Angels gained three new relief pitchers Sunday.

It would help if all three could stick around for a while.

Right-handers Jacob Webb and Reyes Moronta had their contracts purchased from Triple-A Salt Lake, and left-hander Aaron Loup was activated from the 10-day injured list. Three others – right-handers Jimmy Herget, Andrew Wantz and Zack Weiss – were optioned to Salt Lake.

Activating Loup gives the Angels three left-handers in their bullpen, along with Tucker Davidson and Matt Moore.

Webb, 29, spent spring training with the Angels as a non-roster invitee after signing a minor league contract in November. The Angels are his third team in the last year; he split 2022 with the Atlanta Braves and Arizona Diamondbacks, appearing in 34 Triple-A games.

The Riverside native was 1-3 with a 6.75 ERA in 16 games at Triple-A Salt Lake.

Moronta, 30, has pitched for six organizations in the last nine months.

“It’s not difficult,” Moronta said through an interpreter. “It’s the same baseball. The only thing that changes is the uniform.”

His odyssey began with the Dodgers, who designated him for assignment last August because he could not be optioned to the minor leagues. Moronta had a 4.18 ERA in 22 games with the Dodgers and was claimed by the Diamondbacks two days later.

Moronta appeared in another 17 games last year with the Diamondbacks, going 2-2 with a 4.50 ERA. He signed a minor league free agent contract with the Texas Rangers in January, but he was released in March. He then spent three weeks with the Diablos Rojos of the Mexican League before the Angels signed him to a minor league contract on May 11.

In 175 career games, all in relief, Moronta is 10-11 with a 3.02 ERA. He possesses a mid-90s fastball and a slider, and a changeup that he throws only to left-handed batters.

“He’s a hard worker,” said Manager Phil Nevin, who was the Giants’ third base coach in 2017 when Moronta was also in San Francisco. “Takes the ball any time. He’s the kind of guy who would bounce back real quick. He wants the ball all the time. He’s not afraid. He’s going to come right after you. Really good fastball. If you saw the video down in Salt Lake, he’s pitching the same way.”

For Wantz, it’s the third time he has been optioned to the minor leagues this season. Players can only be optioned five times in a single year, but Wantz has been on a perpetual shuttle to Salt Lake because he’s among few pitchers in the bullpen with minor-league options.

After allowing just one earned run in his first 10 appearances of the season, Wantz has now allowed seven runs, all earned, in his last four outings.

Their struggles have added to the growing difficulty the Angels have found getting the ball to Moore, their most reliable set-up man, and closer Carlos Estevez. Herget has a 4.38 ERA in 12 games. Weiss has allowed three hits and a run while recording only five outs.

“That’s where we’ve had some issues,” Nevin said. “The back end, obviously, has been very solid. We’re adding two guys who have pitched in the big leagues a lot.”

ROTATION SHUFFLE

Right-hander Chase Silseth will move back to the bullpen, Nevin said, after losing his only start of the season on Tuesday in Baltimore. Right-hander Jaime Barría will step into the rotation on Monday against the Boston Red Sox, with a chance to stay in the role for the remainder of the season.

Barría, who was primarily a starter from 2018-21, has thrived pitching out of the Angels’ bullpen the last two years. In that time he is 4-4 with a 2.46 ERA in 102 ⅓ innings across 45 games – all but one of which came in relief.

“Jaime’s throwing the heck out of it,” Nevin said. “He’s started before. We like what his fastball’s been doing lately. I’m going to send him out there and let him go as long as he can.”

Nevin also felt Barría was better suited to pitching with extra days off between appearances than Silseth, whose fastball averaged more than 96 mph in his first two relief outings this season, but was 2 mph slower in his lone start.

“When I told (Barría) he had a big smile on his face,” Nevin said. “He’s ready to go. Silseth was the same way. He enjoyed coming out of the ’pen. I used him in some high-leverage spots as soon as I got him and I’ll continue to do that.”

UP NEXT

Boston Red Sox (RHP Tanner Houck, 3-3, 5.48 ERA) at Angels (RHP Jaime Barría, 1-1, 1.96 ERA), Monday, 6:38 p.m., Bally Sports West, 830 AM