Rotation Is a Question Mark

    Huddled in a red sweatshirt, his shoulders pulled high around his ears, Jarrod Washburn watched the Angels beat the Yankees on Monday night from the Angel clubhouse, then listened as his teammates danced and shouted and shot corks about the room.

    He smiled sadly as the party dispersed, the playoffs having gone on without him, the strep throat that cost him a start and unbalanced the Angel rotation still plain in his posture.

    "I've been quarantined," he said, "which is probably a good thing."

    The rainout in New York, Washburn's illness, Bartolo Colon's aching shoulder and a plane-flight turnaround from the end of the American League division series to tonight's beginning of the league championship series has left a thin Angel rotation. The Angels do not expect Colon, who left in the middle of his sixth batter Monday night, to pitch in the AL championship series.

    Paul Byrd will pitch Game 1 against Chicago's Jose Contreras. After that, the Angels will start taking volunteers.

    As they boarded their flight to Chicago and their second championship series in four years, Angel coaches had sketched a tentative plan: John Lackey in Game 3 on Friday and Ervin Santana in Game 4 on Saturday. Wednesday's Game 2 was still a mystery, the options ranging from the hopeful (Washburn) to the desperate (Joe Saunders) to the most likely (group effort, perhaps beginning with Kevin Gregg).

    Colon will be examined today and the Angels then will decide whether to include him on the championship series roster. If the news is bad for Colon, or even vague, and Washburn is ailing, Manager Mike Scioscia would probably carry 11 pitchers against the White Sox, dropping Colon and adding relievers Esteban Yan and Jason Christiansen. They also would have to remove a position player, probably Jeff DaVanon.

    Washburn is hoping for a full recovery by Wednesday, but his expression revealed his doubt. He ate for the first time in three days Monday, and that was only a few sips of soup.

    For the veteran of eight major league seasons, whose last postseason pitch didn't go so well, the thought of missing these games is distressing, like falling ill on your birthday.

    "This is worse than that," he said. "I'd take being sick on my birthday any day. Birthdays, you get to have a few more.

    "Hopefully, I'll get some strength back quickly. I want nothing more than to go out and help them. I'd have given anything to help them beat the Yankees."

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