Plotlines remain thick entering season The Angels, Phillies and Astros improved the most during the offseason By Larry Stone The Seattle Times (KRT) SEATTLE — With spring training about to be sprung, baseball desper ately needed a diversion from its brew ing steroids scandal. Sure enough, one dropped from the sky this week. Be careful what you wish for. A-Rod in pinstripes? So much for the notion that competitive balance is re turning to the game. The acquisition of Alex Rodriguez, if it is completed, would be the ultimate statement by the Yankees that the rules don't apply to them. Not to mention the ultimate "in your face" to the Red Sox, who spent all winter trying to land Rodriguez. For now, of course, teams are hard at work mustering the usual optimism of spring, when even Detroit sincerely be lieves it has a chance to win it all. As a public service to understandably list less Yankee-haters, here are a couple of lists to kick off the impending season. Three teams that had very, very good winters... 1. Anaheim Angels. Under aggres sive new owner Arte Moreno, the An gels signed the best player on the free agent market (Vladimir Guerrero) and the best pitcher (Bartolo Colon), not to mention Jose Guillen, who hit .311 with 31 homers and 86 RBI last year, and Kelvim Escobar, who won 13 games for the Blue Jays. 2. Philadelphia Phillies. After too many Jose Mesa meltdowns to bear, they needed a closer, and they got a great one from Houston, Billy Wagn er. They retained free-agent Kevin Millwood, added a quality starter in Eric Milton and strengthened their bullpen even more with Tim Worrell and Roberto Hernandez. 3. Houston Astros. It didn't start off well, with the loss of Wagner, who publicly questioned the team's com mitment to success. But that was fol lowed by one coup after another — the signing of Andy Pettitte, which coaxed Roger Clemens out of retire ment, and the return of Nolan Ryan to the organization. ... and three teams that had very, very bad winters. 1. Milwaukee Brewers. Popular team president Ulice Payne resigned in protest of ownership's mandate to slash the payroll to $30 million; the team's best and most popular player, Richie Sexson, was traded to Arizona for a pile of lesser, cheaper players; the team was pressured by legislators to open its books for scrutiny; and, as a nice capper, pitcher Luis Martinez, a member of the 40-man roster, was arrested last week in the Dominican Republic for allegedly shooting a man three times. 2. Los Angeles Dodgers. While the crosstown Angels were creating all Eric Mencher Philadelphia Inquirer Jim Thome’s Phillies are expected to fight for the World Series crown this season. the excitement, the Dodgers were forced to sit on their hands, unable to improve the league's worst offense. 3. Atlanta Braves. Their remarkable streak of 12 straight division titles is in severe danger after losing Gary Sheffield, Javier Lopez and Greg Maddux en route to trimming pay roll by $15 million. (c) 2004, The Seattle Times. Distributed by Knight Ridder/ Tribune Information Services. MEN continued from page 7 then the NCAA Tournament. Arizona has lost just twice at home this year, both to top 10 ranked teams. With its final three home games against the Washington schools and Arizona State, will the Wildcats win the rest of their regular season games? "Most definitely, we're going to try to," Adams said. "We're going to go out there and just play Arizona basketball — play aggressive, play tough, just go out there and try and get a win." Arizona should have little problem against Oregon State on the road. The Beavers have one of the worst records in the conference. The Wildcats hold down the sec ond position in the conference, be hind Stanford, and are a for sure bet come end of March. If the Wildcats manage to bring the same emotion and energy to the court as they did against the Ducks, they will be tough to stop. "This was a very emotional game," Arizona sophomore Andre Iguodala said. "The way things were being called, we just had to play through it." Senior Salim Stoudamire, a Port land native, was very satisfied with his performance after saying he's never had a good game in his home state since being at Arizona. "I was really feeding off the energy," Stoudamire said. Contact the sports reporter at jessethomas@dailyemerald.com. $1 OFF MEDIUM Present coupon. Not valid with other offers. Good through 3-19-04. 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