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Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .

Jarrod Washburn arrived in the California organization as a second-round selection in 1995, eventually serving as the reliable left-handed anchor of the rotation for the better part of a decade. While his early years were marked by frequent moves between the minors and the parent club, he established himself as a full-time fixture by 2001.

Washburn reached a historic peak of efficiency during the 2002 championship campaign. That summer, he evolved into the unquestioned ace of the staff, posting a career-best 18-6 record with a 3.15 ERA. He demonstrated a specialized ability to handle a heavy workload, tossing over 200 innings and finishing fourth in the American League Cy Young voting.  He who propelled the club to its first World Series title, even though his dominance in the regular season didn't quite carry over to the final series against San Francisco.

The latter half of his tenure in Anaheim was defined by resilience, as he bounced back from mid-career struggles. After his ERA climbed above 4.00 in 2003 and 2004, he reached a statistical outlier for efficiency in his final year with the club in 2005. That season, he demonstrated a specialized ability to suppress runs, recording a 3.20 ERA over 29 starts and ranking among the league leaders in night-game performance.

After the 2005 season, Washburn left for the Seattle Mariners on a four-year, $37.5 million contract.  Washburn compiled 75 wins and 699 strikeouts in SoCal.

Doug DeCinces arrived in the California organization via a January 1982 trade with the Baltimore Orioles, a move that finally allowed him to step out from the massive shadow of Brooks Robinson. While his time in Baltimore was defined by the impossible task of following a legend, his transition to the West Coast sparked an immediate offensive renaissance.

DeCinces had his best season in baseball in 1982, belting a career-high 30 home runs and recording his only career .300 season. He led the club to an American League West title and finished third in the AL MVP voting behind future Hall of Famers Robin Yount and Eddie Murray.  The regular season was punctuated by a historic week in August, where he hit three home runs in a single game twice within a five-day span, earning him the 1982 Silver Slugger Award.

The 1983 campaign saw DeCinces maintain his status as one of the premier third basemen in the junior circuit, earning his lone career All-Star selection. While a mid-season injury limited his total games, he remained a model of consistent power throughout the mid-eighties, smacking at least 20 home runs in three consecutive seasons from 1984 to 1986, the last of which he recorded 26 home runs and 96 RBIs while finishing 11th in the MVP race and helping the Angels reach the ALCS.

DeCinces’s play tailed off in 1987, and he was released late in the season. With California, he had 130 home runs and a .277 average

An Atlanta Brave for the first four years of his career, Andrelton Simmons arrived in the Anaheim organization via a high-profile November 2015 trade, a transaction designed to give the Angels the most specialized defensive anchor in the sport. Already a human highlight reel in the National League, Simmons brought a foundational level of run prevention to the shortstop position that redefined the team’s defensive floor.

After a solid 2016, Simmons had a defensive season for the ages. That summer, he demonstrated a specialized ability to turn impossible plays into routine outs, leading the American League with a staggering 5.2 defensive bWAR. He combined that glove work with the best offensive year of his career, recording 164 hits and a career-best .278 average. This excellence earned him an eighth-place finish in the MVP voting and his first of two consecutive Gold Gloves in an Angels uniform.

Between 2017 and 2018, he secured back-to-back Wilson Defensive Player of the Year Awards, proving to be a localized vacuum on the left side of the infield.  His 12.1 defensive bWAR over just five seasons reflected a surgical impact that few players in franchise history have ever matched, essentially serving as a second "ace" for the pitching staff through his range alone.

Simmons’ career slowed during the shortened 2020 season due to ankle injuries, and he left Orange County for Minnesota as a free agent.  With the Angels, Simmons had 592 hits, two Gold Gloves, and a 12.1 dWAR.

Jim Edmonds arrived in the California organization as a seventh-round selection in 1988, eventually developing into one of the most dynamic all-around center fielders of his generation. While he debuted in late 1993, he established himself as a premier talent during a breakout 1995 campaign.

In 1995, Edmonds demonstrated a specialized ability to drive the ball to all fields, belting 33 home runs and recording 107 RBIs while earning his first All-Star selection. He showed the organization he was a foundational professional by pairing this offensive surge with gold-standard defense, leading the American League in putouts by a center fielder. This performance served as the essential lead-in to a four-year stretch where he consistently batted near .290 and averaged 28 home runs per season.

The 1997 and 1998 campaigns represented the peak of Edmonds’ defensive recognition in Anaheim. During these seasons, he earned consecutive Gold Glove Awards, punctuated by one of the most famous defensive plays in baseball history: a full-extension, layout-diving catch over his head against the Kansas City Royals in June 1997. Edmonds regularly showcased the skill to read the ball off the bat, allowing him to play a shallow center field and still track down balls at the wall.

Before the 2000 season, Edmonds was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals because his looming free agency made him unlikely to re-sign with the Angels.  With the Angels, Edmonds compiled 121 home runs, 768 hits, and two Gold Glove Awards.