What happened: The Los Angeles Angels hold the worst winning percentage in Major League Baseball, sitting at 32-48 through their first 80 games of the 2026 season. The club has continued to scuffle, dropping its most recent outing and losing ground in a crowded American League. The down year leaves Los Angeles well off the pace in both its division and the wild-card chase.
Why it matters: With more than half the schedule gone and a sub-.400 winning percentage, the Angels are effectively playing out the string rather than chasing October. The poor record sharpens questions about the roster's direction and how aggressively the front office should sell ahead of the trade deadline. For a franchise that has spent heavily in recent years, another lost summer raises the stakes on the offseason to come.
By the numbers: Los Angeles is 32-48 this season, averaging 4.5 runs scored against 5.0 allowed, and has gone 2-3 over its last five. The Angels most recently dropped a home matchup with the Baltimore Orioles, 6-1, on June 22.
What to watch: The Angels continue their homestand against the Orioles, looking to halt the slide before the run differential widens further.