Sunday's series finale in Anaheim is a 1:07 PM PT first pitch with Tampa Bay closing out a 3-game set in Southern California. The Rays at 40-25 are 15 games clear of where the Angels (27-42) are sitting, and the rotation matchup has carried the marquee billing all weekend — Shane McClanahan opened the set Friday and Jose Soriano drew Saturday, with Sunday's arms still settling. The story Tampa Bay is selling is momentum. They just swept Boston at the Trop, capped by Drew Rasmussen punching out a career-high 13 over 7 scoreless on June 10. Before that, Nick Martinez went 7 strong in a 4-3 win, and the Rays have now won 3 in a row after dropping 2 in Miami. That's a rotation rounding into shape at exactly the right time of year. The Angels are not the punching bag the record suggests right now. Walbert Urena dominated Houston in a 10-1 laugher on June 9, then Mike Trout and Logan O'Hoppe went deep in a 3-2 win on June 10 — Trout finally shaking off an ugly 0-for-22 stretch with a homer. Win 2 of 3 from the Astros and they suddenly look frisky at home. The problem is depth: the IL is a horror show. That injury list is the actual narrative for the Angels. Jorge Soler is on the shelf with an oblique, Nolan Schanuel is day-to-day with a calf, Vaughn Grissom and Adam Frazier are both out at second base, and Jack Kochanowicz just got the Tommy John news on June 10. Yusei Kikuchi and Ben Joyce are nowhere close. That's a club playing shorthanded against a Tampa group that just put up 14 runs over 2 games against Boston. Tampa has its own headaches — Ryan Pepiot is gone for the year, Jake Fraley needs hernia surgery, Craig Kimbrel is still on the wrist IL — but the every-day lineup is intact and the bullpen pieces they need are healthy. Sunday afternoon getaway, Angels coming off an emotionally charged series win, Rays in cruise mode. The Halos have a path here, but they need a starter to keep them in it.