Sports

Why Mike Trout should be the next to go this offseason following the surprising decisions made by the Angels

When the Angels open their series with the A’s this weekend, it will look a lot like this:

Oakland is one of the worst seasons in recent MLB history. Through 132 games, the A’s are 38-94, the worst record in baseball. And they’re about to have company.

Per ESPN’s Jeff Passan, Los Angeles is having an “everything must go” sale as it punts on a 2023 wild-card berth and, more damning, likely a shot at retaining Shohei Ohtani.

The team traded for pitchers Lucas Giolito and Reynaldo Lopez and outfielder Randal Grichuk at the deadline in an ill-advised pursuit of the playoffs.

The Angels set their franchise back years by not trading Ohtani for prospects at the trade deadline after they proved inept at building a winning team around him (and Mike Trout) for the past six seasons.

Instead, Los Angeles can look at Oakland to get a glimpse of its future.

The Angels finally realized what was clear a month ago — that they weren’t making the playoffs — far too late. The only question left is if Ohtani will be the only generational talent to leave this offseason.

Trout’s exit has to be on the table, too. He signed a massive 12-year, $430 million contract in 2019, and if the Angels are smart (which is doubtful), they’d shop him around for a massive package.

The Angles are closer to being the A’s than the Astros, and that’s with Trout. There’s absolutely no reason for him to waste the rest of his time in the pros playing for an awful organization.

Trading him would by no means help Los Angeles in the short term but could create a quicker pathway for the franchise back to relevance.

If they’re on the fence, all the Angels have to do is take a hard look at the A’s this weekend to see what’s in store for their future by maintaining the status quo.

The Angels are barreling toward an ugly end to this season and an even bleaker future afterward. It’s up to the front office to decide how long Los Angeles looks at the A’s and sees itself staring back.

Related Posts

Caelan Doris: ‘Going after someone’ for a mistake not my style

New Ireland captain Caelan Doris says he hasn’t adopted Johnny Sexton’s “assertiveness” as he tries to develop his own style of leadership. While Peter O’Mahony led Andy Farrell’s…

Exclusive: Wallabies selection twist as Schmidt set to bench Suaalii, surprise tip for Wilson replacement

Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii might have delivered one of the great performances on debut, but Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt looks set to slam the brakes on the new face of…

“ทิตาธร” อัปเดตอาการบาดเจ็บ พร้อมตอบคำถามการเป็นตัวแทน “ธีราทร”

แบ็คซ้ายวัย 27 ปี พอใจผลงานหลังช่วย “ทีมชาติไทย” เสมอกับ “เลบานอน” ยอมรับยังมีอะไรที่ต้องปรับปรุงอีกเยอะ “ทิตาธร อักษรศรี” แบ็คซ้ายทีมชาติไทย เผยหลังเกมเสมอ ทีมชาติเลบานอน 0-0 ในศึกฟุตบอลอุ่นเครื่องตามปฏิทินฟีฟ่าเดย์ (International Exhibition Matches) เมื่อวันที่ 14 พฤศจิกายน 2567 โดย ทิตาธร ได้เผยว่า “ก็ดีใจครับและภูมิใจที่ได้ลงไปทำหน้าที่ พอใจในฟอร์มของตัวเอง แต่ก็ยังมีอะไรที่ต้องปรับปรุงอีกเยอะครับ”…

France v All Blacks preview: Scott Robertson’s men to capitalise on ‘fantastic opportunity’ and end losing run against Les Bleus

These games are always special affairs and Saturday promises to be no different as France face the All Blacks in a mouth-watering Autumn Nations Series clash. Les Bleus…

Will the north’s hopes ‘go south’ in world rankings?

Having completed a clean sweep of wins in the first full set of fixtures in the Autumn Nations Series, the dominance of the leading southern hemisphere sides could…

England rugby’s late woes revealed as Borthwick in Springboks’ spotlight

England coach Steve Borthwick leads his side into Saturday’s match against world champions South Africa at Twickenham in desperate need of a win as he bids to end…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *