The Angels are headed into a draft with a different kind of leadership, and John Mozeliak is making one thing clear: he doesn’t plan to micromanage it.
With Perry Minasian out and Mozeliak stepping in to run the draft while the club searches for Minasian’s replacement, the setup is unusual. Mozeliak won’t be around to see the long-term results of the decisions being made now, so his role is shaping up more as overseer than architect.
That’s exactly how he says he wants it.
“My philosophy on the Draft is let the scouting director and his team do their jobs,” Mozeliak said in a piece written by Rhett Bollinger of MLB.com. “Even when I sat in that seat for 18 years as a general manager, I never scouted amateur players. I felt that was their responsibility, so they're going to have a lot of autonomy to do it.”
Bollinger noted that the Angels have leaned toward players who were already close to the majors, pointing to right-hander Sam Bachman in 2021, shortstop Zach Neto in '22, first baseman Nolan Schanuel in '23, infielder/outfielder Christian Moore in '24 and Tyloer Bremner last year.
Those were all college picks, and all of them are on the current roster except Moore, who was recently optioned to Triple-A Salt Lake after a brief big-league stint, and Bremner, who could be in the rotation as soon as next year.
Mozeliak also suggested that the Angels may be willing to widen the pool this time. High school players, he said, are no longer off limits.
The club will also be working from a specific draft board. In a year, the Angels will still hold the No.
45, No. 81 and No. 109 picks on Day 1. Bollinger added that the organization could use that position-player capital, since the farm system is viewed as heavier on arms and lighter on bats.
“The only real input I'm going to have is, first off, understanding their process,” Mozeliak said. “With the Cardinals, we proved that we had a very good one over time and we’ll try to mirror that if we can.”
Mozeliak also pointed to another layer that could shape the outcome: money. Financial decisions may factor into who the Angels select and why, though he made it clear that the rest belongs to the scouting group.
“And then if there are some financial decisions that are being baked into who we pick and why, but otherwise, it’s going to be their job to do it,” Mozeliak added. “And I'm excited to learn from them and see how they do it. But in the end, you have to get the Draft right.”
The Angels have had some solid drafts, but they’ve also burned through plenty of prospects. Now they’re trying a different approach, with Mozeliak setting the tone and the scouting staff getting the room to work.
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