The Angels got a scare with Logan O’Hoppe on Friday night, but the catcher avoided the injured list after passing concussion protocol and being cleared on Saturday.
O’Hoppe was struck in the mask by a foul ball in the third inning of Los Angeles’ game against the Boston Red Sox in Anaheim. He was shaken up enough that home plate umpire Adam Beck had to steady him before Angels trainer Mike Frostad checked on him at the plate.
Manager Kurt Suzuki still played it cautiously, starting Taylor Heineman against Boston while O’Hoppe recovered.
“I'm fine today,” O’Hoppe said in a piece written by Rhett Bollinger of MLB.com. “It’s just been a lot the last two weeks, getting my bell rung.
You want to be careful with it, so that's why I came out like I did. I didn't feel any worse, felt a little foggy after the hit, but I didn't have to shut it all down or anything.”
The foul ball came off the bat of Andruw Monasterio and clipped the side of O’Hoppe’s mask. The Angels catcher has dealt with a rough stretch behind the plate this season, and he said the growing number of concussion cases around the game has made the issue impossible to ignore.
“I don't know why it's happening more this year than ever, but I want to live my life whenever it's the time to stop playing this game,” O’Hoppe said. “So that plays into it more than anything else.”
O’Hoppe said he has never been diagnosed with a concussion, but he has looked at his gear as part of the conversation around prevention. He mentioned a new skull cap he has considered, though he plans to stick with the mask he has used throughout his career.
“I have a new skull cap that we looked at,” O’Hoppe said. “But as far as the mask goes, I've been using All-Star my whole career and haven't had a diagnosed concussion in my career, so I’m going to continue with this.”
In Other News...
New Angels GM Just Sent A Message Fans Have Heard Before
John Mozeliaks first public comments as the Angels new general manager sounded a lot like the kind of message fans in Anaheim have heard before: this is not a teardown job. Mozeliak said he does not view the roster as needing a complete rebuild, and he framed the club as one with real resources to work with, pointing to the market and ownership as reasons the Angels can still be a compelling place to build.
The more interesting part may be how that philosophy carries into the draft and the trade deadline. Mozeliak said he is not locked into any one path when it comes to drafting high school or college players, and instead wants the best player available, a stance that could signal a change in how the Angels approach talent acquisition. For a team that has spent years searching for the right formula, the words were familiar, but the next steps will tell whether this version comes with something different behind it. [Read more 🡒]
Angels May Finally Need To Make A Tough Call On Zach Neto
The Angels have spent much of 2026 chasing answers on defense, and the infield has become one of the clearest reasons why. Zach Neto remains central to the conversation because of his importance to the club and his age, but the numbers and the eye test have not lined up the way the Angels hoped after his rise as their everyday shortstop.
Netos defensive regression has put real pressure on the organization to consider uncomfortable alternatives, especially with the team ranking near the bottom in key defensive measures. His latest miscue only sharpened the scrutiny, and with the season moving deeper into the summer, the Angels may be nearing the point where they have to decide whether keeping him in place is worth the cost elsewhere on the diamond. [Read more 🡒]
Angels May Finally Be Weighing A Move Fans Dread
A quiet but telling Angels subplot surfaced this week when MLB insider Robert Murray pointed to a John Mozeliak quote that sounded a lot like a front office weighing whether it should deal from the rotation. For a club that has spent years trying to stabilize its pitching, the idea naturally lands with a thud, especially with Jose Soriano and Reid Detmers both established as important pieces on the staff.
What makes the chatter harder to dismiss is the timing and the contract control attached to both arms, which gives the Angels more flexibility than they usually have with pitchers of this caliber. If the organization is truly shifting its trade approach under Mozeliak, the next step could say a lot about whether the priority is keeping the rotation intact or using one of those starters to reshape the roster for the long run. [Read more 🡒]
