The Angels may finally be stepping away from one of their most familiar habits in the draft.
For years under general manager Perry Minasian, Los Angeles leaned hard toward college players who could move quickly, especially in the early rounds. It was a clear pattern, and it was a predictable one. Sometimes it paid off, but the bigger picture under Minasian was impossible to ignore: no winning seasons.
Now, with interim GM John Mozeliak in charge after Minasian was fired, the tone sounds different. In a recent interview with Sam Blum of The Athletic, Mozeliak said the Angels won’t be boxed into that same draft formula. Asked how much freedom he would have in the draft and how involved owner Arte Moreno would be, Mozeliak made it clear there would be no restrictions.
That alone is a notable shift. Based on Mozeliak’s early comments, the Angels do not appear headed for a rigid, one-track approach this time around. Maybe, finally, Moreno and the front office are recognizing that what has been done hasn’t worked and that a different path is overdue.
That doesn’t mean the Angels are suddenly going to land the next Mike Trout with the No. 12 overall pick. But it does mean they may not be tied to the same narrow blueprint when one of the most important events on the calendar arrives.
Mozeliak also addressed another longtime Angels issue: how quickly prospects have been pushed through the system. His answer pointed in a new direction.
“I definitely think that allowing players to grow at the minor-league level is always to their best benefit. There are times when people make reactionary moves because of certain needs.
But if your record is not (at a place) where you’re contending and pushing, it does seem like that might not be the smartest strategy.”
That’s a diplomatic way of saying the old way wasn’t ideal. The Angels have often moved young players up before they were fully ready, and that approach has done damage to more than a few promising careers. If Mozeliak’s words are a preview of what’s coming, patience may finally become part of the plan.
Fans have every reason to like what they’re hearing so far. But words only go so far. The real test comes in the draft in a few weeks, and then in the years that follow, when the Angels have to prove they’re actually building differently.
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