The Angels are headed toward the trade deadline as obvious sellers, but the bigger question hanging over the franchise is whether that should eventually mean moving Mike Trout, too.
Los Angeles entered the All-Star break 21 games under .500 at 38-59, and the record says plenty about where this team stands. This is a club that needs a reset, the kind that comes with trading away valuable pieces, restocking the farm system and bringing more prospects into the organization. That kind of teardown has not exactly been the Angels’ style, though.
Owner Arte Moreno and then-general manager Perry Minasian both believed that dealing players with strong value was the wrong move, and that approach has helped keep the Angels stuck near the bottom year after year. The franchise has not reached the playoffs since 2014 and has not won a playoff game since 2009.
Minasian was fired at the end of June and replaced by interim GM John Mozeliak, who has a reputation for blowing teams up and bringing in tons of prospects. That is the kind of reset this roster seems to need.
If the Angels are serious about that kind of overhaul, Trout has to be part of the conversation. The three-time MVP and 12-time All-Star has been the model of loyalty during a long run of frustration, never once publicly complaining about how little the Angels have accomplished during his tenure.
He does have a no-trade clause, and he has not said he wants out. Still, the idea of a split makes sense for both sides.
Asked whether he would ever want to become a Phillie, Trout offered a response that left the door open a crack.
“I hear this a lot,” Trout said with a smile. “Like I said, I enjoy coming to Philly.
I’m an Angel, obviously. I have a no-trade clause, so it’s ultimately my decision.
But like I said, I love Philly.”
That answer only adds to the larger question: how long does Trout want to keep riding this out in Los Angeles? He clearly enjoys being an Angel, but at some point the appeal of staying has to be weighed against years of mediocrity and the absence of meaningful late-season baseball.
Fans want Trout healthy and having fun, and he has mostly done that this season. But he also deserves a chance to play in October with something real on the line, and that opportunity does not appear to be coming anytime soon with the Angels.
The hard truth is that the organization may need to swallow the pain, rip off the band-aid and begin the long climb toward building a real team.
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Mike Trout Trade Buzz Just Took A Twist Angels Fans Will Feel
Mike Trouts name keeps surfacing whenever the Phillies are discussed, and the latest round of buzz only adds another layer to the conversation. The Angels star reminded everyone that his no-trade clause puts the decision in his hands, which is the kind of detail that matters anytime a big-market team starts circling a franchise player. It also keeps alive a scenario that, even if it feels remote, will never quite disappear as long as Trout remains one of the sports most recognizable names.
For Angels fans, the more immediate takeaway is less about Philadelphia than about what it says about Trouts place in the league and how carefully any future move would have to be handled. The Phillies have roster holes they need to address and the kind of talent it would take to chase a player of Trouts stature would be substantial, but the whole discussion still comes back to whether he would ever be willing to make that kind of change. For now, the door is not closed, and that alone is enough to keep the speculation humming. [Read more 🡒]
Mike Trout Just Took A Revealing Stand On The Angels Future
Mike Trouts latest comments offered a reminder that, even as the Angels continue to live through one of baseballs longest postseason droughts, their franchise player is still thinking in terms of staying put and trying to drag the club back into October. Trout has spent his entire career in Anaheim, and with his contract running through 2030, the question around him has never really been about talent or commitment. It has been about whether the losing would eventually wear down even the most loyal star.
Instead, Trout used the interview to make clear that the idea of walking away has not been part of his thinking. He remains under a full no-trade clause, giving him complete control over any move, and his stance matters because it keeps the Angels future tied to the same player who has defined their present for so long. For a team still searching for a way out of the cycle, that kind of stability is valuable, even if the bigger question around how they get there is still hanging in the air. [Read more 🡒]
Mike Trout's Son Just Added A New Twist To His Legacy
Mike Trouts place in Angels history is already secure, but the conversation around his legacy has taken on a new layer with the attention now drifting toward his son, Beckham. Trout is set to lead off for the American League in the 2026 All-Star Game, another reminder that even after all the accolades and milestones, he is still very much part of the games biggest stages.
What makes the latest twist interesting is how naturally the family storyline has started to follow him, with Beckham already drawing questions about whether he might someday surpass his father. The answer came quickly and without hesitation, but the bigger question still hangs in the air: whether Beckham will even make it to the majors, let alone chase down the standard his dad has set. [Read more 🡒]
