Major League Baseball’s latest CBA proposal includes a change that would wipe out the kind of monster contract the Los Angeles Angels handed Mike Trout in 2019.
Under the league’s plan, a free agent changing teams could be limited to a maximum of five years, while a player re-signing with his current club could top out at six. That would make Trout’s 12-year, $426.5 million deal with the Angels the sort of agreement baseball would no longer allow.
The players’ side is not buying it. The MLB Players Association has already pushed back hard on this proposal, along with the rest of the league’s ideas involving free agency, a salary cap and draft changes.
The gap between the two sides remains huge, and that’s a big reason there’s so little confidence baseball will be played next season. At minimum, the expectation is that the 2027 season won’t begin on time.
From the owners’ perspective, the appeal is obvious. Deals like Trout’s can tie up huge money for years, and even a player who had already built a superstar résumé can become a tough investment as time passes.
Trout has shown flashes of the player fans remember, including this season, when he started to look more like the perennial All-Star again. But his recent injury was another reminder that he is in his thirties now, and durability usually doesn’t improve from here.
It would not be a shock if someone like Angels owner Arte Moreno liked the idea of shorter commitments. He and plenty of other owners around the league would probably welcome a system that makes it harder to hand out decade-plus contracts.
That is exactly why the MLBPA is expected to fight this so aggressively. The proposal would mean less money flowing to players, and that’s a fight the union is not going to let pass. Trout, at least, already got his deal before any of these changes could become reality.
In Other News...
Angels GM Search Could Reveal Whether This Team Finally Learns
The Angels front-office search is starting to look a lot like a referendum on whether the organization is willing to copy a model that has worked elsewhere. John Mozeliaks interim presence has already tied the job hunt to the Cardinals tree, and the names being discussed reflect that influence: Randy Flores, Rodriguez, and Rob Cerfolio. Each brings a different piece of modern roster building, from amateur scouting and draft evaluation to international talent identification and development infrastructure.
Flores has built his reputation as the Cardinals scouting director, with a portfolio that includes several notable draft finds, while Rodriguez has deep experience in international scouting and player acquisition. Cerfolio is the newer face in the mix, having come through the Guardians before moving into Cardinals minor league operations and the sport science side of the operation. For an Angels club that has spent years searching for a more coherent pipeline, the question is less about whether these backgrounds make sense and more about whether the organization is finally ready to commit to one. [Read more 🡒]
Angels Era Ohtani Rookie Card Just Reached Rare Air Again
A Shohei Ohtani rookie card from his Angels days just climbed back into the highest tier of the hobby, with a 2018 Topps Chrome Superfractor selling for $2,562,229. The BGS 9.5 card, pulled from Ohtanis rookie season in Los Angeles, adds another line to the growing list of Angeles-era memorabilia that collectors still treat like blue-chip stock.
The sale leaves Ohtanis card market in a familiar spot, where even one-of-one pieces and rare autograph variants keep pushing into territory that once seemed unimaginable for a modern baseball card. Other Ohtani gems, including a privately brokered Bowman Chrome Carrying Bag SP and a Kanji-signed autograph card, have already set their own benchmarks, and the next big question is which version of his rise will be the one to top them. [Read more 🡒]
Sam Aldegheri Picked A Crucial Time To Force The Angels' Attention
Sam Aldegheri gave the Angels exactly the kind of outing they needed at a time when every look from the mound matters. The left-hander worked five innings and allowed one run in a recent game, a sharp turn after two rough starts and a reminder that he can still make a case for himself when the rotation picture is unsettled.
The timing matters because Los Angeles is sorting through its pitching depth while waiting on another arm to return, and Aldegheris performance gave the club a little more to weigh. The same game also featured Josh Lowes first career grand slam and Samy Natera collecting his first major league save, but for the Angels, the bigger takeaway may have been Aldegheri forcing his way back into the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
