The Los Angeles Angels dismissed general manager Perry Minasian after five seasons and hired John Mozeliak, who spent 16 years as the St. Louis Cardinals' president of baseball operations, to rebuild a franchise that has not reached the postseason since 2014. The move closes the Minasian era with a 332-363 record, zero playoff appearances, and the departures of Shohei Ohtani and six-time All-Star Mike Trout still on a contract through 2030.
Minasian inherited a win-now mandate in December 2020, signed Anthony Rendon to the back half of a $245 million deal, and traded for Tyler Anderson and Lucas Giolito at separate deadlines. The Angels finished fourth in the AL West in 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024, then fifth in 2025. Ownership watched Ohtani walk to the Dodgers on a $700 million contract in December 2023, collecting no prospect return and no compensatory draft pick because Ohtani rejected the qualifying offer. Minasian's lone playoff-caliber bet—the 2023 deadline addition of Lucas Giolito, Reynaldo López, and Randal Grichuk for two prospects—collapsed when all three posted ERAs above 4.60 in Angel uniforms.
Mozeliak brings a résumé built on sustained October access. The Cardinals reached the playoffs in 10 of his 16 seasons as the lead decision-maker, including two World Series titles (2006, 2011) and three pennants. He extended Albert Pujols in 2004 for $100 million, signed Matt Holliday for $120 million in 2010, and traded for Nolan Arenado in 2021 while shedding payroll. He also navigated the post-Pujols transition without bottoming out, keeping St. Louis above .500 in 12 of 16 years. The Angels are paying for pattern recognition: someone who can operate a $200 million-plus payroll, extract surplus value from international signings, and avoid the five-year treadmill Minasian could not escape.
The second-order effects touch roster construction and free agency. Mozeliak inherits $109 million committed to Trout, Rendon, and three veteran relievers in 2026, with Trout's $37.1 million average annual value locked through 2030. The farm system ranks 23rd by Baseball America, thin on impact bats and reliant on pitching depth in the low minors. If Mozeliak follows his St. Louis template, expect mid-rotation innings eaters on two-year deals, a pivot to Latin American amateur spending, and contract extensions for controllable talent before arbitration. His Cardinals teams finished in the top 10 in payroll every year from 2011 to 2022; the Angels have the revenue base to match if ownership commits. Sponsorship partners—Emirates, AT&T, Geico—will watch for on-field improvement; the Angels have not drawn 3 million fans since 2017, and suite revenue lags the Dodgers by roughly 40 percent despite comparable market size.
Watch for Mozeliak's first coordinator hires in the next two weeks, particularly a director of amateur scouting and a vice president of international operations. The Angels' Dominican academy has underperformed relative to capital deployed since 2019, and Mozeliak rebuilt St. Louis's international pipeline after MLB penalties in 2017. The amateur draft sits 13th overall in June 2026, with college arms clustered in the back half of the first round. Mozeliak has historically favored college pitching over high-school upside; his 2023 Cardinals draft class included four college right-handers in the first 10 rounds. If he repeats that blueprint, expect post-draft trades involving major-league relievers for lower-level lottery tickets.
The Angels announced Mozeliak will begin May 12, which places him in Anaheim three weeks before the international signing period opens July 2. His first significant decision will be whether to extend qualifying offers to pending free agents Tyler Anderson and Hunter Renfroe, both of whom cleared waivers in August 2025 and finished the season on expiring deals.
The takeaway
Mozeliak's Cardinals averaged 88 wins across 16 seasons; the Angels averaged 73 under Minasian—ownership bought October credibility.
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