Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Reliable Trout not fiddling with MVP formula

- By GREG BEACHAM

TEMPE, Ariz. — Although Mike Trout is a fairly well-known baseball player at this point, he still made his way around the Los Angeles Angels’ clubhouse Saturday morning to introduce himself to several new teammates.

The two-time American League Most Valuable Player arrived in Arizona this week with slightly longer hair and a renewed goal to steal 40 bases this season. He also has two companions at spring training for the first time: His high school sweetheart and new fiancee, Jessica Cox, and their miniature American Eskimo dog, Juno.

While a few things change every year, Trout’s teammates and coaches say he has been the same unassuming, upbeat guy throughout one of the greatest half-decades in recent big league history.

“Mike hasn’t changed a bit from the first day he stepped up here on a major league field,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “Probably hasn’t changed since he was in high school.”

The Angels have plenty of new faces this spring, including left fielder Cameron Maybin at Trout’s side. Trout acknowledg­es the importance of becoming a veteran leader alongside Albert Pujols, but doesn’t plan to allow it to hinder his potential to do something spectacula­r in any game.

“I wouldn’t say (I’m) changing,” Trout said. “(But) I’ve been here five, six years now. If the younger guys have questions, people know me. I talk to everybody, so they can ask me anything. I wouldn’t say (I’m) vocal, but I don’t think I need to change. I like my game to talk, the majority of the time.”

Trout spent a good chunk of the offseason planning his wedding to Cox next December, but maintained the same aggressive workout schedule after accepting his second MVP award. About the only thing he changed was his hair — which isn’t exactly long, but it’s longer.

“Some of my teammates were complainin­g (that) I had the same buzz cut since third grade,” Trout said. “A couple of the guys are growing it out, so I said, ‘Hey, maybe I should try it.’ And I did, and Jess liked it, and I just kept it.”

The Angels’ first full-squad workout of spring was curtailed by steady rain Saturday across the Phoenix area, but Trout used the time to settle in for the next chapter in his remarkable story.

Last season, Trout outdistanc­ed Boston’s Mookie Betts and Houston’s Jose Altuve in the MVP voting despite playing for the fourth-place Angels, who finished 74-88 in their worst performanc­e of Trout’s career. Trout batted .315 with 29 homers, 100 RBIs, 30 stolen bases and a .991 OPS while playing solid defense in center field last season.

Yet he still couldn’t lead the Angels into contention in the AL West, largely thanks to a staggering series of injuries to their starting rotation.

“The name of the game is staying healthy,” Trout said. “When you have a bunch of pitchers go down, and guys in our lineup go down, we just couldn’t put it all together.”

Indeed, Trout has a jaw-dropping list of achievemen­ts, but he still hasn’t won a playoff game. The Angels were swept by Kansas City in 2014 in his only postseason appearance.

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? No longer sporting his usual buzz cut, two-time American League MVP Mike Trout speaks on the first day of the Los Angeles Angels’ full-squad spring training Saturday.
CHRIS CARLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS No longer sporting his usual buzz cut, two-time American League MVP Mike Trout speaks on the first day of the Los Angeles Angels’ full-squad spring training Saturday.

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