Los Angeles Times

Moreno says he called off trade with the Dodgers

- DYLAN HERNÁNDEZ

TEMPE, Ariz. — Arte Moreno has jokes. Who knew. Explaining why he doesn’t have a social media account, the Angels owner cracked, “You know me. I get too pissed off to be on Instagram.”

Considerin­g the tone deafness displayed last week by Houston Astros counterpar­t Jim Crane, credit Moreno for demonstrat­ing a measure of self-awareness.

The problem is that for the Angels, this isn’t entirely a laughing matter. They staged their first fullsquad spring-training workout Monday and they didn’t have an establishe­d right fielder or much of a rotation.

They had a chance to address both shortcomin­gs, but Moreno detonated a deal to acquire outfielder Joc Pederson and righthande­r Ross Stripling from the Dodgers. Moreno became impatient waiting for the Dodgers to finalize a trade with the Boston Red Sox, upon which the Angels’ deal was contingent. Moreno confirmed that much. “Yes, that’s true,” he said. He paused. “It wasn’t all impatience,” he added. “There were other things involved too.” Moreno declined to offer details.

“No, not interested,” he said politely. “Thank you.”

Pederson hit 36 home runs last year. Stripling was an All-Star in 2018.

Told that fans don’t think the owner’s impatience is a good reason to blow up a trade that would improve the roster, Moreno started, “Well, have you ever met …” He didn’t go any further. “I won’t get into it,” he said.

In exchange for Pederson and Stripling, the Angels were supposed to send the Dodgers infielder Luis Rengifo and some minor leaguers. Moreno wouldn’t say whether there were any other elements to the trade that weren’t reported.

Reminded that his customers would want an explanatio­n for why the deal didn’t happen, Moreno replied, “I’m sure they would. There’s a lot of things people would like to know and they’re not going to know. For me, it’s water under the bridge. We’ve moved on.”

Whatever the specifics, it’s clear Moreno was the reason Pederson and Stripling aren’t in camp with Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani.

If it turns out the Angels were hurt by Moreno’s impulses, this wouldn’t be the first time.

Moreno pushed for the disastrous trade for Vernon Wells. He was behind the nine-figure free-agent contracts for Albert Pujols and Josh Hamilton.

The deals for Wells, Pujols and Hamilton financiall­y crippled the team for several seasons.

On the other hand, the failures didn’t stop Moreno from spending again this offseason, signing Anthony Rendon to a seven-year, $245-million contract. Moreno explained that Gerrit Cole was the team’s primary target, as the Angels were determined to land a front-line pitcher.

“We just spent a lot of time and effort on Cole,” Moreno said. “I had a substantia­l offer and pretty much walking in there, you knew no matter what I did, we were going to get outbid. We had a pretty big number out there.”

When the elite pitching options vanished from the market, the Angels pivoted. Moreno said they focused on fortifying their lineup by adding the top free-agent position player in third baseman Rendon, essentiall­y postponing the task of acquiring a front-line starter.

“We’re looking for a pitcher that can substantia­lly help us and not a four [or] five,” Moreno said.

If such a pitcher becomes available leading up to the July 31 trade deadline, Moreno believes the Angels will have the financial flexibilit­y and player capital to make a deal.

Then again, the Angels could be 10 games back of the second wild-card spot by then.

Moreno is convinced that with Trout, Rendon, Ohtani, Pujols and Justin Upton in the lineup, the Angels simply can outslug opponents. He cited the example of the 2009 World Series-champion New York Yankees, who scored 5.65 runs per game in the regular season. The rotation of that Yankees team had a combined earned-run average of 4.48.

Moreno expects the Angels to contend for a place in the postseason, which would be their first since 2014. If they fail, the blame almost certainly will fall on general manager Billy Eppler, who is in the final year of his contract.

Asked what Eppler would have to do to receive a new deal, Moreno replied, “I think there are a lot of pieces. It’s not just one thing. There’s just a lot of pieces. As a group, we need to win.

“I probably should fire myself.”

He was kidding, of course. His team already has sold close to 2 million tickets for the upcoming season. He has an agreement to purchase Angel Stadium and the surroundin­g property from Anaheim.

Moreno isn’t going anywhere.

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