USA TODAY US Edition

Don’t blame Trout for MLB’s issues

- Nancy Armour

Mike Trout is not to blame for Major League Baseball’s problems.

The Angels outfielder found himself thrust into the middle of a controvers­y this week after MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred put the onus on Trout for not being a bigger star, the intimation being that he’s part of the drag on baseball’s popularity. That’s as wrongheade­d as it is unfair.

Trout’s job is to play baseball, and it’s one he does very well. A two-time American League MVP, he leads the majors in on-base percentage (.454), ranks

third in home runs (25) and is sixth in runs (71). It’s true the Angels have made the playoffs only once with Trout, losing in the first round in 2014, but that has more to do with their injury-plagued pitching staff and inconsiste­nt offense than Trout.

Trout does what he’s paid to do, and he has a legion of fans who love him for it. Love the fact that he’s not a self-promoter or a phony, either.

While Trout has chosen not to turn himself into a promotiona­l machine or national pitchman, he doesn’t exactly hide in the dugout. He can be seen signing autographs before every game, and when a fan started the #MikeTroutM­oments hashtag Wednesday, it quickly filled with photos and stories of Trout interactin­g with fans.

There’s the young boy who can barely contain his excitement as Trout signs a ball for him. There’s another child standing next to Trout during batting practice after the slugger pulled him out of the stands. There are stories about his charitable activities.

“Mike Trout is an exceptiona­l ambassador for the game,” the Angels said Wednesday in a terse rebuke of Manfred’s comments. “He continuall­y chooses to participat­e in the community, visiting hospitals, schools and countless other charities. One of Mike’s traits that people admire most is his humility. His brand is built upon generously spending his time engaging with fans, both at home and on the road, while remaining a remarkable baseball player and teammate.”

These interactio­ns might not make headlines, but they’re what make lifelong fans. And Lord knows baseball can use more of those these days.

Baseball’s popularity is sagging not because of Trout or any other player, but because the game has not kept pace with time. Literally. In an age when attention spans are shrinking and society demands immediacy, the game drags on. And on. And on.

Manfred has tried to address this, only to meet resistance from the players union and a small group of fans who howl about “tradition!” when ways to improve the game are floated.

“There are always unintended consequenc­es to changes,” Tony Clark, head of the MLBPA, said this week during the All-Star festivitie­s. “That’s not to say we shouldn’t be willing to talk about them. I’m simply suggesting to you that the ones most affected are on the field.”

Is putting a runner on first in extra innings or shortening the game heresy? Sure.

Would limiting visits to the mound by pitching coaches and managers handcuff them strategica­lly? Possibly.

But it’s better than having the game slip into irrelevanc­e.

The decrease in attendance in the first half of the season cannot be attributed solely to weather problems, and everyone in baseball ought to be alarmed. Yet MLB’s strongest move so far has been to go after the Cubs’ Ben Zobrist for wearing black cleats. The horror!

Fans are clamoring for MLB to lift its antiquated “home team” blackout rules for streaming games — good luck seeing anything west of the Rockies if you live in Las Vegas, which doesn’t even HAVE a home team — and Manfred’s response is to criticize Trout’s reluctant stardom.

By the way, nobody ever considered Derek Jeter particular­ly outgoing or warm and fuzzy. But he played for the Yankees, and simply putting that uniform on makes someone an attention magnet whether he’s in the five boroughs or Phoenix.

(Do you think Aaron Judge would be as big a name as he is if he played on, say, the Marlins? Yeah. Me either.)

After watching “stars” such as Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez and Ryan Braun, just to name a few, drag baseball through the mud, Manfred should be grateful that Trout’s headlines are limited to what he does on the field. Baseball has problems, but Trout is not one of them.

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Mike Trout has been a constant on offense.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS Mike Trout has been a constant on offense.
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 ??  ?? Mike Trout goes out of his way to connect with fans, here signing autographs for fans at Safeco Field in Seattle.
Mike Trout goes out of his way to connect with fans, here signing autographs for fans at Safeco Field in Seattle.

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