Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports

Now that the news is out there that Arte Moreno is set to explore a sale of the Los Angeles Angels, the impact of his decision, and when he knew looms large with the massive decisions ahead for the franchise in terms of player personnel, mainly Shohei Ohtani.

Moreno has been the controlling owner of the Angels for the last 20 years and in that span, the club has won six division titles and has never sent Mike Trout past the first round of the playoffs.

The Angels have largely been a disappointment, and as a result of changing general managers and a lack of organizational awareness to strengthen the team’s farm system to make themselves self-sustainable, they’ve opted for numerous high-priced free agents who have largely failed.

With the decision surrounding Ohtani’s impending free agency and a serious drop-off in talent in their prospect pool, Moreno decided to hold off, the opposite of what the Washington Nationals did with Juan Soto, via Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic:

The Lerner family, which owns the Nationals, did not prevent the team’s front office from trading Juan Soto with the franchise for sale. Moreno, though, restricted the Angels’ front office from doing the same with Ohtani at the Aug. 2 deadline – and he knew by that time he was putting the team up for sale, major-league sources said.

The return for Soto was definitely underwhelming, but teams that the Nationals were pressed for time with a new ownership group on the horizon, and seemingly took the best offer they received.

What they got for Soto in terms of prospects felt unprecedented, but Ohtani is a once-in-a-lifetime talent, and the reigning MVP would be in-line for another if not for Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees leading the world in home runs with 48 entering play on Friday.

The Angels could be in a position to extend Ohtani with the sale giving him some new hope that the franchise is more serious about contending and being sustainable, too.

Trout wants to compete

Mike Trout has been with the Angels since the 2011 season and since then he has seen the highs and lows of the club, all without a deep run in October.

According to Jeff Fletcher of the O.C. Register, Trout’s commitment to the Angels and desire to win is as high as ever.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Stunning stat highlights NBA's youth movement
Report: Rival teams expect Sixers to attempt reunion with star
Donovan Mitchell channeled 'The Answer' in first-round win vs. Magic
Defending champion Golden Knights ousted by Stars in first round
Rangers hold off late Hurricanes rally to take early series lead
Watch: Kyle Larson wins closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series history
Watch: Shohei Ohtani homers twice as Dodgers sweep Braves
Russell Westbrook reacts to reports of him leaving Clippers
Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah joins elite company in victory vs. Tottenham
Anthony Edwards joins exclusive club of all-time greats
Aces sign All-Star G Jackie Young to contact extension through 2025
J.J. Watt reveals his thoughts on a potential NFL comeback
Taylor Pendrith outlasts Ben Kohles at Byron Nelson for maiden win
Andrey Rublev conquers Felix Auger-Aliassime, fever for Madrid title
Lando Norris wins Miami Grand Prix for his first career F1 victory
Watch: Astros woes continue in one-run loss to Mariners
Panthers star throws some shade at defeated Maple Leafs
NASCAR Cup Series race at Kansas delayed
Watch: Juan Soto's three-run double gives Yankees 5-2 lead over Tigers in seventh
Pirates GM responds to calls to promote ace pitching prospect