Rod Carew made it clear there is no love lost between himself and Arte Moreno, calling Tuesday's announcement that the Angels owner is exploring the possibility of selling the franchise "happy news," on Twitter, a development that gave him "renewed hope that my relationship with the Angels can be fully restored."
But Carew's animus toward the organization he played the final seven years of his 19-year Hall-of-Fame career with and spent eight years (1992-99) as the hitting coach for actually predates Moreno, who purchased the team from the Walt Disney Co. in 2003.
When Mike Scioscia took over as Angels manager in 2000 and brought in a new coaching staff, Carew arranged to spend part of spring training that season in Florida with the Minnesota Twins, the team he spent the first 12 years of his playing career with, and part of it in Tempe, Ariz., with the Angels.
But when Scioscia found out Carew had been in Twins camp, he was no longer welcome in Angels camp.
"Mike Scioscia said it's either one or the other, and I said to myself, 'Minnesota has been treating me great for so many years, does he think that I'm gonna give away secrets?' No," Carew said by phone from his home in South Orange County.
"All I wanted to do was to try to help the kids improve. I wasn't giving away secrets, so I said to him, 'No.' After that, it was kind of tough even going to ballgames. Then I finally stopped, and I only go to games now when the Twins are in town."
Carew, a .328 career hitter and seven-time American League batting champion who helped the Twins reach the American League Championship Series in 1969 and 1970 and the Angels win their first two AL West titles in 1979 and 1982, said he had a decent relationship with Moreno for the first several years Moreno owned the team.
"But as time went on, Arte didn't do anything about it," Carew said of his riff with Scioscia and his deteriorating relationship with the team. "Then, there was a little resentment. Even though [Moreno] would have me in his suite, I didn't feel comfortable, but I was trying to be a nice guy and not have any problems with the organization."