Heaven Sent
You’re running out of time to see Disney’s most glorious attraction
Imagine tens of thousands of visitors
cheering, applauding and screaming with delight. Envision a
haunting backstory about an ancient curse. Picture nail-biting suspense
with the outcome always in jeopardy. Plenty of action. Memorable
characters and sing-a-long tunes. Popcorn, hot dogs and other junk food at
the ready. And performance after performance, with comforting consistency,
the good guys win.
Since May, it has been Disney’s greatest attraction. No, I’m not
talking about Mickey’s Detective School. You won’t find it anywhere inside
Disneyland or, for that matter, California Adventure. You’ll find it in
Anaheim five minutes to the east, at Edison International Field.
Site art © 2002 MLB Advanced Media,
L.P. All rights reserved
The Angels website can
be accessed by clicking above
The Disney Company-owned Anaheim Angels are in a tense pennant race
and, in 40 years, have never played better — or been more fun to watch.
As the final week of the regular season winds down, the Angels are not
only battling the Oakland A’s for first place in their division, but also
challenging the New York Yankees for the best record in the league.
This season, their games have been packed with more drama and
excitement than the best theme park attraction.
Unlike Disney’s nearby theme parks,
Disney’s baseball team is:
? improving with age. No peeling paint. No ugly green construction
fences. The core of the Angels team is young, and sure to improve. Plus,
their best players are locked up with multi-year contracts, promising a
competitive ballclub for the foreseeable future.? providing new, exciting and different entertainment six or seven
nights a week. No four-year-old parade. The Angels provide something new
to talk about by the water cooler — good or bad — every day. And, the
excitement is spontaneous.? a better deal than a one-day Disneyland pass. Surprisingly, the
team rarely outdraws Disneyland in daily attendance, even though tickets
can be had for as little as $4 each. And the Angels have offered enough
discounts and promotions through the year to make DCA blush.? is showcased in a much more relaxing atmosphere. Beautifully
renovated Edison International Field provides a slower pace and less
congestion. There are no shin-seeking strollers. No pin traders. Plenty
of cold beer and peanuts. And Disney managers who actually walk the park
where they work and encourage their employees.
Walt Disney’s association with the
Angels goes back to Day One. Walt sat on the Angels’ original
board of directors and its advisory board in the early 1960s. Walt helped
convince former owner Gene Autry to move the club from Los Angeles to
Anaheim in 1966. For years, Disney sponsored a Disneyland day at Anaheim
Stadium, which included tickets to both Disneyland and an afternoon Angels
game, complete with Mickey, Goofy and other characters dressed in baseball
uniforms hamming it up on the field between innings.
By the mid-1990s, the Disney Company had launched its own pro hockey
team, the Mighty Ducks, a block away from Anaheim Stadium and acquired the
ESPN all-sports cable network in the Capitol City/ABC deal. The Company
figured that adding the Angels could help provide the foundation for a
Southern California regional version of ESPN. So, in 1996, Disney acquired
a 25% operating interest in the Angels and purchased full ownership after
Autry’s death in 1998.
Disney’s years in charge of the Angels, alas, would be at least as
miserable as the pre-Disney years. The Company backfired in shifting the
focus away from baseball and onto theme park-type entertainment. (Anyone
remember the oversized teddy bear mascots or the over-caffeinated
cheerleaders?) Hostile competitors forced Disney to abandon the regional
ESPN idea. Soon, Disney became disenchanted with the economics of pro
baseball, and in the last few years has tried to unload the team. Which
makes the team’s resurgence all the more surprising — and sweet.
Site art © 2002 MLB Advanced Media,
L.P. All rights reserved
Edison Field is
also detailed on the Angels website
My first trip to Angel Stadium
wasn’t long after my first trip to the Magic Kingdom. It was, I think, in
the spring of 1971 during a Freeway Series game between the Angels and
crosstown rivals the L.A. Dodgers. At age 8, I could barely tell a
baseball from a bowling ball. I spent the entire game switching my
allegiance to the latest team to score a run. But within a few years I
knew all the Angels players by number. I’d go to bed at night with a
portable radio under my covers, listening to KMPC 710 AM (now Radio
Disney) until Dick Enberg and Don Drysdale called the final out.
During summer afternoons, when my dad had to work, my family would
spend two hours riding the OCTD bus from Costa Mesa to Anaheim, any time
Nolan Ryan was pitching or there was a special giveaway, like Bat Day
(when we received regulation Little League bats), Helmet Day, Ball Day (in
an age when no one thought about throwing their souvenir on to the field),
or Fan Appreciation Day (when they gave away almost as many expensive
prizes as there were fans in attendance).
The often-inept Angel teams rarely rewarded my loyalty. While today’s
Angels more identify with the scrappy underdog Mickey Mouse, historically
they were more like luckless Charlie Brown. The Angels are less known for
winning than for freak injuries, off-the-field tragedies, last place
finishes, and a handful of promising seasons that invariably ended with a
last minute collapse.
This season, at least, that all can
change. Tickets are still available for this weekend’s three
games against last year’s division winner, the Seattle Mariners. If you
can pull yourself away from your 200th viewing of the Electrical Parade,
give the Angels a look. There’s plenty of room on the bandwagon — even
though it will make it tougher for me to get World Series tickets.
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