ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Baseball's Angels have a new
name, and it's a mouthful: The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
The switch, which will be challenged in court by the city of Anaheim, is
intended to help the team market itself to more of Southern California,
attract more advertising sponsors and broadcast revenue, the team said
Monday.
"We believe that the appeal in the marketplace will be broader," Angels
spokesman Tim Mead said.
The city of Anaheim will file a lawsuit to block the name change and
hopes to obtain a temporary restraining order in place this week, city
spokesman John Nicoletti said.
Anaheim officials believe the change violates the terms of the team's
33-year lease with the city.
Fans might have to get used to the 'of Anaheim' name.
(AP)
"It's geographically confusing and absurd," Nicoletti said. "No other
professional sports franchise that I know of has two different cities in
its names."
When the franchise began in 1961, owned by singing cowboy Gene Autry, it
was the Los Angeles Angels. The team became the California Angels when
it moved to Anaheim in 1966. In 1997, when the team was controlled by
The Walt Disney Co., the franchise was renamed the Anaheim Angels.
Arte Moreno bought the team in 2003, one year after it won the World
Series, and he wanted to change the name.
The Angels drew 3,375,677 last season, the third-highest total in
baseball behind the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers.
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