Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsSports

Angels take the road less traveled

July 25, 2008|Mike DiGiovanna, Times Staff Writer

BALTIMORE -- First stop, Camden Yards, where the Angels begin a three-game series against the Baltimore Orioles tonight.

"That park in the summer was like pitching in a studio apartment," said Chuck Finley, an Angel from 1986 to 1999. "The ball flies out of there like there's no tomorrow. Of all the parks I ever pitched in, that's the one I hated most."


Advertisement

Next stop, Fenway Park, where the Angels begin a three-game series against the defending World Series champion Boston Red Sox on Monday night.

"Sometimes," Finley recalled of historic and -- for the Angels -- horrific Fenway, "you go into a yard and you're so used to a team beating you, you're almost down 2-0 before the game starts."

Last stop, Yankee Stadium, where the Angels begin a four-game series Thursday night against the storied franchise that has won 26 World Series and always seems to have a prolific offense.

"It was always tough going to New York late in the season," former Angels outfielder Tim Salmon said. "You hope you have a five-run lead in the ninth, because those teams always came back."

One trip, 10 games, in three cities that have not been kind to the Angels. Since their inception in 1961, the Angels have gone 116-174 in Baltimore, 117-173 in Boston and 111-173 in New York.

Those cities have also combined to pack a powerful one-two-three punch to the Angels' pride, playoff hopes, or both.

Twenty-five times in franchise history, the Angels have ventured to Baltimore, Boston and New York on the same trip. Only three times have they had a winning trip.

Their overall record on those trips: 82-139.

"I can tell you why," said Salmon, an Angel from 1992 to 2006. "The years I was there, they had good teams in Baltimore, good teams in Boston and good teams in New York. You were bound to face at least two teams in playoff contention."

Often in suffocating conditions.

"The heat, the humidity . . . New York and Baltimore were really hot places -- it was brutal," Finley said. "By the time we'd get acclimated to it, we were gone."

This used to be a regular trip for the Angels, but because of adjustments to accommodate interleague play and the addition of Tampa Bay in 1997, the Angels have not made a Baltimore-Boston-New York trip since 1996.

"That's amazing; I can't believe they haven't done it since 1996," Salmon said. "Those were always great trips for meal money, though. I got called up in the middle of a trip to Oakland, Baltimore, New York and Boston, and we got $60 a day. Coming from triple A, that was a ton of money."

Los Angeles Times Articles
|