The Sports Report: There could have been a ballpark in Woodland Hills
- Share via
Hello everyone. My name is Houston Mitchell and I hope everyone out there is watching “Agents of SHIELD” because this looks like it could be the best season of the show so far.
Baseball
Bill Shaikin wrote a great story on how a minor league ballpark almost ended up in Woodland Hills. A quick recap before you go read the story here:
In 2012, Peter Guber joined the Dodgers’ new ownership group. In 2014, he led an investment partnership that bought the minor league team in Oklahoma City. The Dodgers also employ players at Class A Rancho Cucamonga of the California League, but they do not own the team.
At the same time, in Woodland Hills, Peter Lowy, then Westfield’s chief executive officer, had land that housed a fading mall. The land needed to be used for something. The two got together and developed a plan: Why not buy a California League team, put it in Woodland Hills, and let the Dodgers run it?
“Where else would it be better to have a minor league team for the Dodgers?” Lowy told Shaikin. “I think it would have been sold out for every game.”
“This wasn’t going to be some big money-maker,” Guber said. “It was marginal in that respect. But it would have been great for the Dodgers. We thought it would have been fun.
“The team wouldn’t have been something somebody would follow in the Los Angeles Times, but we felt it could be a really good incubator for executive talent, and for trying out new fan initiatives.”
The mayor of Los Angeles, Eric Garcetti, was on board with the project. The city would not have had to pay a dime. Everyone loved this idea. Except for one person.
“There was nobody that did not like it,” Guber said, “except for Arte Moreno.” Moreno, of course, owns the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, California, United States, North America, Earth.
Under baseball rules, the Dodgers and Angels share the same territory: Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties. So if a minor league team wanted to play anywhere within that territory, the Dodgers and Angels would have to approve.
Moreno did not approve.
“He wasn’t mean or anything,” Guber said. “He was just indifferent to any of our propositions.
“He has a right to do anything he wants. We have no quarrel with that. … But it certainly didn’t leave a good taste in our mouths, in terms of our relationship in the marketplace.”
And that was that.
You can read the whole story by clicking here.
Golf
Tiger Woods shot a three-over-par 73 on Friday in the second round of the PGA Championship, putting him at five over for the tournament when the cut line was plus-four. His last opportunity came on No. 18, the least-imposing hole at Bethpage Black, but his approach from 113 yards hit the front of the green and spun back into the intermediate rough. He missed on his Hail Mary chip from 40 feet and wound up five feet from the cup. He made that for par, but it wasn’t enough.
It may not have mattered much though, not with the way Brooks Koepka is playing. Koepka followed his opening-round 63 with a 65 for the lowest 36-hole score (128) in majors history. That beats the previous record, held by several golfers, by two strokes.
After two rounds, Koepka has a seven-shot lead over Jordan Spieth and Adam Scott.
“What Brooksy did, he’s driving it 330 yards in the middle of the fairway,” Woods said. “He’s got nine-irons when most of us are hitting five-irons, four-irons, and he’s putting well. That adds up to a pretty substantial lead, and if he keeps doing what he’s doing, there’s no reason why he can’t build on this lead.”
NBA playoffs
Western Conference Finals
All times Pacific
at Golden State 116, Portland 94
at Golden State 114, Portland 111
Tonight, 6 p.m., Golden State at Portland, ESPN
Monday, 6 p.m., Golden State at Portland, ESPN
*Wednesday, 6 p.m., Portland at Golden State, ESPN
*Friday, 6 p.m., Golden State at Portland, ESPN
*Sunday, May 26, Portland at Golden State, ESPN
Eastern Conference Finals
All times Pacific
at Milwaukee 108, Toronto 100
at Milwaukee 125, Toronto 103
Sunday, 4 p.m., Milwaukee at Toronto, TNT
Tuesday, 5:30 p.m., Milwaukee at Toronto, TNT
*Thursday, 5:30 p.m., Toronto at Milwaukee, TNT
*Saturday, May 25, 5:30 p.m., Milwaukee at Toronto, TNT
*Monday, May 27, 5:30 p.m., Toronto at Milwaukee, TNT
*-if necessary
NHL playoffs
Western Conference Finals
All times Pacific
at San Jose 6, St. Louis 3
St. Louis 4, at San Jose 2
San Jose 5, at St. Louis 4 (OT)
at St. Louis 2, San Jose 1
Sunday, Noon, St. Louis at San Jose, NBC
Tuesday, 5 p.m., San Jose at St. Louis, NBCSN
*Thursday, 6 p.m., St. Louis at San Jose, NBCSN
Eastern Conference Finals
All times Pacific
at Boston 5, Carolina 2
at Boston 6, Carolina 2
Boston 2, at Carolina 1
Boston 4, at Carolina 0
*if necessary
Other newsletters
We also have five other newsletters you can subscribe to for free. They are emailed to you and we don’t sell your name to other companies, so no spam from us. They are:
Our Dodgers newsletter, written by me. Subscribe here.
Lakers newsletter, written by Tania Ganguli. Subscribe here.
Horse racing newsletter, written by John Cherwa. Subscribe here.
Boxing/MMA newsletter, written by Lance Pugmire. Subscribe here.
Soccer newsletter, written by Kevin Baxter. Subscribe here.
Odds and ends
Another horse fatality at Santa Anita; 24 thoroughbreds have died since Dec. 26…. Sports leagues hope to win where criminal justice system hasn’t on domestic violence…. Dodgers blast Reds with four home runs and Rich Hill pitches a gem…. Tour of California’s convoy of controlled chaos is the race behind the race…. FC Barcelona’s youth academy searches for soccer’s next Messi…. Mick Cronin isn’t a fan of tough talk, but he wants UCLA to be tough…. Sofia Abrego pulls off rare distance triple at L.A. City Section track and field finals…. Galaxy star Zlatan Ibrahimovic suspended for two games by MLS…. LAUSD is investigating allegation of academic misconduct involving Narbonne athlete…. Matt Harvey snuffs out the Royals’ hitting power in Angels’ win.
Today’s local major sports schedule
(All times Pacific)
Dodgers at Cincinnati, 1 p.m., Sportsnet LA, AM 570
Kansas City at Angels, 7 p.m., FSW, KLAA 830
Born on this date
1909: Tennis player Fred Perry
1924: Sportscaster Jack Whitaker
1937: Baseball player Brooks Robinson
1946: Baseball player Reggie Jackson
1960: Hockey player Jari Kurri
1960: Tennis player Yannick Noah
1962: Volleyball player Mike Whitmarsh
1973: Race car driver Dario Franchitti
1983: Football player Vince Young
Died on this date
1963: Football player Ernie Davis, leukemia, 23
And finally
Reggie Jackson’s final at-bat in Fenway Park. Watch it here.
That concludes the newsletter for today. If you have any feedback, ideas for improvement or things you’d like to see, please email us here. If you want to subscribe, click here.
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.