JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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To complete my conditioning for the upcoming Major League Baseball
season, I wrapped up spring training last week in Arizona. As part of
this regimen, I managed a half hour of conversation with the new general
manager of the Anaheim Angels, Bill Stoneman. I wanted to make sure that
he understood why almost 20% of last year’s season ticket holders --
including the group I was in -- didn’t renew this year. And, more
important, what he planned to do about it.
Stoneman turned out to be a soft-spoken, low-key, good-natured baseball
lifer who said he had received only a few letters from Angels defectors
and wasn’t fully aware of the disenchantment among the troops. Somebody
upstairs should tell him.
I was in Arizona because Bob Shelton, with whom I have long shared both a
close friendship and a passion for baseball, suggested several months ago
that we sign up for a five-day junket to the Cactus League training camps
offered by Elderhostel, which creates and packages adventures that will
fit the budgets and interests and energies of older people.
We enrolled eagerly, but one hitch developed. Four programs were offered:
the Seattle Mariners, Arizona Diamondbacks, San Francisco Giants and the
Angels. Naturally, we signed up for the Angels. A month later, we were
told that the Angels program had been canceled for lack of interest.
Only three people had applied -- and we were two of them (if the third
happens to read this, I’d be interested in meeting her). Meanwhile, the
other programs had already reached their limit of 50.
After some agonizing, we decided to get on the waiting list for the
Seattle program rather than give up our trip. And when two openings
appeared, we grabbed them. We figured as long as we were in the
neighborhood, we’d connect somehow with the Angels. And that’s the way it
played out.
The Seattle group we joined was eclectic -- and about half women. But
there was one common thread: a love and deep commitment to baseball. The
speakers at the seminar sessions -- from former Major League pitcher Joe
Black to Diamondbacks Vice President Roland Hemond -- understood this
instantly and never talked down to their audience.
There was a tour of the Diamondbacks splendid new ballpark (its luxury
boxes are the best example I’ve ever seen of capitalism run amok) and
three spring training games, all involving the Mariners.
We cut off from one of these games to drive to Tempe and spend our day
with the Angels, who were playing the San Diego Padres. I not only
interviewed Bill Stoneman, but we saw the Angels win for the first time
that week and ran into George Will, who was just hanging out there for no
apparent doubled-domed reason.
This was two days before Stoneman traded Jim Edmonds to the Cardinals for
a real, honest-to-God Major League pitcher and a rookie second baseman
who will probably open the season there for the Angels.
I take no credit -- well, maybe just a little -- for the trade. I’m sure
it was just coincidence that I pointed out to the general manager that
any revival of interest in the Angels depended on something happening
besides the loss of Chuck Finley to Cleveland. Stoneman did catch me up
when I said that the only thing that had changed since last year’s
disaster was the health of several key players; he pointed out correctly
that this, alone, was actually a profound change.
I couldn’t tell if he was serious in defending the performance the day
before of one of his projected front-line pitchers, who gave up 11 hits
and nine runs in three innings.
Stoneman pointed out that all of the hits were ground balls, which is
what the pitcher was supposed to induce. It was just rotten luck, he
said, and a “cement infield that the grounders got through for base hits.
The figures don’t show that, but we know it.” He also added that the
Angels pitchers had a better spring earned-run average than the Yankees
-- who had won only six of 28 games at the time.
He noted several times that the Angels “aren’t looking in any rearview
mirrors this season. Last year is gone. In baseball, things can change
very quickly, especially under the staff we’ve brought together who have
all played and won. When Pat Kelly decided he was through playing and
left our camp the other day, he told me it was the best he’d ever been
in, mainly because our staff is so high on credibility, communication and
organization.”
These are the sort of statements that tend to make cynics of
sportswriters but are embraced by the people who want to believe. Who
want to buy season tickets again. Who find it credible, along with the
general manager, that all those ground-ball hits off our pitchers will be
outs when they get to Anaheim.
But us believers got bruised badly last year, and we’re not yet ready to
forgive. The lack of interest in the Elderhostel Angels program was an
example. So were the crowds at the games we saw.
The Mariners packed their home field in Peoria for a game with the
Padres. When they went to Ho Ho Kam Park to play the Cubs, it looked like
a Nebraska homecoming football crowd. By contrast, the Angels’ stadium
was only about half-filled for the game we saw.
But George Will and Bob Shelton and I are as ready as we can get for the
new season. While we wait for the Angels’ opening game next week against
the Yankees, we would welcome some kindred spirits.
So if you’re of a like mind, you might want to drop Bill Stoneman a
letter to let him know you’d consider coming back -- providing, of
course, that those ground balls stay in the infield when the games begin
to count.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column appears
Thursdays.
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