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Angels, Dodgers step closer to Freeway Series

For the first time, both L.A. teams are one round from World Series

Image: HunterGetty Images
Torii Hunter likes the idea of a Freeway Series. “You kind of catch yourself rooting for the Dodgers, and I’m sure the Dodgers are rooting for us,” he said.

LOS ANGELES - Ssshhhh, don’t let it get out, but the prospect of a Freeway World Series is a tantalizing prospect to Torii Hunter, of all people.

With the Angels and Dodgers in their respective league championship series for the first time in the same season, Angelenos and their counterparts in Orange County are chatting up the idea.

“I hope we’re one of those teams,” Dodgers manager Joe Torre said Tuesday.

The teams separated by 31 miles of freeway both swept their division series, with the Angels dispatching longtime nemesis Boston and the Dodgers finishing off St. Louis.

Taking the onramp to a Freeway World Series would require the Angels to get by the Yankees, beginning Friday in New York.

“That’s a dream world,” Angels leadoff hitter Chone Figgins said about an all-LA matchup. “Hopefully, they’ll win on their side, and we can get the first game in our series and go from there.”

The Dodgers would need to beat Philadelphia, something they failed to do a year ago. They open Thursday at Dodger Stadium, where Vin Scully’s soothing voice will broadcast the action and former manager Tom Lasorda will be sitting behind home plate.

“You kind of catch yourself rooting for the Dodgers, and I’m sure the Dodgers are rooting for us,” Hunter said during a workout in Anaheim. “It’d be kind of awesome to have a Freeway Series.”

The teams have a few things in common, starting with Los Angeles being the official name of the clubs, even if the Angels play in another county and survived a court battle to keep it.

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They both have former catchers as managers. The Angels’ Mike Scioscia played on the Dodgers’ 1988 World Series title team, the last time the Dodgers have been in the championship. The Dodgers’ Torre was an All-Star catcher back in his day, who last managed a World Series champion in 2000, with the Yankees.

Mickey Hatcher, the Angels’ hitting coach, and Alfredo Griffin, their first base coach, both starred alongside Scioscia in ’88.

Scioscia’s dislike of looking ahead is well-known, so he wouldn’t bite on the chance of facing his old team for baseball’s biggest prize.

“Believe me, our plate is full,” he said. “As long as you keep winning, it’s a lot of fun. We’re going to have to keep our play at a certain level to even make it a conversation.”

Over at rainy Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, Torre was equally reluctant to engage in the talk.

“For me to come out here and try to dream about who I’d like to play, I’ve got to play Philadelphia,” he said. “Whoever comes out from that other series is hopefully somebody we’re going to play. I just don’t look past that.”

Last week, Torre said his family and friends on the East Coast are rooting for the Dodgers to face the Yankees in the World Series.

“When my so-called friends and relatives talk about that, I really dismissed them in a hurry,” he said. “I just tell them we have a lot more work to do.”

If the Angels and Dodgers do meet, they each boast potential Hall of Fame sluggers in Vladimir Guerrero and Manny Ramirez, who has his own stadium section dubbed “Mannywood.” There’s a rockpile in center field in Anaheim that Guerrero likes to homer into.

A Freeway World Series might be hardest of all on the parents of Jered and Jeff Weaver. Jered will start Game 2 of the ALCS for the Angels, while brother Jeff is a former Dodgers starter who now works out of the bullpen.

Longtime fans of both teams will recall they once shared a home field.

The Angels began as an expansion team in 1961, playing at the old Wrigley Field. The Dodgers moved from Brooklyn after the 1957 season and played in the Los Angeles Coliseum.

In 1962, both teams relocated to the current site of Dodger Stadium, only the Angels called it Chavez Ravine on the days they were playing. Interleague play was still decades away, so there was no confusion about the stadium’s identity.

In 1966, the Angels moved down Interstate 5 to Anaheim Stadium (where football was once played and is now baseball-only Angel Stadium).

That’s where a Freeway World Series would begin and end because the American League won the All-Star game in July.

“I’m pretty sure it’s never been done before,” said Hunter, who came to Anaheim from Minnesota. “But we can’t get too far ahead of ourselves.”

Ah, but in a town that manufactures movie fantasies, everyone can dream.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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