2011 VSB Media Report

Page 252

FACULTY MEMBER FEATURED : RONALD HILL (MARKETING) DATE: DEC. 15, 2011 MEDIA OUTLET: THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR AUTHOR: DANIEL B. WOOD

Dynasties undone? Clippers, Angels are now the 'it' teams in L.A. The Angels signed superstar Albert Pujols last week for a record-breaking $250 million. And now the Clippers have just signed dynamic point guard Chris Paul. Repeat: The Los Angeles Clippers. Things may be finally looking up for two major-league sports teams in Los Angeles, after years of taking their cue from the Avis Rent a Car “We Try Harder” playbook. And their fans are taking heart. Not the obnoxious ones that everyone sees on TV, lining the parade route for the Lakers – 16time NBA champs – or the Dodgers, which many baseball fans hate as much as the Yankees. No, the teams we’re talking about are the Los Angeles Clippers and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. The latter made history last week by signing batting superstar Albert Pujols for a record-breaking $250 million. His 10-year contract cost a third more than owner Arte Moreno paid for the team in 2003. Anaheim, about 45 minutes south of Los Angeles, has always been considered by many a small-potatoes town, along with their team. The Angels have lived in the shadow of the Dodgers, one of Major League Baseball’s marquee teams, despite the Angels winning the World Series in 2002. And now the Clippers have just signed Chris Paul, judged by many to be the most dynamic point guard since Magic Johnson. Repeat: The Los Angeles Clippers. Many people outside the city don’t even know there is such a team. Rooting for the Los Angeles Clippers has been so difficult that the editors at Webster put the example in their dictionary to precisely explain, “fool’s errand.” “Finally, my time has come,” school custodian Rod Allen told me, as I stepped into a Starbucks in Los Angeles this morning. He says he has cheered for the Clippers over the years despite past promises that have not materialized, including that the signing of star center Danny Manning was supposed to bring a championship. “I’m sick of being in the Lakers’ shadow,” says Mr. Allen. “Who remembers who placed second to Seabiscuit?” He was reading Bill Dwyre, lead sports columnist for the Los Angeles Times, who wrote: “Death, taxes and Clippers incompetence are the axioms by which we live.” Paul, a four-time All-Star, has the kind of statistics that can remake a franchise – averaging 18.7 points a game and 9.9 assists. He has the kind of full-court skill that can make other players

2011 Media Report Villanova School of Business Page 251


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