2002 World Series | |||||||||||||
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Teams | |||||||||||||
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Dates | October 19–27 | ||||||||||||
MVP | Troy Glaus (Anaheim) | ||||||||||||
Umpires | Jerry Crawford (crew chief), Ángel Hernández, Tim Tschida, Mike Winters, Mike Reilly, Tim McClelland | ||||||||||||
ALCS | Anaheim Angels over Minnesota Twins (4–1) | ||||||||||||
NLCS | San Francisco Giants over St. Louis Cardinals (4–1) | ||||||||||||
Broadcast | |||||||||||||
Television | Fox | ||||||||||||
TV announcers | Joe Buck and Tim McCarver | ||||||||||||
Radio |
ESPN (National) KLAC (ANA) KNBR (SF) |
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Radio announcers |
Jon Miller and Joe Morgan (ESPN Radio) Rory Markas and Terry Smith (KLAC) Duane Kuiper and Mike Krukow (KNBR) |
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World Series Program | |||||||||||||
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Team (Wins) | Manager | Season | |
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Anaheim Angels (4) | Mike Scioscia | 99–63, .611, GB: 4 | |
San Francisco Giants (3) | Dusty Baker | 95–66, .590, GB: 2½ |
The 2002 World Series was a best-of-seven playoff series to determine the champion of Major League Baseball for the 2002 season. It was the 98thseries between the champions of the American League (AL) and National League (NL), here respectively the Anaheim Angels and the San Francisco Giants. The series was played from October 19–27, 2002 at Pacific Bell Park (now AT&T Park) in San Francisco and Edison International Field of Anaheim (now Angel Stadium of Anaheim) in Anaheim. The Angels defeated the Giants by four games to three to win their first World Series championship.
This was the first World Series since the 1995 inception of the wild card in Major League Baseball (and the last until 2014) in which both wild card teams would vie for the title. The Angels finished the regular season in second place in the American League West, four games behind the AL West champions Oakland Athletics. They defeated the four time defending A.L. champions New York Yankees three games to one in the best-of-five American League Division Series (ALDS), and in doing so won their first postseason series in franchise history. They then defeated the Minnesota Twins four games to one in the best-of-seven American League Championship Series (ALCS) to advance to the World Series, another first in franchise history.