Politics & Government

UPDATED: Controversy Erupts Over Street Name Change to Vin Scully Avenue

"Voice and symbol of baseball," or "only a sportscaster?" Despite pushback from locals, the city approves Vin Scully Avenue.

LOS ANGELES, CA -The Los Angeles City Council today renamed a street leading to Dodger Stadium after Vin Scully, whose 67 years as the Dodgers play- by-play man concludes at the end of this season. The name change comes despite opposition from locals who argued that Scully is a great sportscaster but not a war hero befitting of the honor.

The council's vote finalizes a process started in January to rename Elysian Park Avenue between Sunset Boulevard and Stadium Way as "Vin Scully Avenue."

A dedication ceremony for the sign is scheduled for Monday, in time for the Dodgers' opening day.

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Changing the street's name in honor of the man who began announcing Dodger games when Harry S. Truman was president was opposed by the Citizens Committee to Save Elysian Park and the Echo Park Improvement Association.

Opponents say the change "blot(s) out the name of a beloved public institution and city resource, Elysian Park."

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They backed dedicating another spot -- the intersection of Stadium Way and Elysian Park Avenue -- as "Vin Scully Plaza."

Ken Klein of Echo Park wrote that "Vin Scully Plaza would be a very fitting tribute to this man, who is after all only a sportscaster, not a war hero, or an officer fallen in the line of duty, or a revered community leader. Give the man his due, but not the whole street."

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The Dodgers earlier this week replaced the address on its "Welcome to Dodgers" entrance sign to read 1000 Vin Scully Avenue, in anticipation of today's vote.

City Councilman Gil Cedillo, who proposed the street name change, has called Scully "the voice and symbol of baseball, not just for the Dodgers but the entire nation."

The 88-year-old Bronx-born Scully has announced Dodger games since 1950, when the team played in Brooklyn. He has said the 2016 season will be his last.

Scully has been an announcer longer than anyone else in sports history. A ranking system devised by author Curt Smith for his 2005 book "Voices of the Game" determined that Scully was baseball's greatest announcer, giving him a perfect score of 100, based on such factors as longevity, language, popularity and persona.

City News Service

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