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  1. The 2002 American League Championship Series (ALCS) was a matchup between the Wild Card Anaheim Angels and the Central Division Champion Minnesota Twins. The Angels advanced to the Series after dethroning the reigning four-time AL Champion New York Yankees in the 2002 American League Division Series three games to one.

  2. The Angels and Twins went on to meet in the AL Championship Series (ALCS). The Angels became the American League champion, and defeated the National League champion San Francisco Giants in the 2002 World Series, for their first-ever World title.

  3. The 2002 Major League Baseball season finished with two wild-card teams contesting the World Series; the Anaheim Angels defeated the San Francisco Giants in seven games for the World Series championship. It was the first title in Angels team history. This was the first season for mlb.tv . Standings. Postseason. Bracket. Statistical leaders. Batting

  4. The 2002 American League Championship Series (ALCS) was a matchup between the Wild Card Anaheim Angels and the Central Division Champion Minnesota Twins. The Angels advanced to the Series after dethroning the reigning four-time AL Champion New York Yankees in the 2002 American League Division Series three games to one.

  5. 2002 American League Championship Series. Contents. Introduction. Umpires edit. Ed Montague, Mike Everitt, Brian Gorman, Larry Young, Dana DeMuth, Ed Rapuano. Results. Game 1 edit. Attendance: Game 2 edit. Attendance: Game 3 edit. Attendance: Game 4 edit. Attendance: Game 5 edit. Attendance: Related Sites.

  6. 2002 World Series recap. WATCH: 2002 World Series highlights. How the Angels' Rally Monkey came to be. Donnelly recalls big role in Halos' 2002 WS run. Bonds' performance among postseason history's best. WS clinch ranks as No. 1 moment in Angel Stadium history. Rookie Lackey answers call in Gm 7.

  7. The Angels went on to win the contest four games to three. From August 13th to September 4th, Most Valuable Player Miguel Tejada and the Oakland Athletics set an American League record of twenty straight wins.