Arte Moreno

CEO

Birthday August 14, 1946

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Tucson, Arizona, U.S.

Age 77 years old

Nationality United States

#44196 Most Popular

1946

Arturo "Arte" Moreno (born August 14, 1946) is an American businessman.

1965

In 1965, Moreno graduated from high school and in 1966, he was drafted into the United States Army and fought in the Vietnam War.

1968

After returning to civilian life in 1968, he enrolled at the University of Arizona where he graduated in 1973 with a degree in marketing.

After school, he was hired to work at Eller Outdoor, an advertising company.

1984

He traveled across the country for the next seven years, relocating several times and in 1984, he moved back to Arizona, settling in Phoenix, where he was hired by billboard company Outdoor Systems.

In 1984, Moreno and his friend Wally Kelly attempted unsuccessfully to buy the firm from owner William S. Levine.

Moreno and Kelly entered into a partnership with Levine, and Moreno later became its president and chief executive officer.

1986

With baseball being Moreno's favorite pastime, he purchased the Salt Lake Trappers minor league team alongside 17 other investors in 1986.

1992

The group owned the team until 1992, and the venture proved to be a resounding financial success.

1996

In 1996, Moreno took Outdoor Systems public.

1998

The company's stock soared, and in 1998 Outdoor Systems was purchased by Infinity Broadcasting for $8 billion.

2001

By 2001, Moreno wished to own a Major League Baseball (MLB) team.

He attempted to buy controlling interest in his home state's Arizona Diamondbacks, but no deal could be reached.

2002

He nonetheless remained determined to own a Major League team, and soon set his sights on the 2002 World Series champion Anaheim Angels.

2003

On May 15, 2003, he became the first Mexican-American to own a major sports team in the United States when he purchased the Anaheim Angels baseball team from the Walt Disney Company.

In August 2022, he announced that he would explore a possible sale of the franchise, but in January 2023, he decided not to sell the team.

Moreno was born to a Mexican American family in Tucson, Arizona, the oldest of 11 children of Maria and Arturo Moreno, who immigrated from Mexico.

His father ran a small print shop; his grandfather owned Tucson's first Spanish-language newspaper.

It was announced in April 2003 that Moreno had agreed with The Walt Disney Company to purchase the team for $180 million.

On May 15, 2003, MLB commissioner Bud Selig announced that the sale of the Angels to Moreno had been approved.

One of the first people to congratulate Moreno after the news was Diamondbacks' owner Jerry Colangelo, a personal friend who declared it a good opportunity for Moreno.

Moreno soon demonstrated a willingness to spend the money necessary to sign premium players, including star outfielder Vladimir Guerrero.

He also took a hands-on approach, becoming a regular attendee of the team's home games and periodically leaving his owner's box during games to mingle with fans in the regular stadium seating areas and concourses.

All of these moves proved very popular with fans.

In the first year of his ownership, the Angels drew more than three million fans, 750,000 more than their championship season.

2005

However, Moreno encountered a substantial backlash from fans of the team, and in particular, from the city leadership of Anaheim, California, over his decision in 2005 to change the name of the team from the Anaheim Angels to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

Moreno saw the change as part of an overall strategy to increase the team's revenue by actively marketing it to, and associating it with, the entire Los Angeles metropolitan area, rather than restricting the team's identity to the city of Anaheim and to Orange County.

In recent years, the San Diego Zoo and Los Angeles Times have been notable club sponsors, while all baseball TV rightsholders also use some variation of the team's new name, indicating the effect of Moreno's plan.

But the move outraged Anaheim city officials, who responded by suing the team.

It also angered a substantial segment of the Angels' fan base in Orange County, who took pride in the team's identity being distinct from Los Angeles.

The awkwardness of the of Anaheim suffix, appended to satisfy a contractual requirement for Anaheim to be included in the team's name, also caused the new name to become the subject of national ridicule.

Eventually, the team won the lawsuit filed by the city.

Aside from the name controversy, Moreno's first few seasons as owner of the Angels were largely successful.

2006

Just prior to the start of the 2006 Major League season, Moreno scored another success in signing a lucrative contract with Fox Sports Net for the television broadcast rights for the Angels' regular season games.

The ten-year deal significantly increased the team's television revenue.

In April 2006, Forbes magazine estimated the team to be worth $368 million—twice the amount Moreno paid for the club only three years earlier; in January 2018 Forbes estimated the franchise value at $1.75 billion.

2007

The team posted three consecutive winning seasons for the first time in club history (2007–2009), including winning the American League Western Division championship in 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2014 when they finished with a league leading 98 regular season wins.

However, the Angels, even with Albert Pujols and Mike Trout at the helm for the team, could not lead them back to the postseason or win a postseason game.

2010

From 2010 to 2022, the Angels failed to win a postseason game (the longest gap since their drought from 1987 to 2001) despite a massive deal for Trout for over $400 million and high priced signings of players such as Pujols, Anthony Rendon, Josh Hamilton, that totaled over $500 million.

A losing season in 2022 tied a franchise record of seventh straight losing seasons, matching the mark set from 1971 to 1977.