Officials with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim said they are unlikely to submit a proposal to the NFL to have Angel Stadium serve as a temporary home for an NFL team, according to a report published Friday.
Scheduling conflicts between Major League Baseball and NFL games was the reason cited, the Orange County Register reported.
Anaheim Stadium had been the home of the Los Angeles Rams from 1980-1994.
Anaheim Stadium would be the second stadium in which management has declined to be a temporary home for an NFL team should one move to Los Angeles.
The Rose Bowl Operating Company Board voted July 8 not to reply to a request for a proposal from the NFL for the Rose Bowl to become a temporary home for an NFL team.
The board preferred to instead focus on a proposed arts and musical festival.
Possible temporary stadiums include the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Dodger Stadium and StubHub Center, despite its 27,000-seat capacity.
The Los Angeles market has been without a team since 1995, when the Rams moved to St. Louis and the Raiders returned to Oakland.
Both of those franchises are back in the relocation mix. Rams owner Stan Kroenke is proposing a stadium in Inglewood, and the Raiders have joined forces with the San Diego Chargers to back a stadium plan in Carson.
Plans call for both new stadiums to be completed in time for the 2018 season.
The league has scheduled a special meeting of NFL owners on Aug. 11 in Chicago to update them on the Los Angeles situation and to further define the schedule for one or two potential club relocations.