A Lifetime of Angels Baseball

Growing up in California, the Angels were simply part of life — always on the radio, always on the TV. Like most kids, I enjoyed playing neighborhood baseball and spent a few years on little league teams. Trading baseball cards at lunch, spending hours playing Bases Loaded, RBI Baseball and other video games, and annoying local card shop owners were apart of everyday life. But fandom became something deeper the day my dad took me to my first game to see the California Angels in person. Standing in that ballpark, something clicked that no broadcast could fully replicate, and a lifelong bond was sealed.

What followed was one of the great rewards of sticking with a team through the lean and developmental years. Watching homegrown talents like Tim Salmon and Garret Anderson master their craft year after year, then seeing them finally bring a World Series title home in 2002, made every season of loyalty feel worth it. Those players weren’t just athletes — they connected years of memories, friendships, and family.

Today, that connection has a new chapter. Taking my two young kids to the Big A and watching them experience the same wonder I felt as a kid sitting next to my dad is what fandom is really about. The players change, the team name changes, the stadium changes but the joy of sharing Angels baseball with the next generation — that part never gets old and is worth passing on.

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GrandpaBaseball
Legend
6 hours ago

I was eight years old on opening day 1961, Dad was a Yankees fan and therefore an American League fan at heart. Back in the day mom dressed us all up in “nice” clothes for that long-awaited day to see all the cast-offs that were Angels and for us kids we were starting the learning curve of who was who and who we would also learn to become our favorite. For this game dad purchased 8 $2.50 tickets because two of my sisters chose to stay with the neighbors and play. Six kids were thinking that this was more carnival as much as an important day in baseball history and wanting pop, ice cream hot dogs etc. There was no bottled water back then and much to our delight mom and dad obliged, never mind the catsup-mustard chocolate from ice cream and the dreaded paint stains from the freshly painted wet wooden bench seats. We packed up the station wagon that was parked in a small parking lot with my brother and a sister and I in a rear facing seat in the back and my older brother having two youngsters falling asleep on him on the way home after being in the sun all day. We continued to see more games that summer.

Then the O’Malley days, the good and the bad. Sharing “Chaver Ravine” was a bit strange considering that we would alternate between Dodgers games and Angels games with dad loving Ken McBride starts and Koufax/Drysdale games and cursing O’Malley for charging more on occasion. What I remember was the difference of where we sat because we always had better seats at Angels games with very few fans there compared to the Dodgers games. (Always bringing our transistor radios to both team’s games. Oh boy was Vinny awesome.) Dodger stadium was like going first class compared to the Coliseum or Wrigley Stadium. (A wooden stadium built like Chicago’s Wrigley Stadium by the Wrigley chewing gum owner, taken down for public housing.)

After getting my CDL in April of 1968 and buying my first car would be the driver to both Dodgers and Angels games with my baseball interested games and one game stands out for me and that was Mickey’s last game in SoCal, 2 K’s and no hits.

I like my father before me had lots of kids and like my father’s family not all were baseball fans except for the years of Pony Baseball or taken to the games I managed or coached in at HS level or umpired at lots of levels. I started a Pony Baseball league in my community Coached 4 boys and 3 girls softball teams every year along with coaching HS and umpiring Pony and CIF games for years, truly very fond years. My teams usually were the Dodgers or Angels or Yankees and twice the Red Sox. After playoff and tournaments, we would go to most always Angels games or go to Rancho when the Angels played there. (Minor Leagues.) Then to San Berdo for the games there. One year 2 of my boys and I went to Atilanto to see the Quakes play the Seattle minors and then off to Lake Elsinore for our team playing there along with 25 games at home.

Lots of folks don’t like the Big A, but my family always enjoyed seeing games there and meeting and seeing new folks, old friends and a handful of players. Hope they fix it up and continue playing there. As for the name, we prefer Los Angeles Angels because that is what we were starting out. I always disliked California Angels because we are a SoCal local American League team.

Thanx fer reading this long diatribe. 1961 to 2026 fan. 😍 

AngelsFanInHell
Trusted Member
7 hours ago

I only remember going to one or two games with my family, but went to countless games with my friends.

20260614_123155
BannedInLA
Legend
8 hours ago

Yup. Fandom is basically cultural. Winning & Losing are secondary in the end.

I’m an LA native that only moved to the OC a few years ago, but, I’ve been a lifelong Angels fan. Particularly because they were my first live MLB experience and partly because I wanted to root for the “underdog” .
Whatever the case, I was there then, I’m here now and will be here later.

PS – Change the name back to the “California Angels”, please.

SD19
Trusted Member
9 hours ago

My exact experience down to having 2 small ones I love taking to games now. I think the experience for little kids getting to go to the park gets a little lost on the current state of the franchise. My boy has a drawer in his dresser with all his bobble heads and that’s priceless. Thanks for sharing

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