Spanos was named team president and
chief executive officer of the Chargers by his father in early 1994. Under Spanos's leadership, the Chargers made it to
Super Bowl XXIX the first season and won 113 games between 2004 and 2014, the fourth-most in the league, which included five
AFC West championships and four playoff game wins. In May 2015, Spanos ceded control of the team to his sons, John and A.G., though he stayed on as chairman to oversee a new stadium process. After a proposed ballot measure for a hotel tax financed stadium plan in downtown San Diego failed in November 2016 with 43 percent approval, the Chargers weighed their option to return to the Los Angeles market. In January 2017, Spanos exercised the option to relocate the team to Los Angeles. The move was met with criticism by San Diego due to not being able to find a stadium solution in the city, with 15 years of failed proposals blocked by city officials and business leaders. The team's temporary headquarters was in Costa Mesa under a 10-year lease until a permanent location in the Los Angeles area was acquired. In 2020, construction was completed on the Chargers' new stadium,
SoFi Stadium, which is shared with the
Los Angeles Rams. The venue is owned and operated by StadCo LA, LLC., a joint partnership with
Kroenke Sports & Entertainment and the Los Angeles Chargers. Since his ownership formally began in 2018, the Chargers have reached the postseason three times but have never reached the Super Bowl. ==Philanthropy==