Minor League Baseball 1925–1957 For parts of 33 seasons, late 1925 through 1957, the park was home to the Angels, who were a farm team of the Chicago Cubs. The Angels inaugurated the ballpark on September 29, 1925, with a win against the
San Francisco Seals. For 11 seasons, (1926–1935, 1938) the park was also the home of PCL team the
Hollywood Stars. In 1930, the Angels and Stars combined to draw more than 850,000 fans. The final minor league games at L.A. Wrigley came on September 15, 1957, a doubleheader loss to San Diego, with the Angels finishing the season in sixth place. Some consolation for Angels fans was that their star slugger
Steve Bilko won the PCL Most Valuable Player award for the third consecutive year. The Dodgers considered using Wrigley Field, the
Rose Bowl in
Pasadena and the
Los Angeles Coliseum. The team opted for four seasons in the 93,000-seat L.A. Coliseum, which had a 251-foot foul line in left field, while awaiting construction of
Dodger Stadium, with a seating capacity of 56,000.
Major League Baseball: Los Angeles Angels In October 1960, MLB expanded the
American League from eight to 10 teams. Teams were awarded to Los Angeles and
Washington, D.C. The L.A. franchise was awarded to
Gene Autry and
Bob Reynolds, and was called the Los Angeles Angels. In attendance were former
Vice President Richard Nixon,
Casey Stengel,
Ford Frick,
Joe Cronin, and
Ty Cobb. The 1961 Angels were reasonably successful for an expansion team, finishing in eighth place in the ten-team league. They were led in hitting by
Albie Pearson with a .288
batting average, in home runs by
Leon Wagner with 28, and
runs batted in by
Ken Hunt with 84. The pitching staff was led by
Ken McBride with 12 wins. Future World Series winning manager
Chuck Tanner played in seven games. The team drew 603,510 fans, an average of about 7,500 per game. The largest crowds they pulled in, approaching the ballpark's seating capacity, were games against the Yankees. The ballpark had always been a "hitters' park" in its minor league years, and even more so during the major league Angels' one year there. A record 248 home runs were hit, an average of three per game. That 248 figure would stand as a major league record for over 30 years, until it was broken at Denver's
Mile High Stadium in the 1990s. ==Professional boxing==