The 10 greatest Angels of all time, No. 6: Gene Autry
We recently asked you to list your choices for the 10 greatest Angels of all time. We received 993 ballots. Each weekday morning, a new person will be listed as we count down all 10.
Remember, any Angel was eligible, including managers, owners, announcers, etc. Points were assigned based on where you listed the person on the ballot. Your first choice received 12 points, second choice 10, third place eight, all the way down to one point for 10th place.
So without further ado, here is No. 6:
No. 6: Gene Autry (248 first-place votes, 3,102 points)
If not for Gene Autry, we wouldn’t be counting down the 10 greatest Angels, because the Angels would not exist.
In 1960, baseball announced it was going to put an expansion team in Los Angeles. Reading this news, Autry called MLB executives to inquire about how to become a broadcast partner for the team (Autry owned a radio station at the time).
After discussing terms of a radio deal, MLB executives hit upon a novel idea: Why didn’t Autry just buy the team? He did, and named them the Angels.
For years after that, it was the hope of seemingly every Angels fan and player to win a World Series title for Autry. Year after year passed, with no World Series in sight. The team didn’t even make the playoffs until 1979.
Autry died on Oct. 2, 1998. The Angels retired No. 26 (as in 26th man) in his honor and finally won the World Series in 2002.
ALSO:
The 10 greatest Angels, No. 10: Frank Tanana
The 10 greatest Angels, No. 9: Chuck Finley
The 10 greatest Angels, No. 8: Darin Erstad
The 10 greatest Angels, No. 7: Rod Carew
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