Fernando Valenzuela arrived in Los Angeles in 1980 as a young Mexican and built a community in Chavez Ravine for Mexican ...
Come to Dodger Stadium for a ballgame, stay for a ballpark tour in Japanese or a bite of Takoyaki -- a fritter described by ...
The historic impact Fernando Valenzuela made on the city of Los Angeles traces its roots to the 1950s, according to renounced ...
Fernando Valenzuela, the cultural hero and baseball legend whose journey from a dusty pitcher’s mound in rural Mexico to ...
El Sol del Valle de San Fernando on MSN4h
Fernandomania Forever
I feel like I lost an uncle or a cousin, a member of the family,” said Andres Rubalcava Rubio on the San Fernando Valley ...
This is The Athletic’s daily MLB newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Windup directly in your inbox. Fernando Valenzuela ...
The Yankees slugger has helped bounce the Dodgers from the postseason twice previously, and now could be the main obstacle between them and a World Series crown.
The arrival of Fernando Valenzuela to Major League Baseball in 1981 marked the beginning of a cultural phenomenon known as ...
But Latino Dodger fans quickly embraced Valenzuela’s pitching talent, called him “El Toro” — “the Bull” — and came to more ...
Fernando Valenzuela was more than just a Dodgers pitcher. He was a friendly soul who forged a strong connection between a ...
The Reporter (Vacaville) on MSN2h
Thomas Gase: Mourning the death of ‘El Toro’
Valenzuela, nicknamed El Toro, became a hero from Mexico that captivated not only Los Angeles, but the world. He replaced Jerry Reuss as the year’s Opening Day starter, throwing a shutout against the ...