/ Jul 11, 2025
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Dodger fans watch the procession for the Funeral Mass for Dodger Pitcher Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., left, helps bring the casket with the body of his father Fernando Valenzuela from Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles for internment after a funeral Mass on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Actor Edward James Olmos, center, takes photo with the mariachi group Sol de Mexico after the funeral mass for Dodger pitcher Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. Sol de Mexico performed during the mass. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Archbishop Jose Gomez, center, led the funeral mass for Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., talks to the media after the funeral mass for his father, Fernando Valenzuela, at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., gets hugs after the funeral mass for his father, Fernando Valenzuela, at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
The casket with the body Fernando Valenzuela is taken from Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles for internment after a funeral Mass on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Dodger fan Frankie Aguirre from Orange County gets a photo with the hearse for the funeral of Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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Dodger fans watch the procession for the Funeral Mass for Dodger Pitcher Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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Though he didn’t know him personally, like many of the fans who attended Wednesday morning’s funeral Mass for Fernando Valenzuela, Luis Dircio of Los Angeles felt impacted by the Dodger great.
“He’s part of L.A. I’m Mexican and he’s Mexican. He gave us hope, that even a Mexican could be something really important,” he said.
“He was our hero in L.A. and he just did a lot for our people,” he said, likening Valenzuela to another Dodgers great, Jackie Robinson, who broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball.
Close to 300 people were in attendance at Downtown Los Angeles’ iconic Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels for a solemn service led by Archbishop Jose´ Gomez.
“Fernando was an example to all of us,” he said. “We keep his example in our hearts and in our minds.”
Valenzuela died on Oct. 22 at age 63. A native of Navojoa, Mexico, he began with the Dodgers at age 19, the only pitcher to ever win both the Rookie of the Year and Cy Young Awards in the same season, in 1981.
FILE – In this Aug. 8, 1981, file photo, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela pitches in the All-Star game in Cleveland. The Dodgers needed a strike interrupted season and a pitching sensation named Fernando Valenzuela to win a championship in 1981. More important for the Dodgers, perhaps, is that they found a way that year to connect with Hispanic fans who nearly four decades later are still loyal supporters of the team. Author Jason Turbow tells PodcastOne Sports Now that the season was significant in many ways for the Dodgers, something he details in his new book “They Bled Blue,” a recap of a season like no other.(AP Photo/File)
With a large poster of himself in his prime as a Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher, Fernando Valenzuela answers reporters’ questions at a news conference announcing his return to the Dodger organization as a Spanish-language color commentator, at Dodger Stadium on Thursday, June 5, 2003. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)
A wreath of flowers and Dodger’s Fernando Valenzuela’s number are outside Dodger Stadium.. prior to game 1 of a World Series baseball game between the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. ..Valenzuela passed away earlier this week. (Photo by Todd Harmonson, Orange County Register/ SCNG)
Former Los Angeles Dodger Fernando Valenzuela waves to fans before throwing the first ceremonial pitch before the All-Star Game at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, July 19, 2022. (File photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/ SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela fans continue to visit a makeshift memorial outside Dodger Stadium before game 1 of the World Series in Los Angeles on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela receives flowers from three East Los Angeles fans during a baseball clinic in Los Angeles on May 16, 1981. (AP Photo/RR)
FILE – Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela blows bubbles as he passes the time in the dugout during the rain delay before Game 3 of the National League playoffs with the Expos at Montreal, Oct. 18, 1981. Fernando Valenzuela, the Mexican-born phenom for the Los Angeles Dodgers who inspired “Fernandomania” while winning the NL Cy Young Award and Rookie of the Year in 1981, has died Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024.(AP Photo/Rusty Kennedy, File)
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FILE – In this Aug. 8, 1981, file photo, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela pitches in the All-Star game in Cleveland. The Dodgers needed a strike interrupted season and a pitching sensation named Fernando Valenzuela to win a championship in 1981. More important for the Dodgers, perhaps, is that they found a way that year to connect with Hispanic fans who nearly four decades later are still loyal supporters of the team. Author Jason Turbow tells PodcastOne Sports Now that the season was significant in many ways for the Dodgers, something he details in his new book “They Bled Blue,” a recap of a season like no other.(AP Photo/File)
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After 17 seasons in the majors, he became a broadcaster for the Dodgers in 2003, working for more than 20 years until shortly before his death.
Mike Scioscia, Valenzuela’ Dodger teammate and catcher throughout the 1980s, eulogized his friend at the service.
“I can’t tell you how blessed we were to experience him as a 20-year old,” he said. “He had the heart of a lion.”
Scioscia spoke of Valenzuela’s strength and leadership abilities.
“He had a quiet confidence about him,” he said. “He always felt he was the best in the world, but he’d never tell anyone about it. He would walk out on that mound with all this internal confidence.”
“In our clubhouse we could feel the confidence as he walked through,” he said.
Scioscia noted: “He was a leader on a very veteran team,” despite his young age, highlighting that he was only 20 when he experienced the enormous fanfare that came to be known as Fernandomania.
“He just kept perspective the whole way and just kept pitching, day in and day out,” he said.
Scioscia also cited Valenzuela’s playfulness and sense of humor. In the locker room, he said, he often fiddled with a lasso he had, and when teammates would walk by he would toss the lasso and capture their foot at the ankle.
“He would rope you like he’d a rope a calf,” he said. “I don’t think he ever missed.”
Wednesday’s Mass also included a very teary eulogy from his son, Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., who bears a strong resemblance to his father. He spoke in Spanish.
“My dad was a man of little words,” he said. “If you knew him at the beginning, you would think he doesn’t talk at all … But if he was comfortable with you, he would speak with you. Once you got to know him, you couldn’t stop him.”
Valenzuela, Jr., spoke of his father’s generosity.
“If you asked Fernando for an autograph, he would give it to you,” he said. “Even if you didn’t ask him for anything, he’d give you his friendship. But he never asked for anything.”
“He would give you advice, sit with you, tell you stories,” he said. “He loved to joke. Sometimes people would ask him for an autograph and he’d say, ‘It’s not me.’ He was like a child all his life. And he loved to play baseball.”
Fans and friends agreed, some sharing their own thoughts outside before the service.
“I came to say goodbye to him, to a great friend,” said Ricardo Jaramillo of Los Angeles.
“He was a great friend to the whole city of Los Angeles,” he said.
Raoul Chaeres of Long Beach knew Valenzuela personally and considered him his idol.
“He was an example for all the Latinos and a support for the whole community,” he said through an interpreter.
Rev. James Anguiano, homilist for the Mass, shared some thoughts on Valenzuela, whose number 34 was retired by the team.
“Today I wanted to wear my number 34 jersey, but I didn’t think I could fit it under what I’m wearing,” he said.
While he lauded Valenzuela’s baseball accomplishments, he pointed out, “there was so much more to him, so much more that we could all learn from him … We need to recognize who he was as a human being, the goodness that came from him.”
“We thank him for serving as a role model in the Latino community, for inspiring and bringing hope to many people,” he said. “He did so not caring about himself, but caring about others.”
Valenzuela’s son spoke proudly of his father.
“He was always humble with everyone, even his children and grandchildren, everyone he met,” said Valenzuela, Jr.
“He was a great person,” he said. “He always had a smile and now we won’t have that smile.
“But he will always be in our hearts.”
Jarret Liotta is a Los Angeles-area-based freelance writer and photographer.
Dodger fans watch the procession for the Funeral Mass for Dodger Pitcher Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., left, helps bring the casket with the body of his father Fernando Valenzuela from Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles for internment after a funeral Mass on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Actor Edward James Olmos, center, takes photo with the mariachi group Sol de Mexico after the funeral mass for Dodger pitcher Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. Sol de Mexico performed during the mass. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Archbishop Jose Gomez, center, led the funeral mass for Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., talks to the media after the funeral mass for his father, Fernando Valenzuela, at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., gets hugs after the funeral mass for his father, Fernando Valenzuela, at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
The casket with the body Fernando Valenzuela is taken from Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles for internment after a funeral Mass on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Dodger fan Frankie Aguirre from Orange County gets a photo with the hearse for the funeral of Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
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Dodger fans watch the procession for the Funeral Mass for Dodger Pitcher Fernando Valenzuela at Our Lady of the Angeles Cathedral in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Expand
Though he didn’t know him personally, like many of the fans who attended Wednesday morning’s funeral Mass for Fernando Valenzuela, Luis Dircio of Los Angeles felt impacted by the Dodger great.
“He’s part of L.A. I’m Mexican and he’s Mexican. He gave us hope, that even a Mexican could be something really important,” he said.
“He was our hero in L.A. and he just did a lot for our people,” he said, likening Valenzuela to another Dodgers great, Jackie Robinson, who broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball.
Close to 300 people were in attendance at Downtown Los Angeles’ iconic Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels for a solemn service led by Archbishop Jose´ Gomez.
“Fernando was an example to all of us,” he said. “We keep his example in our hearts and in our minds.”
Valenzuela died on Oct. 22 at age 63. A native of Navojoa, Mexico, he began with the Dodgers at age 19, the only pitcher to ever win both the Rookie of the Year and Cy Young Awards in the same season, in 1981.
FILE – In this Aug. 8, 1981, file photo, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela pitches in the All-Star game in Cleveland. The Dodgers needed a strike interrupted season and a pitching sensation named Fernando Valenzuela to win a championship in 1981. More important for the Dodgers, perhaps, is that they found a way that year to connect with Hispanic fans who nearly four decades later are still loyal supporters of the team. Author Jason Turbow tells PodcastOne Sports Now that the season was significant in many ways for the Dodgers, something he details in his new book “They Bled Blue,” a recap of a season like no other.(AP Photo/File)
With a large poster of himself in his prime as a Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher, Fernando Valenzuela answers reporters’ questions at a news conference announcing his return to the Dodger organization as a Spanish-language color commentator, at Dodger Stadium on Thursday, June 5, 2003. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)
A wreath of flowers and Dodger’s Fernando Valenzuela’s number are outside Dodger Stadium.. prior to game 1 of a World Series baseball game between the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. ..Valenzuela passed away earlier this week. (Photo by Todd Harmonson, Orange County Register/ SCNG)
Former Los Angeles Dodger Fernando Valenzuela waves to fans before throwing the first ceremonial pitch before the All-Star Game at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, July 19, 2022. (File photo by Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star-News/ SCNG)
Fernando Valenzuela fans continue to visit a makeshift memorial outside Dodger Stadium before game 1 of the World Series in Los Angeles on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela receives flowers from three East Los Angeles fans during a baseball clinic in Los Angeles on May 16, 1981. (AP Photo/RR)
FILE – Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela blows bubbles as he passes the time in the dugout during the rain delay before Game 3 of the National League playoffs with the Expos at Montreal, Oct. 18, 1981. Fernando Valenzuela, the Mexican-born phenom for the Los Angeles Dodgers who inspired “Fernandomania” while winning the NL Cy Young Award and Rookie of the Year in 1981, has died Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024.(AP Photo/Rusty Kennedy, File)
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FILE – In this Aug. 8, 1981, file photo, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela pitches in the All-Star game in Cleveland. The Dodgers needed a strike interrupted season and a pitching sensation named Fernando Valenzuela to win a championship in 1981. More important for the Dodgers, perhaps, is that they found a way that year to connect with Hispanic fans who nearly four decades later are still loyal supporters of the team. Author Jason Turbow tells PodcastOne Sports Now that the season was significant in many ways for the Dodgers, something he details in his new book “They Bled Blue,” a recap of a season like no other.(AP Photo/File)
Expand
After 17 seasons in the majors, he became a broadcaster for the Dodgers in 2003, working for more than 20 years until shortly before his death.
Mike Scioscia, Valenzuela’ Dodger teammate and catcher throughout the 1980s, eulogized his friend at the service.
“I can’t tell you how blessed we were to experience him as a 20-year old,” he said. “He had the heart of a lion.”
Scioscia spoke of Valenzuela’s strength and leadership abilities.
“He had a quiet confidence about him,” he said. “He always felt he was the best in the world, but he’d never tell anyone about it. He would walk out on that mound with all this internal confidence.”
“In our clubhouse we could feel the confidence as he walked through,” he said.
Scioscia noted: “He was a leader on a very veteran team,” despite his young age, highlighting that he was only 20 when he experienced the enormous fanfare that came to be known as Fernandomania.
“He just kept perspective the whole way and just kept pitching, day in and day out,” he said.
Scioscia also cited Valenzuela’s playfulness and sense of humor. In the locker room, he said, he often fiddled with a lasso he had, and when teammates would walk by he would toss the lasso and capture their foot at the ankle.
“He would rope you like he’d a rope a calf,” he said. “I don’t think he ever missed.”
Wednesday’s Mass also included a very teary eulogy from his son, Fernando Valenzuela, Jr., who bears a strong resemblance to his father. He spoke in Spanish.
“My dad was a man of little words,” he said. “If you knew him at the beginning, you would think he doesn’t talk at all … But if he was comfortable with you, he would speak with you. Once you got to know him, you couldn’t stop him.”
Valenzuela, Jr., spoke of his father’s generosity.
“If you asked Fernando for an autograph, he would give it to you,” he said. “Even if you didn’t ask him for anything, he’d give you his friendship. But he never asked for anything.”
“He would give you advice, sit with you, tell you stories,” he said. “He loved to joke. Sometimes people would ask him for an autograph and he’d say, ‘It’s not me.’ He was like a child all his life. And he loved to play baseball.”
Fans and friends agreed, some sharing their own thoughts outside before the service.
“I came to say goodbye to him, to a great friend,” said Ricardo Jaramillo of Los Angeles.
“He was a great friend to the whole city of Los Angeles,” he said.
Raoul Chaeres of Long Beach knew Valenzuela personally and considered him his idol.
“He was an example for all the Latinos and a support for the whole community,” he said through an interpreter.
Rev. James Anguiano, homilist for the Mass, shared some thoughts on Valenzuela, whose number 34 was retired by the team.
“Today I wanted to wear my number 34 jersey, but I didn’t think I could fit it under what I’m wearing,” he said.
While he lauded Valenzuela’s baseball accomplishments, he pointed out, “there was so much more to him, so much more that we could all learn from him … We need to recognize who he was as a human being, the goodness that came from him.”
“We thank him for serving as a role model in the Latino community, for inspiring and bringing hope to many people,” he said. “He did so not caring about himself, but caring about others.”
Valenzuela’s son spoke proudly of his father.
“He was always humble with everyone, even his children and grandchildren, everyone he met,” said Valenzuela, Jr.
“He was a great person,” he said. “He always had a smile and now we won’t have that smile.
“But he will always be in our hearts.”
Jarret Liotta is a Los Angeles-area-based freelance writer and photographer.
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It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.
The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making
The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.
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