Some Diehard Baseball Fans In Sports-crazed Sacramento Welcome Athletics And Hope They Stay Awhile

Van Thompson walked through the busy concourse shortly before first pitch and sang along to the national anthem , a white Athletics ball cap in hand covering his heart.
Earlier Wednesday morning, Susan Falcon took her dog out on the other side of town near a bustling coffee shop and raved about the positive vibe the A's have brought to California's sports-crazed capital city in such a short time.
On the fly, former minor league pitcher Jarod Pavese packed up two of his three daughters and the boyfriend of one and headed north from Southern California's Riverside County for a last-minute spring break trip to cheer their Chicago Cubs in the series finale.
"It was very spontaneous. We try to be as spontaneous as we can but not really," 17-year-old high school senior Gianna Pavese said, sitting with her boyfriend Gavinn Schulze, dad and 12-year-old sister Kat in row 10 of section 104 on a sunny spring day. "It's really exciting. It was just spur of the moment."
Despite some kinks still to be worked out, the A's relocation is providing fans who might not regularly go to games a big new opportunity to see the big leagues live.