Though he couldn't remember the specific opponent of that first game, Bruney guessed it to be Texas or Kansas City. Bruney was a big Bo Jackson fan, so he followed the Royals and Bruney's cousin was a pitcher for the Rangers. The family would often gather after those Rangers games in Seattle to wait for him. As a result, one of Brian's first vivid memories of baseball is pretty special. "Nolan [Ryan] would walk right by me and they'd always be like, 'go talk to him.' But I was little," Bruney recalled. "I was always too nervous as a kid to talk to him." To this day, Bruney has yet to talk to Nolan Ryan or to get his autograph, though he's purchased quite a few. As a kid, he collected autographs from the entire Rangers team, but never managed to get Ryan's. "[Ask] every other pitcher. Their idol was Nolan Ryan I'm sure," Bruney said. "I wouldn't say that it was a special thing. Everybody was a huge Nolan Ryan fan." Still, most aspiring pitchers do not have the opportunity to watch the larger than life Ryan walk right past them as a child in the tunnels under the Kingdome. That experience, and watching Mariners games with his uncle Mike, left quite the impression on Bruney at a very early age. "As soon as I could read, I was reading box scores. I knew from that age that I was going to play baseball," Bruney said.