It's something all sports fans will deal with in their lives. Their favorite sportscaster will retire, or worse, pass on. Often times a radio or TV announcer can become more to a fan than the actual team. The reasons for this are simple: players change, coaches change, management changes, stadiums and even team colors and logos will change, but often times the voice telling the stories of a favorite team will remain the same.
It is like a continuous book-on-tape with the same narrator. Football fans will spend every fall weekend afternoon tuned in to hear the tales of battle of their favorite team. Baseball fans, probably the passionate about their announcers, will have every day of summer and more narrated by a familiar voice (162 days is nearly a half a year). Even basketball and hockey fans will invite their long time friends on the TV or radio to their home over 80 times a year.
For a life long Atlanta sports fan, the intimacy of the fan/sportscaster relationship is at the forefront of my mind this week. It was one week ago last year that long time Braves announcer Skip Caray died before he could join the team for a West coast road trip. For the first 23+ years of my life, my family had invited a man into our home, car and living room 162 times a year. Next to my immediate family or close friends, I knew no voice better.
Later that year Skip's long time partner Pete Van Wieren announced his retirement. Shortly thereafter, voice of the Dogs Larry Munson decided to call it quits as well. It was as if the door to the past, my childhood even, wasn't being closed...it was slammed. I still recall falling asleep to Steve Holman calling the Hawks as Mookie Blalock would dump it into Mutombo down low, and now have to wonder how much longer he can go?
Phillies fans mourned the passing of Harry Kalas nationally and I could understand what they were going through. Every team in every market will have to go through it eventually, it is just something the sports fan cannot avoid.
It is a Catch-22, really. We loathe new voices and amatuers who don't know how to tell us the story of the game how we know it is supposed to be told. But we also dread the day that the voice we have become so accustomed to must move on, whether it be by choice or act of God.
Who are some of your favorite/memorable sportscaster and their stories?
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And a home run for the wizard! Makes me smile every time I hear it.
ReplyDeleteAh, that is a great call. I'm assuming that's Jack Buck, classic! My favorite of his will always be "I don't believe, what I just saw!" following Gibson's pinch-hit home run in the 1988 series.
ReplyDeleteI love me some Mike Shannon....
ReplyDeleteIn college up in Missouri we'd always watch the Cardinals games on tv with "mute" turned on so we could listen to Mike Shannon on the radio. My fave Shannonism's were always his step-by-step descriptions of the picthers' habits. Nothing better than his voice, a Cards game, and a ice-cold Bud Light :)
Too bad Mike Shannon has a crazy-ass daughter who named her son Maddoc because she's a "mad doc" True story.
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