Archive for the 'Sports' Category

11
Nov
10

Dave Niehaus: 1935-2010

This from Ken Levine, and The Huffington Post. Ken tells the story much better than I ever could, so I’m going to copy/paste his article below. We will miss you, Dave. Thanks for the memories…

“The best way for a baseball announcer to endear himself to a new audience is to be with a winning team. You report good news every night and the fans will love you. Piece of cake. On the other hand…

When I first became a broadcaster for the Seattle Mariners in 1992, I joined Dave Niehaus, who had been their voice since day one back in 1977. He said to me, “I figured it out, Kenny. For me to get to a .500 record, the team would have to go 2042-0.”

And yet, he became the second most treasured icon in Seattle, right behind Mt. Rainier.

Can you imagine how many truly bad, ugly games he called over the years? Not a lot of good news to impart there. The Mariners for the first twenty years were just God awful.

Still, people in the Pacific Northwest clung to his every word. The attraction was not the team; it was listening to Dave. His passion for the game, vivid descriptions, and magnificent voice made any baseball game sound exciting, even a Mariners’.

Prior to joining Seattle, Dave worked alongside Dick Enberg calling games for the then-California Angels. Team owner Gene Autry once said to Dave, “You call a hell of a game. It’s not the one I’m watching but it’s a hell of a game.” Actually that’s only half true. It was the game you were watching, only better. Because Dave had something that so few announcers have today — showmanship. You were not just getting play-by-play, you were being told a tale by a master storyteller. Name me a better way of spending a warm summer night sitting out on the front porch.

Dave Niehaus passed away yesterday at age 75. Like all of Seattle, I’m devastated. We didn’t lose an announcer; we all lost a member of the family. Personally, Dave was the greatest broadcast partner I ever had. I’ve been very lucky to work with some of the best, including four Hall-of-Famers. I greatly respect them all and am eternally grateful for their friendship.

But I loved Dave Niehaus.

Summer will never be the same. And neither will Christmas, at least for me. My yearly tradition was to call Dave on Christmas morning. That’s what the holidays are all about, right? Reaching out to the people who mean the most to you, and bitching about the Mariners’ pitching.

There are many tributes to Dave today, along with replays of his classic calls and glowing testimonials. Nice to see that some ballplayers, like Ken Griffey Jr. and Jay Buhner, have already weighed in.

But I’d like to share some off the air memories. No one was more enthusiastic, laughed harder or as often, and looked better in white shoes than Dave Niehaus.

On the 4th of July he always wore this ridiculous red, white, and blue jacket. I tried to get him to wear it all year.

He still would go to movies with me even after I made him sit through Woody Allen’s Shadows and Fog. To this day I still feel guilty about that.

It could be twelve degrees in Cleveland in April and he’d keep the window open in the booth because he felt it was cheating the audience to not be “in the game.” I told him in 1992 this was not good for his health! I was right!

I don’t remember just how it started but whenever the Mariners were down by ten runs or more, Dave and I would sing the “Wabash Cannonball” on the air. Unfortunately, we sang it so often we no longer had to consult the lyric sheet.

He referred to himself as “the Veteran Spieler”.

Three years ago, when I filled in for him, (and that was like Steven Seagall filling in for Brando), he called me after the first inning to say how great it was to hear me again. What made that even more touching was that I was rusty as hell. He called me anyway.

He was a great joke teller. His telling was far better than most of the jokes.

He knew every advance scout, coach, owner, reporter, umpire, official scorer, PR person, PA announcer, organist, clubhouse attendant, pressbox attendant, and commissioner in baseball.

I was forever in awe of the descriptive images he would just routinely toss off. A high pop fly one random night in Baltimore was “a white dot against a black sky”. A ground ball down the line would “rooster tail into the corner”. How did he think of these things?

He knew great restaurants in every town. Some of them have since burned down.

If you worked for the Mariners, he knew your name and your kids’ names.

Dave’s broadcast booth led the league in laughter every season.

He had several offers to go to other teams in larger markets but always turned them down. He loved Seattle.

On the road he never took the team bus to the ballpark. We always caught an early cab. It could be September, three weeks after the team had been mathematically eliminated, a thousand degrees in Texas with hail and locusts in the forecast, and Dave was at the park four hours before game time doing his prep. Every day. Every game. No exceptions. Ever.

He personally welcomed every new player to the team. In the years I was there, that was probably close to a hundred.

He never refused an autograph, a handshake, picture request, or invitation to emcee a program for a local charity.

He’s still remembered fondly in Los Angeles and he hasn’t broadcast there for 45 years.

No one loved the game or knew the game better than “the Veteran Spieler”.

I was so glad he was inducted into the Hall of Fame last year. And I am so sorry he never got to call a World Series game.

Dave will always be remembered in Seattle. If Yankee Stadium was “the House that Ruth Built”, then Safeco Field is the “House that Haus Built”.

He was a loving husband, father, grandfather, broadcaster, mentor, ambassador, Hoosier, military veteran, citizen, and proud to say — Hall of Famer. I will miss him terribly.

Dave Niehaus enjoyed life and made everyone else’s life more enjoyable.

But Dave, your calculations were a little off. According to me, your record as a Mariner broadcaster was 5,284-0. That’s well above .500.”

15
Aug
10

Tragedy in the Desert

Eight killed in desert off-road race

http://msn.foxsports.com/motor/story/Eight-killed-in-desert-off-road-race-in-California-081410?GT1=39002

As many of you know, I’m involved in Desert Racing as an assistant to a photograper/videographer. I’ve been to many races and have frequently positioned myself in “the line of fire” hoping to get that one amazing shot. Last night, a truck went out of control and wound up killing eight spectators and injuring many others. This one hits home for me and my thoughts and prayers go out to the families of those taken and the survivors as well. Names have yet to be released but my fears are that I may actually know someone so this hits home especially hard.

Update

Stu has requested that I post some of the photos I’ve taken so here goes. These particular shots come from the Powder Puff Breast Cancer Race held every year the second week in October in Barstow Ca.  All proceeds go to benefit breast cancer research and this race is especially fun because all the drivers are women. The first few are from “tech” held friday eve. before the race. Tech is where the cars must pass inspection.

My buddy Scott and I team up with the folks that race this car.

Yes indeed it is a Rolls Royce 4x4 race car.

These photos are taken at the start/finish line. If it seems folks are standing too close, they’re not. All cars must come to a complete stop here before moving on. The rest of the course is more regulated. 

Go team! Jen Clemison at the helm.

It just wouldn't be a race without problems....... ah, make that obstacles.

With problem diagnosed and fixed, they're ready to rumble again

More to come. Scott, my partner in crime will be posting up some vids when he has a chance. It’s kind of crazy in the desert racing world right now as everything is in turmoil. “La familia” will pull through eventually.

23
Jun
10

What Kind OF Boat Doesn’t Float?

I think I may have posted this, or something like it before – but it’s worth seeing again. One of my favorite youtube vids.

06
Jun
09

It’s Hammer Time!

koh-logo-2009

Nope, this ain’t the M.C. variety…….. no-no-no, THIS is the real deal! This is where Man meets Desert, meets Rocks and quite often meets destruction, carnage and the accompaning failure to achieve. This is THE race that ties it all together….. flat playa, washboard and most challenging, THE ROCKS!

I had a 1971 Jeep CJ5 rock crawler that had all the goodies….. to the tune of 30k. I remember when the “Sledgehammer” trail first came on the scene back around 1995. I remember really wanting to go and take the challenge. I now see that my Jeep was not worthy…….. by a long shot.

This sport, which is growing exponentially, requires allot of dinero. Most teams are well equipt with chase trucks and a few even have their own Helicopters. A far cry from my simple, 30k Jeep.

Adam, this one’s for you! And Bill…… this is the “playa party” that I prefer…… not that I would ever turn down a Burning Man trip if presented (hint-hint-hint!) ;-)

And be sure to watch the video. It gives you a true understanding of the grueling nature of this Race/Crawl. Just click on play when the home screen opens. This is some Rock-n-Rolla like you’ve never seen! I was especially intriqued by the broken 1/2 transfer case shell sitting on the rock. Talk about carnage! 

A little tip I learned this evening (dopey me/never too old) Down in the lower right corner where it says 100%. Change it to 200% and watch this video. It’s awesome!

http://www.kingofthehammers.com/a/

21
Mar
09

March Madness

dunk

Back in October of 2008 I lamented the current state of affairs for Seattle area sports fans in the post: Tough Times For NW Sports Fans. Things didn’t get any better. The Seahawks finished the season with a dismal 4-12 record in coach Mike Holmgren’s last year as head coach. Even worse was the final win-loss record of the UW Huskies football team. For the first time in school history the “Dawgs” went winless, finishing 0-12.

With the NBA’s Seattle Sonics no longer in town, all eyes turned to the men’s basketball team at the University of Washington. The Huskies had finished  the previous season with a 16-15 record, but fans were cautiously optimistic for the upcoming season.

The UW Huskies did not disappoint, winning the Pac-10 championship with an overall record of 25-8 and earning a birth in the NCAA tournament. The UW won their first game of the tournament against Mississippi State to make the field of 32, and today face Purdue for a chance to advance to the “Sweet 16.” It’s a fun team to watch, and they play an exciting brand of basketball.

The University of Washington Huskies will always be special to me. I am not an alumni, but as a young man I would sit in with my grandfather (yes Bill, that grandfather) :-) and listen the the Husky broadcasts on the radio. It’s a fond memory, and I think about him every time I watch or listen to a game.

It’s about 4 hours to game time. GO DAWGS!

20
Feb
09

Welcome Home, Junior.

Ken Griffey Jr

Welcome home, Ken Griffey Jr. <—– Click to watch highlight video




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