Posts Tagged ‘Tom Cheek’

Tom Cheek thoughts

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Can this please be the winter that we finally see the late Tom Cheek earn the Ford C. Frick Award and take his rightful place in Cooperstown?

Cheek called Toronto Blue Jays games for 27 years, a streak that began at the franchise’s birth and carried for 4,306 consecutive games. He was an instructor to an entire nation and the elective course was Baseball 101. Tom was a man who was large in voice, body, heart and confidence, yet was small in ego. Cancer took him from all of us in 2005 and an entire nation lost a friend, as did all of us in baseball.

My relationship with Tom was certainly unique, as I played college baseball with his son Jeff in Alabama and later in life became a fellow broadcaster with dad in the big leagues. I still call Jeff one of my best friends and we talk often about the classy way his dad carried himself at home and at work. There are many of us that owe Tom Cheek a great deal and not all of us are Canadiens, though those north of the border will always save a place in there heart for that unforgettable voice. Now his place should be in our hearts and along side all of the legendary voices in Cooperstown.

There are many that share this perspective and I still can’t believe this has taken so long (check the date on this):

http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Baseball/MLB/Toronto/2006/12/07/2670326-sun.html.

Best of luck to Joe and Mario on the site. I hope to be a regular contributor if they will allow me.

Daron Sutton is the television play-by-play voice of the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Home run calls

Monday, October 12th, 2009

For fans of Major League baseball, the comfort of identifying with the home team’s broadcaster makes the game special. In many cases, it is an announcer’s home run call that serves as a signature. I am often asked to share my home run call with inquiring baseball fans. One problem: I don’t have one. My opinion is certainly not shared by all, but it’s my belief that all home runs are different and attaching a scripted phrase to every long ball, be it a moon shot or a wall scraper, doesn’t accurately tell the story.

Early in my big league career, I was pulled aside by a broadcasting executive who told me that he was going to take me to the next level. I thought he meant they were moving my office from the second to the third floor. I should have been so lucky. It seems that this executive felt I needed a unique home run call and that I should crank my volume up a notch or two to reach my full broadcasting potential. I have always felt that it is important to listen to constructive criticism, so I obliged. The next month and a half, I proceeded to call every pop up to second base with the same fervor as a Barry Bonds McCovey Cove shot.  Every time I think back to that conversation, visions of Joe Buck screaming, “Slam-a-Lama-Ding Dong” bounce around my head. The lesson I learned, was that just like most home runs, great home run calls just happen.

For my money, the best home run calls are those that are spontaneous and capture the moment. For that reason, the most memorable home run calls are born from some of the game’s most memorable moments. While I’m not old enough to remember Russ Hodges’ classic call of Bobby Thompson’s three-run homer to lift the Giants over the Dodgers for the Pennant in 1951, I have had the privilege to hear some of the most memorable home run calls in recent history. With that, here is a list of my top five favorite home run calls. These obviously are all big game calls which gives them an advantage, but in my mind, they are some of the most memorable. Some are very basic and simple and some are more descriptive. To me though, they all captured the moment brilliantly.

5. Jack Buck-October 1985.

Game five of the NLCS-St. Louis Cardinals vs. Los Angeles Dodgers. Ozzie Smith’s improbable ninth inning home run beat the Dodgers. “Smith corks one into right down the line! It may go! Go crazy folks, Go crazy! It’s a home run! And the Cardinals have won the game 3-2 on a home run by the Wizard….Go Crazy folks, Go Crazy.”

4.  Jack Buck- October 1991.

Game six of the World Series-Atlanta Braves vs. Minnesota Twins. Kirby Puckett’s walk-off home run in the bottom of the 11th inning. “Into deep left-center for Mitchell…..and we’ll see you tomorrow night.”

3. Vin Scully-October 1988.

Game one of the World Series-Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Oakland A’s. Kirk Gibson’s dramatic home run off Dennis Eckersley beats the A’s. “High fly ball to deep right field…..she iiiiis gooone.” Over a minute later, Scully added, “In a year that has been so improbable, the impossible has happened.”

2.  Tom Cheek-October 1993.

Game six of the 1993 World Series-Philadelphia Phillies vs. Toronto Blue Jays. Joe Carter’s walk-off home run ends the World Series. “Touch ‘em all Joe, you’ll never hit a bigger home run in your life.”

1.  Jack Buck-October 1988.

Game one of the World Series. Kirk Gibson’s home run off Dennis Eckersley. “Gibson…swings and a fly ball to deep right field! This is gonna be a home run! Unbelievable! A home run for Gibson! And the Dodgers have won the game, 5 to 4!  I don’t believe…what I just saw.”

This is a short list to be sure, but some of my favorite calls of all time.