63 Years - 1 Team - Best Baseball Broadcaster Ever

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ocdart

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I grew up learning baseball from listening to Vin Scully after the Dodgers moved to LA from Brooklyn before the 1958 season. Over the early years I just assumed that all baseball broadcasters were like Vinnie. Boy, was I wrong! As I grew up and had the opportunity to hear game broadcasts for other teams in other cities I learned what a treasure we have in Los Angeles.
If you've never had a chance to hear the best ever broadcast a baseball game, grab whatever chance you have before he's gone. He announced on the telecast last night that he's coming back for his 63rd year with the Dodgers next season.
Here's the announcement I saw on MSN.com this morning. Low-key as ever, just like Vinnie.


LOS ANGELES -- Hall of Fame broadcaster Vin Scully, widely considered the best broadcaster in sports history, will return to the broadcast booth for an unprecedented 63rd season in 2012, he announced during this evening's Dodger telecast. Scully will again call all Dodger home games and select road games.

"I don't want to make a big deal out of it, you and I have been friends for a long time," Scully told the audience on PRIME TICKET. "But after a lot of soul searching and a few prayers, we've decided that we will come back with the Dodgers for next year. God's been awfully good to me, allowing me to do the things I love to do. I asked him one more year at least and he said okay."

Scully's 62 years of service constitute the longest tenure of any broadcaster in sports history. While he handles all nine innings of the team's television broadcasts on PRIME TICKET and KCAL 9, the first three innings of each of his games are also simulcast on KABC 790 AM.

He began his professional baseball broadcasting career in 1950 with the Brooklyn Dodgers and was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1982. During his unequaled career, he has gone on to call three perfect games, 19 no-hitters, 25 World Series and 12 All-Star Games. He was also at the microphone for Kirk Gibson's miraculous Game 1 homer in the 1988 World Series, Hank Aaron's record-setting 715th home run, Barry Bonds' record-breaking 71st, 72nd and 73rd home runs and the scoreless-inning streaks' of Dodger greats Don Drysdale and Orel Hershiser.

When Scully first began broadcasting, the Dodgers had yet to win a single World Series. Three years later, at the age of 25, he became the youngest person to ever broadcast a World Series game and in 1955, he had his most memorable moment behind the microphone, as he called the Dodgers' first and only championship in Brooklyn.

The following season, Scully once again found himself in the enviable position of calling what he would later say was the greatest individual performance he had seen -- Don Larsen's perfect game in the World Series.


 

Scully is indeed a legend. They simply don't make broadcasters like him or Chick Hearn these days. Nowadays they are all retired players, coaches, or managers who lack the skills of the true professionals like Scully.
 
Not a Dodger fan at all, but I will listen to Dodger broadcasts just because of that guy. He really knows how to call a game - unlike most of the hacks out there nowadays (I'm looking at you, Joe Buck).

For what it's worth, whenever I see Farmer John hot dogs in the supermarket I hear Vin Scully's voice.
 
As and A's fan, I will never forget that Gibson home run and the voice behind it. Scully is one of the greatest, it's just too bad he was on the other side.
 
Been a Dodger fan since 77.Grew up listening to him.After him,they broke the mold.No one else comes close in my book.
 
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