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Old June 4th 08, 04:44 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
Drifter Drifter is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2006
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Default Who Was/Is Your Favorite Baseball Radio Broadcaster?

Tex wrote:
On Jun 3, 12:38 pm, Drifter wrote:

Bob Prince. good old Bob calling the Pittsburgh Pirates. no matter
how bad the Bucks played, Prince made the game sound great. and, he
drank Iron City beer during his broadcasts. about the seventh inning
sometimes the games really got good. i lost interest in baseball
after Bob died.

Drifter...


Yes "the gunner" was great. I recall listening to the talk shows on
KDKA when he was fired - the public was really in an uproar!

There are some audio clips of his broadcasts at http://home.comcast.net/~edinmb/gunner.html

And remember his "gunnerisms"?
http://home.mindspring.com/~gearhard/pigunner.html

"AN ALABASTER BLAST"
A Baltimore chop base hit that would go higher than normal due to
the extraordinarily hard infield at Forbes Field

"ARRIBA"
Prince's cry to Roberto Clemente to hit one up and over the wall.

"ASPIRIN TABLETS"
A pitcher would be throwing a ball so hard it looked as tiny and
as hard to hit as an aspirin tablet. As in, "Veale's firin' aspirin
tablets out there tonight."

"ATEM BALLS"
Hard line drives right to an infielder - it was at 'em. "Law has
his At'em ball workin' tonight."

"BABUSHKA POWER"
Prince developed babushkas that the women in the stands could wear
to bring the Pirates luck. It was, in a sense, a later version of the
Green Weenie.

"THE BASES ARE F.O.B." (full of Bucs)
What was needed now, was a bingle, a dying quail, perhaps a bug on
the rug...

"A LITTLE BINGLE"
A little hit; a small single; perhaps a bunt single. Just
something that would get a Bucco on base.

"THE BLACK MAX"

"A BLOOP AND A BLAST"
A quick way to get two runs through a single (the bloop) and a
home run (the blast), as in, "The Buccos are down by one run going to
the bottom of the ninth. What we need here is a bloop and a blast."

"A BUG ON THE RUG"
A basehit that skittered through the gap, particularly on
artificial turf.

"BY A GNAT'S EYELASH"
A very small margin indeed, as in, "That ball just missed. It was
foul by a gnat's eyelash."

"CHICKEN ON THE HILL"
A home run for Willie Stargell, begun by the fact that Stargell
owned a chicken restaurant in Pittsburgh's Hill District and that
whenever he homered, the person at the counter would get free chicken.
Thus, Prince would say, "We need a homer here. Come on, Willie, spread
some Chicken on the Hill." In one particular game, Prince said that if
Stargell hit a home run, everybody in the restaurant would get free
chicken. Stargell did hit the home run, everyone got free chicken, and
Stargell sent the bill to Prince.

"CLOSE AS FUZZ ON A TICK'S EAR"
a little closer than a gnat's eyelash.

"DON'T BOO STU, HE'S OVER-DUE"
A cheer to get firstbaseman Dick Stuart out of a slump.

"DON'T KNOCK THE ROCK"
Rocky Nelson, 1b-man alternating with Stuart.

"A DYING QUAIL"
A little bloop, a tweener, or a bingle; a hit that falls in like a
shot quail would.

"THE GREEN WEENIE"
A device invented by the Gunner to jinx and perhaps spook opposing
players, the green weenie was the size and shape of a hot dog. When
pointed at the opponents and shaken, it rattled and supposedly put a
jinx on them.

"HE COULDN'T HIT THAT WITH A BED SLAT"
This is what the Gunner would say when a batter chased a pitch way
outside. Take one of the slats out from under a full sized bed and
notice how much longer it is than a bat, and you get an idea that the
batter was definitely chasing.

HE LIT UP THE LIGHTS ON BROADWAY"
in response to a called 3rd strike.

"HIDDEN VIGORISH"
Similar to the law of averages, it was the force which dictated
that a player who was in a slump was due for a big hit, as in,
"Stargell is Oh for his last eight, so with hidden vigorish he should
get a big hit here."

"HOOVER"
A double play by which the Bucs would clean up the basepaths. When
someone complained that Prince was giving free advertising to a
particular brand of vacuum cleaner, he tried to invent a story about
President Herbert Hoover's cleaning up corruption in Washington.

"HOW SWEET IT IS"
After suffering through some terrible Bucco teams in the early-
1950's, Prince got to enjoy the taste of victory in 1960 and
throughout the early-1970's with the Battlin' Bucs. The taste of a
championship, a mid-season victory, or a home run that would put the
Bucs ahead would draw out "How sweet it is".

"KISS IT GOOD-BYE"
The most famous of Prince's sayings; this was his well-known home
run call.

"MARY EDGERLEY"
No one knew exactly who she was (or whether she was related to
Jimmy Durante's Mrs. Calabash), but Prince would end each broadcast by
saying, "Good night, Mary Edgerley, wherever you are."

"A #8 CAN OF GOLDEN BANTAM"
A can of corn; refers to an easy fly ball. Immortalized in 1970
when Matty Alou dropped a "can of corn" against the Cubs, and the Bucs
had to wait another day to clinch their first pennent in 10 years.

"RADIO BALL"
"Koufax just threw Stuart his radio ball. He could hear it, but he
couldn't see it." "Low hummin' riser." (Similar to a radio ball)

"RUG CUTTIN' TIME"
"It's rug cuttin' time." More commonly known as "crunch time."
"For all the money, marbles, and chalk." Deciding moment. Crunch time.

"RUNNIN' THROUGH THE RAIN DROPS"
When a pitcher gives up a lot of hits but doesn't give up serious
runs. Escapes without serious damage being done.

"SNAKE BIT"
Can't get a break. The Bucs are snake bit tonight.

"SOUP COOLERS"
a high pitch was up around a sluggers mouth, or lips, or "soup
coolers". Prince often said Stargell was looking for a pitch up around
his "soup coolers".

"TWEENER"
A ball that got "between" the outfielders; similar to a "bug on a
rug", but it could occur on grass or as a "bloop" hit that fell in
between fielders; hopefully, followed by a Bucco "blast".

"WE HAD ‘EM ALL THE WAY"
Spoken after a close win by the Pirates, it indicated that we
should have known all along that the Pirates would win. It was perhaps
the father of Lanny Frattare's "No doubt about it."


Thanks Tex. WOW! talk about a blast from the past.

Drifter...

--
"Regulatory capitalism is when companies invest in lawyers, lobbyists,
and politicians, instead of plant, people, and customer service."
- former FCC Chairman William Kennard (A real FCC Chairman,
unlike the current Corporate Spokesperson in the job!)