His best work was when he was with Starr and Bob used to run down to the 1200 Beacon Holiday Inn for a coupla quick ones then scurry back to the park
thirdendorsed said:His best work was when he was with Starr and Bob used to run down to the 1200 Beacon Holiday Inn for a coupla quick ones then scurry back to the park
Fenway1912 said:It is no secret than Ken had a serious drinking problem but at least in his Red Sox days it was not apparent on air.
I would rank the Red Sox announcers of my lifetime
Johnster said:Fenway1912 said:It is no secret than Ken had a serious drinking problem but at least in his Red Sox days it was not apparent on air.
I would rank the Red Sox announcers of my lifetime
I don't really want to blow my identity on this board but you might want to check your facts... You have Ken confused with someone else.... The only passion Ken had more that being sportscaster was the Jimmy Fund.
thirdendorsed said:The late Mel Miller didn't fire Ken Coleman. Sports is operated as a separate division, the AM program director doesn't make that call.
It was the MBAs and self-styled experts who took over the station when RKO General sold out that decided Coleman was through. You might want to ring up Harvard-Pilgrim and ask their CEO what he had to do with it. Never mind the answer you get, he had a lot to do with gassing Coleman.
Trupiano was not brought in as #2. They were looking for a 1 and 1A. Castiglione simply isn't very good but managed to hang on as the number 2 guy long enough to become the main guy by attrition. Clearly he is being phased out in favor of O'Brien.
By the way, Coleman was not the boozer in the booth. There was some heavy drinking by PBP guys, but it wasn't him.
thirdendorsed said:Eric Shultz, now CEO of Harvard-Pilgrim, was running WRKO when they pulled the plug on Coleman. With Kenny, the facts often took a back seat to his personal agenda, such as his book on the '67 Sox when he gave then-current owner and GM Haywood Sullivan credit for stuff that Dick O'Connell did during that season. Reason was simple, by then he owed his job to Sully and Sully hated O'Connell.
Coleman was fired by Atlantic Radio. ARS wasn't even formed until the mid-90s as part of a merger with groups headed by Tom Stoner and Dangerous Dave Pearlman. RKO was in the Harvard building from the time they sold the TV building after losing the license. Harvard and Pilgrim had not merged then and they still hadn't merged when Atlantic moved its stations to somewhere in the Back Bay, I forget where.
But no, Mel Miller wasn't picking play by play announcers. Bet on that one.
McLean was ill when he left, that's why an injured Yaz filled in for a while before Dave Martin was hired.
thirdendorsed said:There is also the explanation that O'Connell covered up Tom Yawkey's extra-curriculars, hence his swift firing by Jean fairly quickly after Tom's death.
The Haywood thing about the move to Fla is interesting. Sox went to Winter Haven for 1966. Sullivan began '65 as manager of the As triple A club in Vancouver and became KC's manager in May. Hard to see where he would have gotten Yawkey's ear about moving the spring training site, I'd guess they would have needed more than the three months that passed between his getting the front office job in Nov. and the start of the first Winter Haven spring.
Unless, of course, he was one of Yawkey's southern boy favorites while he was with Boston and remained on good terms with his bigoted boss, as is likely given the speed with which he went from disposed manager of a team that lost 103 games to a VP spot in Boston
thirdendorsed said:Fenway's description of Haywood's role in Winter Haven makes sense. The behind-the-scenes story of the Red Sox front office in the 66-70 range is a great untold story. The '66 Gosger/Sanders for Wyatt/Tartabull trade, two white guys for a black and a Hispanic, really stands out.
Best part of the WPLM broadcasts were forgetting to reset the radio after a night game and waking up to the beautiful sounds of Well W W E L. Thanks Arnie.
Second best part was when they gave the continuity person a credit in every game. They can't do that on WEEI because they have, flat-out, the worst traffic and continuity operation in major market broadcasting. It's probably their systems more than their people, but the number of outdated spots that run on that station is staggering.
Here's an idea: Put spots on carts and label them with a kill date.
How about George Scott, Reggie Smith, and of course Pumpsie Green? Or are you only counting acquisitions, as opposed to coming up as rookies?thirdendorsed said:Sox acquired eight established American Black players during Yawkey's lifetime. Willie Tasby in 60, George Smith for Monbo in 65, Elston Howard in 67, Floyd Robinson in 68, JarvisTatum as a throw-in in the Tony C. deal 70, Tommy Harper after 71 season, Fergie Jenkins, 1975 and Bobby Darwin 1976. Only Smith, Harper, Howard and Jenkins were regulars.
ArtSpooner said:How about George Scott, Reggie Smith, and of course Pumpsie Green? Or are you only counting acquisitions, as opposed to coming up as rookies?