After hearing the sad news yesterday of "The Bird's" death, presumably caused by a farm accident, I was reminded about how the game in which Mark Fidrych became a national sensation was actually broadcast by Bob Prince.
The Gunner was, of course, the original play-by-play voice of ABC's "Monday Night Baseball," which never caught on like "Monday Night Football" did but still was a fun watch while it lasted in the '70s and '80s.
One wonders if Prince hadn't been fired by the Pirates if he would have landed this rather high profile gig, but regardless.
But as the story Warner Wolf has often told goes, the Tigers were playing the Yankees. ABC brass insisted that the announcers play up the Yankees and opposing pitcher Ken Holtzman, even though Fidrych was just beginning to catch on and was 7-1 at the time.
And, of course, Fidrych beat the Yanks 5-1 and became a sensation of 1976.
Where Prince fits in with this is ESPN Classic often reruns this game and I'm sure will now (when they aren't showing poker reruns).
I'm too young to remember Prince calling these games on ABC (I do remember when Prince was brought back in the '80s and listened to him then, as well as have heard lots of tapes and the like) but have watched the rerun of this broadcast.
In it, you can see why Prince was so popular in Pittsburgh but wasn't able to take that popularity nationwide on ABC.
Prince wasn't necessarily supposed to be the storyteller here. He was supposed to be more of a traditional PBP guy with Wolf and Bob Uecker- I believe- telling the stories and the like. In hindsight we can see where it would have been better for Wolf to do play-by-play and Prince and Uecker tell stories.
There comes a part in the seventh inning where The Gunner simply cannot hold back any longer and makes a reference to a karate instructor in Pittsburgh.
And YOU KNEW- in Pittsburgh, making a reference to the karate instructor was going to be eaten up.
And on a nationwide scale- everywhere else they had to be wondering "who is this guy with the foghorn voice making references to karate instructors while Fidrych is pitching his way to start for the American League in the All-Star Game?"
Still, if you get the chance, give the rerun a watch. It's fun to see the shining point of Prince's national career.
The Gunner was, of course, the original play-by-play voice of ABC's "Monday Night Baseball," which never caught on like "Monday Night Football" did but still was a fun watch while it lasted in the '70s and '80s.
One wonders if Prince hadn't been fired by the Pirates if he would have landed this rather high profile gig, but regardless.
But as the story Warner Wolf has often told goes, the Tigers were playing the Yankees. ABC brass insisted that the announcers play up the Yankees and opposing pitcher Ken Holtzman, even though Fidrych was just beginning to catch on and was 7-1 at the time.
And, of course, Fidrych beat the Yanks 5-1 and became a sensation of 1976.
Where Prince fits in with this is ESPN Classic often reruns this game and I'm sure will now (when they aren't showing poker reruns).
I'm too young to remember Prince calling these games on ABC (I do remember when Prince was brought back in the '80s and listened to him then, as well as have heard lots of tapes and the like) but have watched the rerun of this broadcast.
In it, you can see why Prince was so popular in Pittsburgh but wasn't able to take that popularity nationwide on ABC.
Prince wasn't necessarily supposed to be the storyteller here. He was supposed to be more of a traditional PBP guy with Wolf and Bob Uecker- I believe- telling the stories and the like. In hindsight we can see where it would have been better for Wolf to do play-by-play and Prince and Uecker tell stories.
There comes a part in the seventh inning where The Gunner simply cannot hold back any longer and makes a reference to a karate instructor in Pittsburgh.
And YOU KNEW- in Pittsburgh, making a reference to the karate instructor was going to be eaten up.
And on a nationwide scale- everywhere else they had to be wondering "who is this guy with the foghorn voice making references to karate instructors while Fidrych is pitching his way to start for the American League in the All-Star Game?"
Still, if you get the chance, give the rerun a watch. It's fun to see the shining point of Prince's national career.