For a generation of baseball fans, the soundtrack of October is narrated by only one voice. And that voice belongs to Joe Buck.
Beginning with his first World Series broadcast for Fox Sports in 1996, Buck called 24 editions of the Fall Classic on TV − more than twice as many as anyone else has.
So it's more than fitting for the latest edition of MLB Network's "Sounds of Baseball" series (premiering Thursday at 8 p.m. ET) to feature some of the most iconic moments in recent postseason history. Because, more often than not, Buck has been there to describe them.
Here are four takeaways from Joe Buck's distinguished career behind the ballpark microphone:
The one-hour retrospective doesn't shy away from the question of nepotism, as Buck got his start in broadcasting following in the footsteps of his father, Jack Buck — a Hall of Fame announcer in both football and baseball.
HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.
"I think my dad's legacy really allowed me to get my start. I would not have been broadcasting the (St. Louis) Cardinals when I was 21 years old if my last name wasn't Buck," he says as the program opens.
But that alone wouldn't be enough to sustain such a lengthy career.
"He just gave me the example," Buck says, "and then I've tried to do it on my own, in my own way."
Buck made his debut calling MLB games for the Cardinals while his dad was off doing national TV or radio broadcasts. The two even had a few opportunities to work together, most memorably in September 1993, when Cardinals outfielder Mark Whiten hit four home runs in a game.
With Fox Sports holding almost exclusive broadcast rights to the World Series for nearly three decades, Buck has been at the mic for so many history-making highlights. It's mind-boggling to see so many of them go by in such rapid succession.
A sampling:
As program host Bob Costas notes, Buck paid tribute to his father and baseball lore in many subtle ways.
On three separate occasions in the playoffs, Joe Buck channeled Jack Buck's famous call of Kirby Puckett's walk-off homer in the 1991 World Series, "And we'll see you tomorrow night!" The most classic example came in that same Cardinals-Rangers World Series 20 years later, when Freese hit a solo shot in the bottom of the 10th to force Game 7: "Freese hits it in the air to center. We will see you tomorrow night!"
Buck also referenced one of the most famous calls in baseball history — Bobby Thomson's "Shot Heard 'Round the World" in 1951 — when Travis Ishikawa homered to wrap up the 2014 NLCS in San Francisco: "The Giants win the pennant!"
Despite his status as one of the game's premier announcers, Buck still has his fair share of critics who find him too smug, too laconic or biased against their favorite team.
But program co-host Tom Verducci, who has shared a broadcast booth with Buck on many occasions, says most were leveled unfairly.
"Joe dealt with something nobody else in terms of national broadcasters doing the World Series ever dealt with and that is the onset of social media, where all of a sudden there were millions upon millions of television criitics," Verducci said.
"I don't think Joe could shut it out because it is very loud. But he did a great job of keeping it in its own compartment to the side and not bleeding into the booth."
Indeed, when pointed comments are flung his way, Buck frequently chooses to poke fun at himself.
"There's never any false hype to his calls," Verducci said. "There's never a moment where he says look at me instead of the game."
2024-12-25 11:10849 view
2024-12-25 10:162280 view
2024-12-25 09:432778 view
2024-12-25 09:42999 view
2024-12-25 09:131075 view
2024-12-25 08:572740 view
Hollywood legend Dick Van Dyke and his family are alive and well thanks to some quick-thinking neigh
South Dakota is poised to update its laws against child sexual abuse images to include those created
President Biden would veto a standalone House bill that would provide $17.6 billion in aid to Israel