Posted on 10/18/2005 7:03:50 PM PDT by csvset
Bill King, longtime Bay Area sportscaster who was the radio voice of the Oakland A's since 1981, died Monday night.
King died after complications from surgery.
Known for his trademark beard, his call of "Holy Toledo," and his colorful lifestyle, King was behind the mike for some of the most memorable moments in Bay Area sports history.
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
Does this mean what I think it means?
Anywhere else perhaps, but in the Bay Area, I doubt it.
{After the "Holy Roller" play): "(Raider Head Coach John) Madden's on the field. He wants to know if it's real. They said 'get your big butt out of here'. He does."
Athletics radio announcer Bill King dies
JANIE McCAULEY
Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. - Longtime Oakland Athletics radio voice Bill King, whose signature call of "Holy Toledo!" was a household phrase for decades in the Bay Area, died early Tuesday from complications following hip surgery. He was 78.
The A's said King died at a hospital in San Leandro, three days after undergoing surgery for an injury sustained earlier this year.
King was the lead radio broadcaster for the Golden State Warriors and Oakland Raiders and worked for a time on the San Francisco Giants' broadcast team.
"Bill was a great friend, a brilliant performer and an exceptional man," Raiders owner Al Davis said. "I say this with great admiration and love that Bill becomes one of the people that I give the cloak of immortality. Time never stops for the great ones."
At spring training in March, King tripped over some luggage in his Phoenix hotel room and had been struggling to get around all season - missing a number of road games and relying on crutches and later a cane.
But he reported about the A's with the same fervor he demonstrated for years covering not only the A's, but other pro sports teams in Northern California. He joined the A's broadcast staff in 1981.
"It's a devastating thing," said Ken Korach, King's partner in the booth the past 10 seasons. "It's almost hard to believe. It's pretty sad. He just meant so much - a true icon, a renaissance man, a one-in-a-million kind of a character, and I mean that in a positive way. He was one of a kind."
His death came as a shock to the sports community, which considered King with his carefully groomed curled-up mustache as much a ballpark staple as the players and the popcorn.
King, a native of Bloomington, Ill., had surgery Friday and all indications were that he would recover. Korach received an e-mail from King's daughter Friday night that he "came through the surgery fine."
"I think he was just a member of the family for almost 50 years in the Bay Area. He was the greatest sportscaster I ever heard," Korach said. "He brought an immense amount of passion and dedication to every broadcast and touched so many people. They remember certain times in their lives because of him. For over 50 years, he was a constant in people's lives."
A's president Michael Crowley called King "arguably the most recognizable voice in the history of Bay Area broadcasting."
"One would be hard-pressed to find an announcer who served as the lead play-by-play voice for three major sports franchises for as long as Bill," Crowley said.
King was the Warriors' first broadcaster when they moved West from Philadelphia following the 1961-62 season. He broadcast the Wilt Chamberlain era and called the games in the team's title season in 1974-75. Lon Simmons, who was inducted into the broadcast wing of baseball's Hall of Fame last season and was a former partner of King's, called him "the best basketball announcer I've ever heard."
"He was talented, versatile, enthusiastic and, most importantly, a class act and a great man," Warriors president Robert Rowell said. "He will be sorely missed by everyone he touched, including those who never had the opportunity to meet him, but still benefited from his presence in their homes."
On road trips, King often could be seen studying Russian history and literature. He also loved ballet and jazz and always had a book with him on road trips in case flights were delayed.
King was stationed on the island of Guam at the end of World War II, when he began his broadcasting career with the Armed Forces Radio Network.
In 1976, King called himself "ageless," saying he wouldn't stop doing his job just because he was growing older.
King is preceded in death by his wife, Nancy Stephens. His stepdaughter, Kathleen Lowenthal, drove King to and from his home in Sausalito to the Oakland Coliseum for games this season.
King also is survived by stepson, John Stephens, of Sausalito and grandchildren, Julia and John Lowenthal.
Memorial services were pending.
"He just loved the game of baseball and loved sports and did what he truly loved to do, which was to broadcast games," said Ken Pries, the A's vice president of broadcasting and communications who first got to know King while working as an intern for KNBR during college.
"He was a great story teller. I always told him he should write a book about all of his experiences with the Bay Area teams. Unfortunately he never had a chance to do that. I'm sure it would have been a best seller. It's hard to believe we're not going to be hearing his voice on the airwaves come next baseball season."
He was good. I'm not a big fan of basketball, but, to hear King call a game,it was as though you were there.
When I was in the Navy, I tried telling a guy from Wisconsin how good of an announcer King was. He thought I was talking about Larry King, lol!
Dittos to that. Wasn't King the guy who drove the Twenty year old car? I don't remember the details but I think it was some kind of large decked out car that was at least twenty years old.
I haven't lived in the Bay Area for 25 years, so I'm not sure what he may have driven. Seeing his obit though brought back a lot of good memories of listening to games on the radio.
Bill King made even Warrior basketball games almost enjoyable to listen too.
I don't have the words to describe how much I enjoyed his broadcasts. Right now I feel like the bird who got hit with the RJ fastball.
I was never a basketball fan, but to hear Bill King you knew it was the warriors or else it was Sunday and the Oakland Raiders.
We used to turn the TV sound off and listen to Bill King broadcast the Raiders.
It didn't get any better!
RIP, Bill.
It was a privilege to have listened to Bill over the years. A's, Raiders, etc.
We'd do the same.
"Old Man Willie!"
RIP Bill King, the best that ever was.
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