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Jack Buck, 1924 - 2002
MLB.COM ^ | 06/18/2002 | Jared Hoffmann

Posted on 06/18/2002 10:17:59 PM PDT by MediaMole

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A sad day.

He was the voice of so many great sports moments. He will be missed.

1 posted on 06/18/2002 10:17:59 PM PDT by MediaMole
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To: MediaMole
The memories of when I used to be a baseball fan/Cardinals fan. Those days were long gone and now even a little longer gone tonight.
2 posted on 06/18/2002 10:24:09 PM PDT by Arkinsaw
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To: MediaMole
This is terribly sad! The last time I saw Jack Buck, he was speaking at a Bush Campaign appearance in 2000. He said that he normally doesn't get involved in politics, but that after the last 8 years, we'd had, he felt he had to.

God rest his soul.

3 posted on 06/18/2002 10:28:50 PM PDT by A Citizen Reporter
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To: MediaMole
Gone is the voice of my youth. A sad day indeed.
4 posted on 06/18/2002 10:53:34 PM PDT by zarf
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To: MediaMole
Jack Bump
5 posted on 06/18/2002 10:56:01 PM PDT by My Favorite Headache
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To: MediaMole
The relationship between he and Caray improved and they worked together until Caray was fired by the Cardinals after the 1969 season. Some broadcast historians consider their 16-year partnership the greatest in sports broadcasting history.

I was lucky enough to listen to many of their broadcasts, and somewhere in my parents' house is a great highlight record that Buck amd Carey did to commemorate the Cardinals' championship season of 1967. I listened to it so often I had all of their classic calls memorized.

Buck and Shannon made a great broadcasting team as well.

6 posted on 06/18/2002 11:15:18 PM PDT by ravinson
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To: MediaMole
Hall of Fame broadcaster Jack Buck dies
Jun 19, 2002 2:00 AM (EDT)  

By R.B. FALLSTROM

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Jack Buck, who in nearly five decades as a broadcaster became a St. Louis institution and one of the most recognizable voices in sports, died late Tuesday night, his son Joe Buck said.

The Hall of Famer underwent lung cancer surgery Dec. 5, then went back in Barnes-Jewish Hospital Jan. 3 to have an intestinal blockage surgically removed. He never left the hospital. He was 77.

"He had a great life," Joe Buck said. "He didn't waste one minute of one day. He did everything he could. He packed two lifetimes into one lifetime. He went from poor to wealthy in his lifetime yet he never changed."

On May 16, Buck underwent another operation to eradicate a series of infections, including pneumonia, that kept recurring, and was placed on kidney dialysis. Joe Buck said his father died at 11:08 p.m., with his family by his side.

"He continued to fight to his last breath," Joe Buck said. "He made us proud every day. He battled for his life. He did it with dignity and with pride."

Jack Buck started calling Cardinals games on radio in 1954, teaming first with Harry Caray. Nationally, Buck called everything Super Bowls to the World Series to pro bowling for CBS, ABC and NBC.

"I wouldn't change a thing about my life," Buck wrote in a 1997 autobiography. "My childhood dreams came true."

Buck's gravelly voice - crafted in part, he said, by too many years smoking cigarettes - described to a national radio audience the indescribable end to Game 1 of the 1988 World Series.

"I don't believe what I just saw!" he yelled after Los Angeles outfielder Kirk Gibson, barely able to walk, hit a two-run, game-winning homer off Oakland's Dennis Eckersley.

Buck was also behind the microphone for the first telecast of the American Football League and at the NFL championship "Ice Bowl" in 1967.

(AP) Jack Buck, center, the radio voice of the St. Louis Cardinals baseball team, walks past Cardinals'...
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But in St. Louis and throughout the Midwest, it was Buck's calls of Cardinals games that made him a beloved figure. With each final out of a Cardinals victory, he wrapped things up with his tidy, "That's a winner."

"There only is and always will be just one Jack Buck," said former Cardinal Jack Clark. "He's a Hall of Fame announcer and a Hall of Fame person. He was in the game when it was at its purest. His calls of Stan Musial, (Bob) Gibson, Ozzie (Smith) and all the way up to Mark McGwire are classics. He was a class man and a class human being."

It was Buck who told Cardinals fans to "Go crazy, folks, go crazy!" when Smith homered - his first ever left-handed - to win Game 5 of the 1985 NL Championship Series.

Buck chose to pause - not speak - when slugger Mark McGwire tied Roger Maris' single-season home run record in 1998. Then, he said, "Pardon me for a moment while I stand and applaud."

"It was a thrill just to be interviewed by the man and sit down and talk to him," Arizona ace Curt Schilling said. "He was living baseball history."

(AP) St. Louis Cardinals broadcaster Jack Buck smiles prior to the game against the San Francisco Giants...
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John Francis Buck was born Aug. 21, 1924, in Holyoke, Mass. He left home as a teen-ager to work as a deck hand on the iron ore boats of the Great Lakes and was drafted into the Army at 19 during the height of World War II.

Buck shipped out for Europe in February 1945 and was wounded the next month in Germany. Back home a year later, Buck went to Ohio State and launched his broadcasting career at the school's radio station.

"When I went on the air to do a sports show at WOSU, I had never done a sports show before," Buck wrote in "That's a Winner," his autobiography. "When I did a basketball game, it was the first time I ever did play-by-play. The same with football. I didn't know how to do these things. I just did them."

In 1954, Buck beat out Chick Hearn - who went on to become an institution with the Los Angeles Lakers - for a job with the Cardinals.

Buck left the Cardinals booth for a year in 1960, instead working for ABC. He later had a falling out with the network, which led him to not return a phone call that could have landed him the first play-by-play role on the network's "Monday Night Football."

(AP) Hall-of-fame broadcaster Jack Buck interviews St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa at Busch...
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Instead, he called Monday night games and 17 Super Bowls on CBS radio from 1978-1996.

In 1990, Buck began a two-year stint as lead baseball announcer for CBS. All the while, Buck continued to call Cardinals games. He was joined in the booth by his son, Joe, in 1991. Joe Buck is now the lead baseball and football play-by-play announcer at Fox.

Buck often read his poetry work on the air and, on occasion, to crowds. When baseball resumed last year after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Buck, a tear in his eye, read a patriotic poem during a pregame ceremony at Busch Stadium.

Inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame's broadcaster's wing in 1987, Buck later became a member of both the Broadcasters' and Radio halls of fame. He was awarded the Pete Rozelle Award by the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1996 and received a lifetime achievement Emmy in 2000.

Buck, who had six children with his first wife Alyce, and two with wife Carole, is survived by his second wife; sons Jack Jr., Dan, and Joe; and daughters Beverly, Christine, Bonnie, Betsy and Julie.

(AP) Hall-of-fame broadcaster Jack Buck interviews St. Louis Cardinals' Albert Pujols at Busch Stadium...
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A public viewing of Buck's casket will be held Thursday at Busch Stadium, starting at 7 a.m. A public memorial service will follow at 12:30 p.m., with the Cardinals' game against the Anaheim Angels pushed back to 3:10 p.m.

7 posted on 06/18/2002 11:29:24 PM PDT by CARDINALRULES
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To: zarf; MediaMole
"Gone is the voice of my youth. A sad day indeed."

So true. I grew up in St. Louis during the heyday of Harry Caray and Jack Buck. Unforgettable the sounds of their voices across the warm summer nights. Now so long gone.

The last time I was in St. Louis a few weeks ago, the announcer on KMOX was saying that Jack Buck was in their prayers, and it was obvious he didn't have long.

RIP Jack.
8 posted on 06/18/2002 11:32:30 PM PDT by texasbluebell
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To the ass that decided to add the Keywords SOCCER RULES and WHOGIVESACRAP ...well I won't bother to write what I am thinking but you can guess.

Nice way to talk about a man that earned a Purple Heart and was a Patriot.

9 posted on 06/19/2002 12:12:46 AM PDT by CARDINALRULES
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To: Arkinsaw
I grew up in Northeast Arkansas. The local stations carried the Cardinals games. I listed to many games called by Jack Buck. He was a great announcer and a wonderful man.
10 posted on 06/19/2002 2:46:07 AM PDT by TheCPA
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To: MediaMole
Besides his oldest daughter, the best gift I ever received from my father-in-law was an autographed baseball by Jack Buck. I'll miss him dearly. He was a huge part of my childhood.
11 posted on 06/19/2002 4:44:11 AM PDT by tear_down_this_wall
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To: xzins; Wrigley
Sad Baseball Bump
12 posted on 06/19/2002 4:46:00 AM PDT by ShadowAce
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To: MediaMole
Damn....Jack Buck, Harry Caray, Red Barber all gone...a sad day in sports
13 posted on 06/19/2002 4:51:22 AM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan
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To: CARDINALRULES
Used to live in Chicago years ago. Always looked forward the Cubs/Cards games. Jack Buck was a class act.

Here is his poem he read on Sept. 17th.

Since this nation was founded under
God, more than 200 years ago,

We've been the bastion of
Freedom...

The light which keeps the free world
Aglow.

We do not covet the possesions of
Others, we are blessed with the
Bounty we share.

We have rushed to help other
Nations...anything...anytime...
Anywhere.

War is just not our nature... we
Won't start, but we will end the fight.

If we are involved we shall be
Resolved to protect what we know is
Right.

We've been challenged by a
Cowardly foe who strikes and then
Hides from our view.

With one voice we say there's no
Choice today, there is only one
Thing to do.

Everyone is saying the same thing
And praying that we end these
Senseless moments we are living.

As our fathers did before, we shall
Win this unwanted war.

And our children will enjoy the
Future, we'll be giving.


14 posted on 06/19/2002 6:50:25 AM PDT by barker
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To: barker
I will remember Jack Buck fondly. I believe that I was a fan of Jack Buck before I ever was a fan of the Cardinals or baseball. Some of my earliest memories of childhood were when I would wander into my parents room to just sit with my father and listen to Jack Buck call the game. I realize how important that was for the relationship I formed with my father. I remember listening to games from about 4 years to when I was 13 years old with my dad. Jack Buck was an extremely important intermediary who helped bridge a loving and growing relationship between me and my father. We did not have to talk about anything on most occasions, only listen. However, when my father wanted to tell me something, Jack Buck provided us with the forum for my dad to guide me as I was growing up. I will really miss Jack Buck's voice. He was so important to me as a child, and I didn't even know it then.
15 posted on 06/19/2002 7:07:57 AM PDT by rgrun
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To: MediaMole
Wow! I loved Jack Buck. He and Harry Carey during the '50s and the '60's were the best baseball broadcasting duo of their time. They made the Cardinal games worth listening to on radio. In fact, I usually turned on the radio and turned down the TV if a game was being broadcast. And man, the enthusiasm during the '64, '67 and '68 World Series games.

My mother is a die-hard Cardinal fan and I'm sure she's mourning Jack's passing. He was like a member of the family.

16 posted on 06/19/2002 7:14:27 AM PDT by duckbutt
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To: ravinson
I've got that record, too. This was before the days of
tapes and VCRs. They put the year's highlights on 33 rpm
records - - and I think I've got each one they put out - - have
to putter around in the basement to find them......
17 posted on 06/19/2002 7:18:05 AM PDT by duckbutt
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To: duckbutt
I will remember listening to Jack on many a steamy summer evening out in the back yard in southern Illinois with the cicadas buzzing in the trees while the broadcast and the subdued roar of the crowd came out of my transistor radio tuned to KMOX
18 posted on 06/19/2002 7:25:51 AM PDT by tom paine 2
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To: tom paine 2
Man - I'm about to cry. Mike Shannon is OK - - but there is NO
comparison to Jack Buck/Harry Carey as the game callers. Man,
I'm thinking about BBQs in the backyard on summmer days in St. Louis.
The epidomy of summer to me was the smell of BBQ and fresh cut grass, and the sounds of the baseball game on the radio. Doesn't get any better than that.
Ah.....innocent youth........
19 posted on 06/19/2002 10:07:44 AM PDT by duckbutt
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To: duckbutt
I've got that record, too.

Wasn't that great? Hold onto it; it's going to be worth a lot of money someday.

20 posted on 06/19/2002 11:22:58 AM PDT by ravinson
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