For 67 years, we have been hearing those soothing words come floating out of
that voice: The warmest, most welcoming, most melodic voice in the sports
universe.
Discount Saucony Shoes .And if it feels as if
that voice has been a part of your life forever, well ... It probably has.He has
been as much a presence over these last 67 years as the afternoon sunshine and
the sparkling stars that hover above the broadcast booths where he has spun his
magical tales. So how are we supposed to comprehend life after Vin, life after
baseballs most iconic voice exits the booth for the last time on the first
Sunday in October?When Vin Scully first walked into the Dodgers broadcast booth,
Winston Churchill hadnt started his second stint as the prime minister of Great
Britain. Connie Mack, a man born while Abraham Lincoln was president, was still
managing in the major leagues. The transistor radio -- a gizmo that would turn
the man at the microphone into a California icon -- wouldnt be invented for
another four years.That was April 1950.The Dodgers still played baseball at
Ebbets Field. And Vin Scully was a 22-year-old rookie broadcaster, sharing the
booth with the legendary Red Barber. He was a young man about to embark on a
journey even he could have never envisioned: from East Coast to West Coast, from
crackling AM radios to the fuzz of black-and-white TV to the splendor of living
color to baseball games streaming across your smart phone.So how do we capture
the magnitude of Vin Scully, the meaning of Vin Scully, the miracle of Vin
Scully? Not with our words, but with the words of the men and women who have
known him best, whose company he has shared, whose lives he has touched, whose
careers he has described and even transformed.We spoke with numerous people who
fit that description. We listened to them laugh, regale us and even fight back
tears. So here are their stories. And here is his story, The Story of Vin
Scully, from the hearts, minds and voices of those who have fallen under the
spell of baseballs most beloved voice.The VoiceWhere else to begin, except with
that classic, instantly recognizable voice?Bob Costas (Scullys former colleague
at NBC): You start out with the most important thing, which is how distinctive
and pleasing his voice is. So just because you can hit every note doesnt mean
that youre Sinatra, and just because you can do every dance step doesnt mean
that you are Fred Astaire. There is some almost indescribable quality, but you
know it when you hear it and you see it, that makes even the routine sound
special when it comes from him.AP Photo/Mark J. TerrillVin Scully tells the
crowd Its time for Dodger baseball during Opening Day ceremonies before their
game against the San Francisco Giants in 2009.Want more of this Bob Costas
interview? Go to our The Man. The Voice. The Stories. The Extras page.Bob Wolff
(95-year-old broadcast legend): He has a beautiful, harmonious voice in which it
sounds like he is singing the words. He used his voice to a great
advantage.Charley Steiner (Dodgers broadcaster and Scully pregame dinner
companion): You know, a voice is a fastball. Youre either blessed with one or
youre not. And then how you use your fastball is equally if not more important.
Have you ever heard Vin scream ever once? Never. She is gonnnne. But not: HE is
gone! You never hear that. So, hes got the fastball, and hes got control and
command. He knows just the right moment when to inflect, when not to, when to
shut up. ... So, hes got Jack Benny timing, with this perfectly suited voice
that weve all grown accustomed to over these years.Orel Hershiser (Former
Dodgers ace and current Dodgers broadcaster): I liked the way he pronounced my
name. He lengthened the O - Ooooo-rel Hersh-hi-ser. It wasnt oral. It wasnt
mispronounced Earl. It wasnt Her-shimer or Her-shes-er. It was pronounced
perfectly: Today on the mound, Ooooo-rel, Hersh-hi-ser. That Scully rhythm, you
know? Hes got that melodic rhythm, and my name sounds better to a melody. If it
were to be set to a melody, Vinny can do it.Bud Selig (MLB Commissioner
Emeritus): If I can tell you a funny story. Some years ago, quite a few years
ago, I called him. I wanted him to do, I think, a voice for the All-Century team
because he is reflective of that in the radio, in my opinion. Anyway, he called
me back, and my wife answered the phone. And he said, Hello, is the commissioner
there? This is ... and she said, Oh, I know that voice anywhere. I know who this
is. It was great, and I kidded him later on about it. He said, I couldnt believe
she knew my voice. Bob Costas: Hes had many great calls and many great moments
on the air, remembrances of players and people and circumstances and little
turns of phrase that, in and of themselves, were terrific. But even when hes
just describing a routine play, the rhythm of it and the sound of his voice
elevates it.Tim McCarver (Hall of Fame broadcaster): If John Facenda is known as
the voice of God, where does that leave Vin Scully?Sportscaster Vin Scully in
the 1960s. Chris Williams/Icon SMI The ManWe always describe him as a
broadcaster. But to call Vin Scully just a broadcaster doesnt begin to approach
what his name represents, especially on his turf in Southern California.John
Lowe (Longtime friend and baseball writer): Ill never forget something I read
(from) H.L. Mencken. He said about Beethoven: The artist can be no greater than
the man. And that makes me think of Vinny, because the reason youre hearing so
many stories about him, and the reason he is so beloved and so brilliant, is
that hes a great man. Hes a great artist because hes a great man.Fred Claire
(Former Dodgers PR director and GM): I can remember I had just started with the
Dodgers, and there was this young guy who was just starting with the radio
station. He wanted to interview Vin. Ill never forget this. So he came in, and
Vin said, Sure, Ill do it. And so the young man hit the recorder and talked to
Vinny. Vinny spent at least 40 minutes with him. The young man came back to me,
and ... hes shaking. He said, Fred, I didnt hit the right button. The recorder
didnt work -- literally in tears. So he said, Could I just have a few more
minutes? And so I went to Vinny and explained what happened. Its a young guy
interested in announcing. And Vinny said, Lets do it again. Lets do it again. I
dont know anyone else who would do that. Lets do it again. Think about that.
That has to do with his compassion, his humanity and something thats part of his
grace and his memory of a young announcer starting out himself who got a helping
hand.Dennis Gilbert (Longtime friend and agent, current White Sox special
assistant): Vin and his wife are Americas greatest love story. ... Its the
respect they have for each other, the caring they have for each other, the
courtesy. I mean, hes still opening her car door, hes still -- they hold
hands.Ned Colletti (Former Dodgers GM, current Dodgers senior advisor): Now, as
the world gets different and it gets faster and more impersonal and all those
things are changing, when I think about Vin and I talk to Vin, even as of today,
hes like the comforting soul that reminds me of what it was. Its still in
present tense for him -- how he is and how he treats people and his tremendous
respect and passion for the game of baseball.Los Angeles Dodgers broadcaster Vin
Scully talks to sportswriter Rick Reilly during a March 1985 spring training
game in Vero Beach, Florida. Bernstein Associates/Getty ImagesDennis Gilbert:
There was a gentleman who was 90 years old who wanted to meet Vin. ... So we go
into the press box, and Vin sits there, and theyre chatting for about 10
minutes, and then he had to excuse himself to get ready for the game. Well, the
next day I hear from the gentlemans son, just saying how his father says his
life is now complete. It was one of the greatest moments of his life to meet
Vin. And I called Vin to tell him. ... Vin said, Thank ME? I want to thank HIM
because of what a great experience it was for me just to meet the gentleman. How
about that?A.J. Ellis (Former Dodgers catcher): You can catch him (in the
clubhouse) on Sunday mornings on the way to Mass. He comes in and gets coffee.
(One Sunday,) Brandon (McCarthy) and I are the only two guys in the clubhouse.
And Vin comes in and starts chatting. ... And all of a sudden his phone rings,
and he says, Sorry, boys, excuse me. Hes always so polite. So he says, Yes,
dear. Oh thank you for reminding me. Yes, dear. (Then he says,) Gentlemen, if
you would excuse me, today is one of my grandchildrens birthdays. We have a
tradition in our family that I have to sing to her. And he steps into the
players bathroom and you can hear him singing Happy Birthday over the phone to
his grandchild. Me and Brandon are looking at each other like, OK, this is
unbelievable. Heres Vin Scully in his great baritone voice, singing Happy
Birthday as it echoes through the bathroom of the clubhouse.The Reluctant
MegastarHe lives and works in the town where more Americans chase stardom than
anywhere else. But somehow, Hollywoods only 88-year-old rock star is a man who
spends every day of his life aiming the spotlight away from himself.Charley
Steiner: L.A. is the city of stars. Name any star you want, from Tom Hanks,
Steven Spielberg, on and on and on and on. My contention is Vin is THE star. In
the city of stars, he is the biggest star of them all. Because everybody listens
to him, everybody loves him, and he has been the soundtrack of their stars since
1958.Ned Colletti: I dont know that I know anybody else like him -- with the
reverence of the people, with the adoring public that he has and how many people
speak so kindly of this man every day. And yet he is the most humble man Ive
ever known.Fred Claire: I think the last time I saw Vin earlier this year, he
was being honored by the L.A. Sports Council at a significant dinner in Los
Angeles. And ... he said, Fred, lets go over here. Theres a reception area, and
we can visit. ... We were talking and having a glass of wine, and I think both
of us were kind of locked into the conversation. But what was happening was I
could see over my shoulder there was a crowd of people forming. ... It was
incredible because everyone wants to tell him how much they think of him. How
much they love him. How much he means to them and to their families. And Vinny
is so gracious that he cant refuse anybody. ... It would be overwhelming if it
wasnt for Vinny being on the receiving end.Rick Monday (Current Dodgers
broadcaster): I grew up in Southern California, Santa Monica. ... My mother was
a single parent, and we had Vinny and Jerry Doggett in my moms car when the
Dodgers played, and they were in our homes. They were already our friends. ...
(Later in life, when I got to the big leagues) my mother knew that I obviously
was in the major leagues, but I really truly believe that the first time it
really struck home for her was when her son was playing in a major league game
against the Dodgers, and my mother heard Vin Scully mention her sons name.Ned
Colletti: My daughter, Jenna, interned for the Dodgers a few years ago. ... So
she got to know Vin, and he became her favorite Dodger. And when she got married
... Vin read the bridal party introductions on tape. So he surprised everybody
at the ceremony. This was in Chicago. When the people heard his voice, the whole
place erupted. ... Its hard to steal the show from a bride and groom at a
wedding, but for a couple of minutes, a guy who surely didnt want to steal the
show from anybody at any point, stole the show. ... Well forever be grateful for
the humility and the love that he showed.Bob Costas: Somewhere around 1994, 95,
I was interviewing Ray Charles for an NBC news magazine and probably spent a
couple of hours talking with him. ... Then, when were done and the cameras had
been turned off, he says to me, You know who I would really like to meet? And Im
thinking, Hes Ray Charles. He could have met just about anybody hed wanted to
have met throughout the course of his life. Who might it be? ... Vin Scully. And
I say, Why? And he says, Well, because I love baseball. But you have to
understand, to me the picture means nothing. Its all the sound. And Vin Scullys
broadcasts are almost musical, so I enjoy baseball so much more listening to
him. ... So I set it up with Vin and took Ray to Dodger Stadium. I was sitting
across from Ray, and there was an empty seat awaiting Vins arrival, and Vin came
walking through the door wearing -- as I remember -- a royal blue jacket, the
way he is always turned out for a baseball broadcast. And as he walked toward
Charles, he said, Ray, my name is Vin Scully, and its a pleasure to meet you. He
might as well have said, A pleasant good evening to you wherever you may be,
because thats how it struck Ray. And then they sat down, and we had a
combination baseball and music discussion. Vin had a nice experience. And Ray
Charles -- and I mean this sincerely -- hes Ray freaking Charles -- I believe he
had one of the great experiences of his life.Jerry Crasnick/ESPNA thank you note
Vin Scully wrote to ESPN.com senior writer Jerry Crasnick.Want more of this Bob
Costas interview? Go to our The Man. The Voice. The Stories. The Extras page.The
StyleHe has been the Dodgers television voice for decades, but if you listen
closely to Vin Scully on the airwaves, you can still hear a man who was raised
on radio. And even he admits that all those years filling in the blank canvas on
radio have helped him carve out a style unlike anyone else in the booth.Jon
Miller (San Francisco Giants broadcaster): I think that he has a great grasp of
how to do the television, (but) its all firmly grounded in his ability to do
radio and how he was brought up in the business as a radio guy. ... There are
plenty of guys who are on TV ... where they just sit and chit-chat, the two guys
chit-chatting back and forth as pitches are being made. And, you know, Vinny,
thats not his style. He likes to give you the next pitch, to digress for a
moment from this story, and then the pitch, and then back to the story. ... You
know, in radio, you have to describe every pitch to people. It didnt happen
until you described it to people on radio. Thats just a total, basic fundamental
of radio.Bob Costas: You know, (Red) Barber, when he first started doing games
on television, he very tersely put it: On radio, a broadcasters No. 1. On
television, he is a distant No. 2. Your job on radio is to paint the picture.
Your job on television is to put a caption beneath a picture that already
exists. When he first said that, that sounded like, yes, thats right, and for
the most part, it is right -- except Vin, who obviously had great regard for
Barber and owes him a debt as his mentor, Vin didnt just put a caption beneath a
picture. He put a frame around it, and he added shadings to it. So, yes, for Vin
there is a difference between radio and television, but my impression is that he
didnt see it as much of an either/or as Red did. Red saw them as distinctly
different. Vin saw a way to meld them.John Lowe: The year that Ichiro was going
to break the George Sisler hit record, of course Sisler played a 154-game
schedule and Ichiro was playing a 162-game schedule. So Vinny wants to bring
this up without, I think, making it sound like hes criticizing Ichiro. Ichiro
did have a tremendous year. But to bring up this issue of the 154 versus the
162, he tells the TV audience, Just between us. Bob Costas: If you watch any
other game, no matter how good the announcer is, no matter how good they are,
there is always some obstacle or some maze that they have got to make their way
through if they are going to tell even one or two of the dozen or so stories
like that Vin tells during a game. So hes a uniquely talented announcer, but if
a 30-year-old Vin Scully came along today, the circumstances could never be
duplicated. The business might not know what to do with him. The importance of
radio would be much less. You would never have anything that would match the
odyssey of the Dodgers (or) the importance of Jackie Robinson. The transplant
from Brooklyn to the West Coast, the broken hearts in Brooklyn, the whole new
vistas of baseball on the West Coast. And then the metabolism of the society of
the game changing. But he is grandfathered in, and I mean that in the nicest
way. So the very things that appeal to people about him are the opposite of most
sports TV does. Its like we cant get enough of this, and we cant stop doing the
exact opposite.The CallsHe was there for Sandy Koufaxs perfect game 51
Septembers ago. He was there when Hank Aaron launched No. 715 and changed the
world. And of course Vin Scully was there when Kirk Gibson hit a World Series
home run off Dennis Eckersley that belonged in a Hollywood script. Its a
reminder that a funny thing happens when a man spends 67 years of his life
describing baseball games. His voice, his words, can become almost as big a part
of historys biggest moments as the moments themselves.Charley Steiner: You know,
were running down now, during each game, his top 20 calls of all time. Its very
cool. And for me, there have been so many. But the one call to me that kind of
sticks out more than the others is the Gibson home run: She. Is. Gone. Lays out.
Hes not screaming, but you could hear the excitement in his voice. Then there is
that moment, as Gibson is running around the bases ... he comes up with this
line: In a year that has been so improbable, the impossible has happened. And Im
thinking to myself, no mortal can do that.Kirk Gibson (On how Scully inspired
him to bat that night): What happened was, I had several injections in each leg.
I was in the training room. He kind of kept painting the game initially as no
Kirk Gibson because I wasnt available. I wasnt going to play. So they kind of
painted that as the game went on. Id listen to it and Id put ice on my legs on
and off, on and off. I had no inclination Id be able to play. ... Then, when
they got to the eighth inning, before they cut out (for a commercial), they cut
to the dugout again. We were trailing by one run now, and they said, Kirk Gibson
will not be playing tonight. And I just got up and said, My ass. ... I said, Go
get Tommy [Lasorda]. We hear Tommy [swearing]. Tommy says, Leave me alone,
basically. ... I said, Hit Davis eighth. Ill hit for the pitcher. He goes, OK.
... As I was sitting there watching the game, I kinda started dreaming a moment
in my mind. Id get up there and Id have a special moment and I started to feel
what it would feel like. ... And it just took place. And you hear the calls
after it ... She. Is. Gone. Jon Miller (On Aarons 715th): Henry Aaron hits one
of the all-time epic historic home runs in the history of the sport, and Vinny
gives a vivid description of it ... and (then) Vinny did not say anything for, I
dont know, almost a full minute after that. There was just the roar of the crowd
in Atlanta and the fireworks going off. And even though it was just a radio
broadcast -- he was only on the radio that night -- there it all was, as if you
were right there in the ballpark. You could hear it. You could almost feel it.
Then he came back in and he painted the picture not just of what was going on,
but of the actual significance of the moment. Of who Henry Aaron was and what he
had just done. And then the largest significance, of Henry Aaron being a black
man in the deep South in the United States, having broken this cherished record
by one of the most popular figures in the history of baseball, a record that a
lot of people did not want to see broken. And 50,000 people are on their feet in
the Deep South, cheering for this black man. ... And I just remember thinking,
Thats the greatest bit of extemporaneous live play-by-play sports broadcasting
in maybe the history of the medium. Bettmann via Getty ImagesHank Aarons mother
threw her arms around his neck; kissed him for all she was worth, Scully
described after Aaron hit homer No. 715 to pass Babe Ruth on the all-time list
in 1974.Want more of this Jon Miller interview? Go to our The Man. The Voice.
The Stories. The Extras page.Bob Costas (On Koufaxs perfect game): You know,
people who were at that game and had transistor radios were still listening to
Scully. They could watch it, but they were still listening to Scully and his eye
for detail -- Sandy removes his cap ... wipes his index finger across his left
brow, dries it off on his left pant leg, readjusts the bill of his cap. I
imagine that the mound at Dodger Stadium must be the loneliest place in the
world. There are 29,000 people here ... and about a million butterflies. He
described all the little things, like the people in the bullpen who were
pressing towards the fence to get a better look, and what the butterflies that
the infielders must be feeling, like, God, please dont let one get through me
and mess up a perfect game. And you have to also remember that, although (Jim)
Bunning has pitched one the year before, Don Larsen and Bunnings perfect games
were the only perfect games that had been pitched since 1922. So a perfect game
was a tremendous rarity. It seems to have come more frequently since. So not
only was it a rarity, but it was at Dodger Stadium, and it was Sandy Koufax. ...
When Koufax comes along, Vin is not that much older than Sandy. Sandy throws a
perfect game (at age) 29. And Vin is, what? 35? 36? They are both kind of at the
peak of their respective lives. ... Just as Koufax was an elegant pitcher,
Scully is the most elegant of baseball broadcasters.Jerry Reuss (Former Dodgers
pitcher on the thrill of having Scully describe his no-hitter): Oh, did he ever
set the stage. ... I posted it on my Flickr site, and its about two and a half
minutes long, and you get to see the final inning about how he did it. For me,
its the most memorable highlight that he ever did. You know, I still can (hear
the way he called it), and because of the way that it was done and watching the
whole ball game, I still remember the excitement. Hell, I saw the game. I
pitched the game. But by the way Vin describes it, its the closest I can get to
reliving it.Rick Monday (On how he treasures the tape of Scully describing how
he rescued the American flag from a protestor in 1976): For years and years, all
I had was that audio. And then (in) 84 ... I met a gentleman ... in Tom Lasordas
office who was with one of the movie studios. He said, Hey, I was at a buddy of
mines house whos with a different studio, and he showed me the video tape of the
flag. And I said ... Ive never seen that; nobody knows it exists. And he
messaged it over to me that night. So Ive been hanging on the words of Vinny to
recreate that for years, and then all of a sudden, heres this video. When you
look at the video and you match it with Vinnys talk, its like Vinny was standing
not just up in the booth sitting there. Its like he was right by my side as I
was going over. To this day, when I hear Vinny make the call -- and Ive heard it
maybe a few hundred times ... I get goosebumps.Bob Costas: Many of the all-time
great announcers have truly great and still resonant calls of great moments.
Some are every bit as good as Vins best calls. But what generally sets Vin apart
is all the stuff leading up to it. To really appreciate Vin, you dont listen to
just Harvey Kuenn, the last out of the (Koufax) perfect game. You listen to the
whole inning. And you listen to (Kirk) Gibsons or watch Gibsons whole at-bat,
which was an exceptionally long at-bat because it went to 3-2, and there were
foul balls, and he was limping around and gathering himself, and he had to come
out of the dugout, and it was very dramatic. You had to note that he put his
uniform on, and now he was present in the dugout -- all those things. Its when
you listen to all of it ... that is where Vin separates. Not necessarily the
call of the home run, or of the strikeout, or of the great catch, but of all the
atmospherics, everything that led up to it.Dodger pitcher Sandy Koufax is mobbed
by teammates on the field after pitching a perfect game. Shown in the picture
are Willie Davis, Wes Parker, Ron Fairly, Sandy Koufax and Don LeJohn.
Bettmann/Getty Images The StoriesIs there anyone you can you think of who was a
better storyteller than Vin Scully? Will Rogers? Mark Twain? Ken Burns? Well,
whoever the heck is in that argument, we know none of the other contestants was
trying to work play-by-play of a baseball game in between the tales.Rick Monday:
His ability for recall is absolutely amazing. Were into the computer age. Hes
got the best computer between his ears that you have ever seen.Jon Miller: Hes
just this walking repository of baseball history, and baseball oddities and
curiosities and personalities. And I think that, for me, is the beauty of who
Vinny is. Just his amazing recall of those stories. The art of it, for me, is
the ability to recall those things when it actually is relevant to what hes
doing -- the game itself. Its not like hes got a list of stories, (and he says),
I think Ill tell THESE stories tonight. Dennis Gilbert: When he tells a story,
he feels it. Its not just something that hell read about. Its something that
hell get himself engrossed in. Hell want to know as much about it as possible.
Its not like an actor just reading his lines.Stan Kasten (President and CEO of
the Dodgers): Just a couple of weeks ago, we were playing the Rays, the Tampa
Bay Rays. As you know ... there are several different types of rays, a fish. Of
course you know which of them are the fastest, and which are the slowest, and
which are the biggest fish. Or at least you do if you listened to that game that
night -- where we had about three innings of everything youd ever want to know
about fish, in between a delightful recounting of balls, and strikes, and hits,
and errors, etc., etc.Bob Costas: He and I always used to have this little
inside joke that no one ever lined into a double play to end an inning while Vin
was in the middle of a story -- never.Rick Monday: They tell you, No, dont start
a story with two outs. Vinny does. Vinny starts a story with two outs, and the
storys going to last five minutes. The game accommodates Vinny. The game will
slow down. The guy will foul off 12 pitches if Vinny starts a story. And if
anybody else, if any other human being starts a story, you get a 1-2-3 inning
and youll laugh, and itll be, And well come back and tell the story after the
next half-inning. Never happens to Vin. His timing is impeccable.Stan Kasten (On
all the times he found himself frozen in place, waiting for Scully to finish a
story): Ive got to hear how it turns out, right? ... Hes always got stories,
and, you know, OK, well, I didnt hear how the story ends, right? Ive got to hear
that. Ive got to hear how this middle reliever for the visiting teams
third-grade teacher taught him a lesson. I need to hear that, OK? Ive got to
know that story. I dont even know the damn pitchers name, but I need to know the
story.Ron Cey (former Dodgers third baseman): One of the things I was introduced
to here early, when I started playing here, was the transistor radio. ... Coming
out to listen to Vin Scully, and lot of people would bring their transistor
radios to the ballgame. Because we had so many people who got attached to that
philosophy, all those transistor radios would be on at the same time. It would
resonate and become like a loudspeaker.Jerry Reuss: I was pitching a game for
Houston -- it was either 72 or 73. It was a weeknight game, and there was maybe
a crowd of 20,000 there. But as I stood there on the mound ready to deliver a
pitch, for whatever reason it caught my attention (from the sound of those
transistor radios) that Vin was in midstory. ... It was the only time it ever
happened, but I can hear by his cadence, his inflection, that he was in
midstory. It just caught me. So I stepped off the mound, threw down the resin
bag, rubbed my hand, and I could still hear him tell the story. ... He got his
point out, people laughed, and without missing a beat, he said, Now Reuss is
ready to deliver. ... Thats the kind of respect that Vin Scully deserves.A.J.
Ellis (On how Scully got him trending on Twitter): It was 2012. It was my first
year as a starting guy. And I was having a game against the Cubs. I got an RBI
single my first at-bat, a home run in my second at-bat. And I didnt know about
this til after the game when all the writers came afterward (and asked): How do
you feel about Vin mentioning you on Twitter? And I was new to Twitter at the
time. I was like, What are you guys talking about? (They said) Vin got you
trending and kept talking about your name. Someone in the booth informed him you
were trending on Twitter. He had no idea what Twitter was. So, he talked about
it and said, Lets keep him going. Next thing you know, my Twitter account blew
up that night. I was (in) the top two or three stories in the country.Bryce
Harper (Nationals right fielder, on the thrill of having Scully call his first
game in the big leagues against the Dodgers): The first thing he said was,
Coming up to the plate is the 19-year-old Bryce Harper. His dads an iron worker
from Las Vegas. And his mom Sheri. ... I have the DVD of the game, and I have a
signed picture from him as well now, of me and him. He tells the stories. He
understands the players. He understands their families and what their mom and
dad do. Just everything. Hes an incredible person, and he has a huge heart. I
cant imagine the game without him.Justin Turner (Dodgers third baseman): The
first time I met him, I was a visiting player with the Mets. He came into the
locker room and I got to talk to him for 10 to 15 minutes. He ... started
talking about stuff that -- I had no idea how he knew this stuff about me and my
life and my parents. It was mind-blowing. ... He was talking about how every
Christmas I would go down (in) my parents house and help my dad put up Christmas
lights. I dont know how anyone would even know that. Its like hes camped out in
front of my house.The Farewell TourThe visitors clubhouse is crammed into an
undersized cranny in the bowels of Dodger Stadium. The home broadcast booth,
located in the Vin Scully Press Box, sits five levels up, overlooking one of
sports most picturesque vistas. To get from that clubhouse to that broadcast
booth requires a harrowing journey -- via either a shaky, slow-motion elevator
or by foot up a barren stairway and slow-moving escalators. But over and over
this season, a never-ending series of visiting managers, players and coaches
have undertaken that journey. And all for one reason: to salute the great Vin
Scully on his turf before its too late.Charley Steiner: I kid with him all the
time. I said, Vin ... youre so damn big your farewell tour comes to you. People
come up from the clubhouses to say hello and pay their respects -- managers,
broadcasters, writers, all of the people he would have had to see traveling. No,
they come to him. And its the damnedest thing. And theres such love and
reverence that comes from these people who come up. You know, they dont have
their full uniform on. They have their pants and T-shirt, you know, uniform
pants and T-shirt. Umpires, he makes time for them. And they all pose for
pictures. When Papi (David Ortiz) came up with the Red Sox, I saw that picture
for a week. But thats him, and thats where hes Babe Ruth. And youll never see
this Babe Ruth in a Boston Braves uniform.Boyd Robertson (Scullys stage manager
on Dodgers broadcasts for the last 28 seasons): Theyre all there to say hello
and say goodbye. A lot of the players in their 20s, if they are from Southern
California, their parents listened to Vin. ... One of the most touching visits
was from Dusty Baker, because as you know, they had a long history together. Hes
from Riverside and played with the Dodgers. It was touching to see them hug each
other and say goodbye.Vin Scully acknowledges the crowd during on-field
ceremonies to celebrate Jackie Robinson Day before the Dodgers-Padres game at
Dodger Stadium in 2007. Rich Pilling/MLB Photos/Getty ImagesBryce Harper (Born
in the offseason following Scullys 43rd in the booth and one of the first
vistors to pay homage): I asked before the series if there was any way I could
go up and see Vin and tell him goodbye. And they were like, Yeah, no problem if
you really want to go up there. I was like, Yeah, absolutely. I dont want to
make him come down here. So I made some time before the game to say hello and
made sure what time hed be up there so I wouldnt bother him. Thats somebody
everyone should pay their respects to. Not just Dodgers fans, but all of
baseball.A.J. Ellis (One of the first Dodgers to visit Scully in the booth): I
walk in, and hes sitting there right up by the microphone, and he says, Hey,
A.J. come right in. You immediately feel like youve traveled up to visit the
king.Stan Kasten (On what has stood out most about Vin Scullys farewell season):
The endless, and I mean endless ... stream of visiting players, coaches,
managers who make their pilgrimage on that rickety elevator up to the press box
for the only time in their lives to meet Vin Scully. Every game. Every game the
visiting team has people that, Oh, I have to get up to meet Vin Scully. ... Hes
attained a stature that is legendary, literally legendary. And so everyone who
respects the game at all, who has any consciousness of its history or its place
in popular culture knows Vin Scullys place in that world, which is at the top of
any pyramid you care to draw up.A.J. Ellis: I walked in, and he said, Thanks for
waiting. Its nice to have all these players saying goodbye. And, boom, thats the
moment it hits you. I said, Well, Vin, this isnt saying goodbye. Im coming up to
say, Hi. ... But then, as I walked out, he said it again: Thanks again for
coming up and saying goodbye. It was almost like weve taken him for granted
because hes always there.Vin Scully waves to fans from a car before the game
between the San Francisco Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers on Opening Day at
Dodger Stadium in 2014. Harry How/Getty Images The EndOn Oct. 2, 1936, an
8-year-old boy was walking down a street in New York, near the late, great
ballpark of the New York Giants, the Polo Grounds. As he passed a storefront
window, he was drawn to the linescore of the World Series game played earlier
that day, which ended: Yankees 18, Giants 4. A pang of sympathy for the Giants
rushed through young Vincent Scully. And it was that chance encounter, with the
linescore of a World Series blowout, he says now, that inadvertently launched
what would become a lifelong romance with baseball.Now roll the clock forward,
and keep rolling. Rip the pages off the calendar, and keep ripping. Spin ahead
exactly 80 years, to Oct. 2, 2016, to the San Francisco Giants versus Dodgers,
at AT&T Park. To the day Vin Scully will call his final game. The symmetry
is perfect. But the goodbye that is coming that day? Its bittersweet -- and
almost impossible to grasp for all of us who cant imagine baseball without That
Voice, and its seemingly endless, reassuring presence.Stan Kasten: Try to
comprehend 67 years of anything. ... Malcolm Gladwell could figure it out, the
enormity of doing any job, let alone the same job, in any sport, let alone one
sport, or any teams, let alone one team, for 67 f---ing years.Bob Costas (On
whether anyone else in any profession has had 67 years of greatness): I thought
of someone like Tony Bennett. ... Or someone like Angela Lansbury as an actress.
But the difference is that the baseball broadcaster, even more so than any other
sportscaster, is a constant presence. Even if we all have been constantly aware
of Tony Bennett ... its not like youre watching a Tony Bennett concert every
day, or seeing him on television every night for six months, or even as much as
you love him, listening to a Tony Bennett album every single night. ... Or even
if you have seen every movie that Angela Lansbury ever did, or every Broadway
performance that she ever delivered, thats still not the same as 162 baseball
games every year, which basically Vin did for most of his career until he just
started doing home games.Rick Monday: Every day for 67 years, our friend has
come on the air and given us Dodger baseball. Hes not a broadcaster. Hes our
friend, whether youve ever met him or not. He has that charm. He has that
attachment. Ive always said he could get kids in a sandbox to stop building sand
castles, to stop playing with the trucks, by reading the phone book if they
piped it into the PA system. He just has that quality about him.Bud Selig: You
know, there have been great announcers, but there isnt a question in my mind
that Vin Scully has had the most profound social impact on this game of any
announcer in history. And really, I would have to say to you, his impact is
greater than most people who are in the game, actually ... because what he did
with baseball is make it a family institution. People grew up every night,
couldnt wait to listen to him. He affected their families. He affected their
lives.Mark J. Terrill/AP ImagesMajor League Baseball commissioner Bud Selig
poses with Vin Scully after presenting the Dodgers announcer with the
Commissioners Historic Achievement Award in 2014.Want more of this Bud Selig
interview? Go to our The Man. The Voice. The Stories. The Extras page.Stan
Kasten: I get to know Vin, we become really good friends, and we talk about a
lot of things. And at one point it comes to where he hates the way major
leaguers do rundowns. They all stink at it. ... The best way to do a rundown is
the full arm fake. The full arm fake stops runners dead in their tracks, and you
gently walk over and tag them. Thats the way to do it, you know? And so Vin and
I had this thing. Vin said whenever theres a rundown now he thinks about me,
(and) whenever I see a rundown I think about him. And I was discussing this with
Vin one day, and I said, This is the right way to do rundowns, and the way I
know that is because I read it in stuff that Branch Rickey wrote 70 years ago.
And Vin says to me, Youre right. Thats right. Thats exactly what Branch and I
used to discuss. Oh ... Branch Rickey was a player who came to the major leagues
in [1905]. (So) Vin Scully has talked baseball with people who have played the
game from [1905] through yesterday, OK? Who on earth can make that claim? No
one. One person. Vin Scully.Bob Costas: Six degrees of Kevin Bacon? Its probably
two, and no more than three, degrees of Vin Scully -- to connect you in some way
to everything in baseball history. Everything. He had to have known somebody ...
who knew Cy Young. He had to have known somebody who probably met Ty Cobb. Ty
Cobb lived until 1961. If he didnt know Walter Johnson, he sure as hell talked
to somebody who batted against Walter Johnson. ... So there is no significant
baseball personage that Vin Scully either didnt know or potentially knew someone
who knew them.Stan Kasten: Vin and I joke about this all the time, I havent yet
conceded that hes leaving, although Im starting to think maybe its really going
to happen. All year when people say this is Vins last year, all I would ever say
was, Well see, and then just laughed because he knows thats what I do. But ...
Im ruefully getting close to conceding that he may really be leaving, and its
very painful.Jaime Jarrin (Dodgers Spanish-language broadcaster for the last 58
seasons): It is very sad, this year, for me, because I know the fact that hes
leaving the Dodgers, because he just plays such a big, big part in my
professional career. He has been my mentor, my teacher, my inspiration
professionally, my friend.Rachel Robinson (Jackie Robinsons widow and founder of
the Jackie Robinson Foundation): I can hardly believe that Vin Scully is
retiring after being such an important part of Dodger baseball. What fond
memories we all have of his enthusiasm for baseball, and his terrific
appreciation for the beauty of the sport. Our relationship with Vin goes all the
way back to the 1950s for sure, when Jack was still playing and Vin was a young
broadcaster. We were all so young then.Jaime Jarrin: I dont know how people will
react to the fact that he is not going to be there. ... But one thing I know:
People are going to be crying.Bud Selig: Will baseball go on and be fine without
him? Vin would be the first person to say that. And I will say that, too. It
will. But therell be a lot of lonesome people in Los Angeles.Stan Kasten: Vin is
still part of the organization and will still be here on special occasions. And
we havent completely defined that yet because, again, Im still not conceding
that hes leaving. ... But we get to replay his games forever, and thats going to
be comforting to many, many, many people, especially in Los Angeles. ... I grew
up with Red Barber, Mel Allen, and Phil Rizzuto, OK? And then I spent my whole
career (in Atlanta) with Skip Caray, and Pete van Wieren, and Ernie Johnson, all
of whom I loved and I became devoted fans of. But I dont feel the need to hear
them every day, like people in Los Angeles seem to need -- and will continue to
need, I think, for a very long time (to hear Vin Scully). ... And thats just
because hes Vin.Rick Monday: I have to admit Ive had a hard time thinking about
that last inning. Im not sure I can even be in the booth. I cant imagine when he
turns off that mic for the last time ... (very long pause, as Monday appears to
be fighting off tears) ... because the silence will literally be
deafening.ESPN.com MLB writers Doug Padilla and Katie Strang and ESPN The
Magazine reporter-researcher Doug Mittler contributed to this report. Jayson
Stark Jayson Stark is a senior baseball writer for ESPN.com. He also appears as
an analyst for ESPNs Baseball Tonight and ESPN Radio.join the conversation
follow @jaysonst follow ESPN
Saucony Outlet Online . The Oilers come in
having lost five in a row (0-4-1) and 16 of their last 20 games, dropping a 2-1
decision to the Vancouver Canucks on Tuesday.
Buy Sacony Shoes
Online . The 43-year-old closer, in his 19th and final big league
season, has said hed like to play the outfield. Yankees manager Joe Girardi says
hes thinking about allowing Rivera to do it this weekend, when the Yankees
finish their season with a three-game series at the Houston Astros.
http://www.discountsaucony.com/ . Fellow
centre Pavel Datsyuk remains out because of a concussion. Zetterberg has 11
goals and 19 assists for a team-high 30 points, and Datsyuk has a team-high 12
goals and 11 assists. BURTON-UPON-TRENT, England -- For once, its not what
Lionel Messi is doing with his feet thats creating a stir.After dyeing his hair
peroxide blond, the Barcelona forward will stand out even more in matches.The
29-year-old Argentine revealed the new hairdo, covering previously dark locks,
at the Spanish champions pre-season training camp in England.Defender Aleix
Vidal seemed bemused to be asked about Messis hair on Wednesday, saying hes free
to do whatever he wants. Im not boothered -- hes the best.
Clearance Saucony
Shoes. Messi isnt a trendsetter with his hair.In recent months,
James Rodriguez (Real Madrid), Samir Nasri (Manchester City), Aaron Ramsey
(Arsenal) and Marouane Fellaini (Manchester United) have gone blond.Going back
into the last century, Romanias entire 1998 World Cup team showed up for a game
all sporting blond manes.
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