Jack Brickhouse was a sports broadcaster known primarily for his
enthusiastic coverage of Chicago
Cubs games on television from the late 1940s until the early 1980s, he
received the Ford
C. Frick Award from the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1983.
He covered national events from time to time, including the World
Series, even though his Cubs never got there. The voice on the audio track
of the famous Willie Mays catch in Game 1 of the 1954 Series at the Polo
Grounds belongs to Brickhouse. He was doing the game on NBC television
along with the New York Giants' regular broadcaster, Russ Hodges.
He also covered many other events, sports and otherwise, even
professional wrestling. Prior to the Chicago
White Sox getting their own TV network, he often did Sox games as
well. And for many years he covered the Chicago Bears on radio, in an
unlikely and entertaining pairing with famous Chicago gossip columnist Irv
Kupcinet.
Born in Peoria, Illinois, he began his broadcasting at the age of 18 at
Peoria radio station WMBD in 1934, and retired in 1981. Following brain
surgery on March 3, 1998 to remove a tumor, he died in Chicago, Illinois
from cardiac arrest at age 82. This sad event came amidst the excitement
of the Sammy Sosa-Mark McGwire home run race, and was a double-whammy in
that the Cubs had lost their other broadcasting icon, Brickhouse's
successor Harry Caray,
during the off-season. They were cut very much out of the same cloth, as
it were: extroverts, shameless "homers" who made even the
poorest games seem exciting.
One stylistic technique Brickhouse employed, though, was arguably
superior to Caray's: he tried to let the pictures speak for themselves.
Caray, a radio broadcaster by training, tended to describe the game on TV
as if he were doing a radiocast. Brickhouse was sparer with his
descriptive prose; not as spare as Vin
Scully of the Los Angeles Dodgers, certainly, but talking in quick
bursts rather than long sentences, knowing that the great camera work of
WGN-TV and of producer Arne Harris would tell much of the story.
Instead of over-describing the action, "Brick" was more
likely to add "flavor" to what was obviously happening, with
almost child-like enthusiasm. He would pepper his play-by-play with
various old-fashioned expressions, such as "Whew, boy!" after a
close play that went the home team's way, or "Oh, brother!" when
it went the other way, or "Wheeeee!" when the team would
do something well.
He was best known for his famous expression of "Hey-hey",
which he reportedly used everywhere... when the baseball team hit a homer,
when the football team scored a touchdown, or even when he was taking
tricks in a card game. But it was that home run call that stuck in fans'
memories, and that phrase now vertically adorns the screens on the foul
poles at Wrigley
Field.
Some examples of Brick's calls:
May 15, 1960; pitcher Don Cardwell, in his Cubs debut, is trying
to get the last out of a no-hitter, against the Cardinals; the batter is
Joe Cunningham; the left fielder is Walt "Moose" Moryn...
"Watch it now ... Hit on a line to left ... Come on, Moose! ...
HE CAUGHT IT! Moryn made a fabulous catch! ... It's a no-hitter for
Cardwell! ... What a catch that Moryn made, what a catch he
made!"
December 15, 1963; Bears defensive back Dave Whitsell makes a
key play that wins the game over Detroit, and clinches the Western
Conference for the Bears...
"Here's the pass... picked off by Whitsell! ... HE'S GONNA GO!
... HE'S GONNA GO! ... TOUCHDOWN! ... HEY-HEY!"
May 12, 1970; Atlanta's Pat Jarvis pitches to "Mr.
Cub", Ernie Banks...
"Jarvis fires away... That's a fly ball, deep to left, back,
back... HEY-HEY! He did it! Ernie Banks got number 500! The ball
tossed to the bullpen... everybody on your feet... this... is IT!
WHEEEEEEE!"
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