Tom Cheek was a broadcaster who announced Major League Baseball
games for the Toronto Blue Jays on
radio from the team's establishment in 1977 until 2004. Cheek's best-known
call was perhaps his description of Joe Carter's dramatic title-clinching
home run in Game 6 of the 1993 World Series, when he said, "Touch 'em all, Joe! You'll never
hit a bigger home run in your life!"
Born in Pensacola, Florida, Cheek attended the Cambridge School of
Broadcasting in Boston, Massachusetts and began his career in Plattsburgh,
New York. He moved to Burlington, Vermont as corporate sales manager and
sports director. Early Wynn was his first broadcast partner. From 1981,
Cheek's play-by-play partner was Jerry Howarth. They have had colour
commentators over the years including Gary Matthews and Warren Sawkiw.
From 1974 to 1976, Cheek was the swing man on Montreal Expos radio
broadcasts on television nights. Besides baseball, Cheek's play-by-play
experience also included basketball, football, and hockey for the
University of Vermont. Cheek also broadcast college basketball for the
Mutual Radio network, and was a member of the broadcast team for ABC
Sports at the 1980
Winter Olympics in Lake Placid and the 1984 Winter Olympics in
Sarajevo.
Cheek, perhaps the most respected Toronto sports broadcaster (with CJCL
1430 and FAN 590) equaled only by that of Foster Hewitt, announced every
single Blue Jays game from the first game on April 7, 1977 until June 3,
2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father - a
streak of 4,306 consecutive regular season games and 41 postseason games.
The Jays raised abanner to the Rogers Centre's "Level of Excellence"
bearing his name and, in the place where a uniform number would have gone,
the number 4,306.
Cheek quickly returned to the booth, but was forced to take further
time off after undergoing surgery on June 12, 2004 to remove a brain
tumor. It seemed he had recovered and would call the Jays games in 2005.
But the cancer returned and he had treatment at Mount Sinai Hospital and
Toronto Western Hospital. By September 2005, Cheek's condition had
deteriorated and he was reportedly in grave condition. He could no longer
speak and was at his home in Florida. He passed away at age 66 in Oldsmar,
Florida, and was buried in Clearwater, Florida on October 14, 2005 with
his wife Shirley, three children and seven grandchildren present.
In 2005, Cheek was nominated for the Ford C. Frick Award from the
Baseball Hall of Fame, along with long-time broadcast partner Jerry
Howarth.
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