A third baseman in the minors, I lost my first 14 decisions of 1979 to tie a record, but became the AL Comeback Player of the Year for my 16-13 record in 1980.
Robert Allan Murphy was a sportscaster who spent 50 years doing
play-by-play of Major League Baseball games on television and radio.
Murphy made his first appearance in a broadcast booth with the
Muskogee, Oklahoma Reds. His first major league job was with the Boston
Red Sox in 1954, working alongside Curt Gowdy. In 1960, he moved to
the Baltimore Orioles for two
seasons.
Murphy's call of Roger Maris' record-tying 60th home run of the 1961
season became an audition tape that landed him a job with the expansion New
York Mets in 1962 (also under consideration was Bob
Wolff). Murphy remained in the Mets broadcast booth through
2003, joining long-time colleague Lindsey Nelson as a recipient of the
Baseball Hall of Fame's Ford
C. Frick Award in 1994. Murphy was inducted into the New York Mets
Hall of Fame in 1984.
His older brother, sportswriter Jack Murphy, was instrumental in
introducing Major League Baseball to San Diego, California in 1969; the
stadium there was named for him prior to the sale of its naming rights
and is still frequently referred to by longtime fans as
"The Murph".
Among Murphy's trademark calls were the following:
"Well Hiiiiiii everybody, Bob Murphy, along with (insert
co-announcer's name)."
"Here to paint the word picture for you" (introducing his
radio play-by-play colleague)
"Heeeeeeeee struck him out!"
"We'll be back with the happy recap in just a moment."
(after a Mets win)
Murphy was also an announcer for the New York Titans of the American
Football League. In addition, in 1973 he hosted the New York edition of Bowling
for Dollars, a locally-produced game show, on WOR-TV, then the Mets
broadcast home.
After the 2003 season, Murphy retired to Florida. He died of lung
cancer in West Palm Beach. After his passing, the Metropolitans honored
"The Murph" by wearing a "Bob Murphy" patch on the
left sleeve of their uniforms for the rest of the 2004 season.
Our sites have always been by you and about you. If
you check
our TV Forums or our Technology & Science forums, you'll find literally thousands of messages from fans
of 1970s TV shows, survivors of hurricanes or aircraft accidents, etc. from all over the world sharing their memories, asking
questions, making comments. Our baseball section is new, but don't let
that stop you from sharing
your memories of the first game you went to, your favorite player, a
now-forgotten stadium, etc. Of course you can also ask questions, post
trivia, tell the world what you think of Barry Bonds, or just read what
others are saying.
Logos and team names may be trademarks of their respective franchises or leagues. This site is not recognized, approved, sponsored by, or endorsed by Major League Baseball nor any sports league or team. Any marks, terms, or logos are used for editorial/identification purposes and are not claimed as belonging to this site or its owners. Any statistical data provided courtesy of Retrosheet (see credits).