Dave Niehaus dies at 75: An appreciation
His calling of the game was often better than the Mariners' game itself. If he had broadcast in a major market, he might have been a Hall of Famer sooner.
Gina Catarra/via Wikimedia Commons
April 6, 1977, was the night we all started suffering together. The difference the past third of a century is that, for Dave Niehaus, the optimism always seemed to trump what for many of us was the fatalism of a kind of cursed brand of Seattle baseball that never would lead to anything transcendent.
Niehaus, who died today (of a heart attack, it’s being reported as I write this), seemed to realize that what is transcendent about baseball isn’t necessarily winning pennants or proceeding through the playoffs to a World Series championship. That stuff is transitory.
For him it was the virtual eternity of the daily ritual during the endless-seeming season: tape the pregame comments with the Seattle Mariners manager; visit with his press-box peers (well, nominally so); wander onto the field during batting practice, bantering with anybody about anything; accept the adulation of what may have been more well-wishers and admirers than anyone connected with Seattle has ever had.
Then came the good part. Whether it was the 7-0 loss to the Angels opening night, 1977, or the Refuse to Lose epic fifth game of the ’95 playoffs with the Yankees, it didn't seem to matter with Niehaus. Whether the M's won or (more likely for this franchise) lost, he genuinely loved everything connected with baseball.
He must have. Under his watch as the only lead announcer the club ever had, the M's obviously under-performed. They're now but one of two remaining franchises never to play in a World Series and their roster and management woes have been described, reported, and lamented to distraction.
But the on-field folly never fazed Dave Niehaus. He just loved the damned game.
His artistry as a raconteur was such that he could digress during an M's dressing-down (never better than with Ron Fairly) in tangents intended to distract listeners from the disaster on the field. I'd pay a lot to have a tape, for example of the time the M's were being annihilated and, observing it dutifully but peripherally, Niehaus and Fairly kept a patter going about, of all things, the variety of exotic "meat" they’d eaten. It went on for a full half inning. I paraphrase:
Fairly: “Ever eat snake?”
Niehaus: “Yep.” Pause. “Just like they say. Tastes just like chicken.” Pause.
Fairly: “Alligator?”
Niehaus: “Uh huh . . . just like chicken.”
On this and many occasions the "game-calling" was much better than the game. It was little wonder that Niehaus won a Baseball Hall of Fame appointment. If he'd announced in a major market, the honor might've arrived a decade sooner.
Detractors I know from other markets sometimes called Niehaus a hopeless "homer." Most announcers are. But I probably listened to as many minutes (well, hours, days, years) of Niehaus as anybody and I distinctly recall many instances of him leveling with listeners about the shortcomings of the almost-always short-came club.
During his recent years I wondered (and mused in writing) whether Niehaus’s eyesight was bad. His one-time expert observations of, say, a ball hit into "deep" center field lately were describing a ball that turned out to be a routine fly-out.
I also took issue with his incorrigible use of "irony" when he really meant "coincidence."
One ongoing Niehaus mischaracterization was his reference to the "batter" as the “hitter,” infectious in that, top to bottom, all M’s personnel seem to have taken on the same way of referring to the guy at the plate.
I’ve long-since appreciated that Niehaus understood the distinction. But he realized that merely to be a "batter" isn’t nearly as kinetic, optimistic, hopeful as being known as the "hitter." If Niehaus called the guy a hitter, maybe that’s what the player would become.
One can’t comprehend what it will be like next season without the mellifluous voice of this master audio artist coming across the airwaves for hundreds of hours of narration that have become synonymous with summers in Seattle. The first call I got when the news broke a while ago, not surprisingly, was from my 31-year old son, lamenting the loss from a perspective of a generation of lucky listeners who have never known anything but Niehausisms. (Who but Niehaus eschewed the clichéd “that’s two outs,” preferring “that’s two in the mud”?)
Knowing the announcer only peripherally, though, I would imagine he would have advised those who are certain to endure the void of his absence simply to keep watching and listening to baseball, and loving it as he did. It won’t sound the same. How could it? What so many of us clung to with this clumsy, often crummy franchise is gone.
Left behind is the most obvious, hauntingly optimistic epitaph imaginable: Fly, fly away.
Next page: A KCTS 9 video where Niehaus talks about his induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
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Comments:
Posted Wed, Nov 10, 8:17 p.m. Inappropriate
Dave Niehaus could narrate paint drying and make you want to listen. Partly, it was irrepressible optimism of the "two-grand-slams-and-we're-right-back-in-it" school. Jeez it's hard to imagine the M's without him, without his constancy. This guy has delivered more hope than Obama.
Posted Wed, Nov 10, 9:48 p.m. Inappropriate
Nice guys do finish first. Niehaus won his World Series.
Posted Thu, Nov 11, 8:49 a.m. Inappropriate
Nice Eulogy Mike and well said Knute. Not only did Niehaus "love the damn game" he did so in a way that was infectious. After the unpleasantness of the 94 season, I swore off baseball forever. Not being able to quit cold turkey I still listened to games on the radio. Niehaus' play by play reminded me why I too loved the game and drew me back to the Kingdome well before the M's incredible run sealed the deal. I never met the man personally, but this town won't be the same without him. My heartfelt condolences to his friends and family.
Posted Thu, Nov 11, 10:20 a.m. Inappropriate
Great piece Mike - Dave Niehaus always reminded me of the best of cricket commentators in the UK, who could talk for hours about cakes and tea while a profoundly uneventful, esoteric game meandered inexorably towards its end.
And of the great Scottish rugby commentator Bill McLaren, who had a similar gift with language and relentless love of the game he described (speaking of one player's pre-kicking ritual as 'A heek of the breeks and a little ting tong'). And Michael O Muircheartaigh, the legendary voice of Gaelic Games...
'Colin Corkery on the 45 lets go with the right boot. Its over the bar. This man shouldn’t be playing football. He’s made an almost Lazarus-like recovery from a heart condition. Lazarus was a great man but he couldn’t kick points like Colin Corkery.'
Posted Thu, Nov 11, 10:52 a.m. Inappropriate
KIRO has been replaying Dave Niehaus's Hall of Fame speech. It's linked to from http://www.mynw.com/category/mariners_articles/20101110/Mariners-broadcaster-Dave-Niehaus-dies-at-75/ (http://goo.gl/c6tEg for short) and described at http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/larrystone/2008076576_stone28.html (http://goo.gl/Jj86E for short).
"On a hot, sultry July [1946] evening about 8:30 at night ... Suddenly, from the old Zenith floor model radio in the living room comes this voice screaming, 'It might be ... It could be ... it is!' And the young boy jumps about three or four inches off the ground with each halting phrase. Magic is happening in St. Louis, Missouri. Stan Musial hit another home run about a zillion miles away, and a career has germinated that ends up here in Cooperstown today."
What a speech. Listen to it, if you haven't already. Listen to it again, if you have.
I still have my old My-Oh-My KVI bumper sticker somewhere. Dave was probably the local broadcaster I've followed the longest, since I watch local news far less often than I used to, and didn't start listening to talk radio till I was a teenager. I will miss him.
Posted Thu, Nov 11, 12:53 p.m. Inappropriate
Baseball is a "radio sport" because of guys like Dave. I wasn't a baseball "fan" until I moved to seattle and began listening to games on the radio on weekends. I've stood in the isle of the hardware store staring at a tool for 20 minutes while Dave called an electrifying at-bat. And you know, it wouldn't be near as exciting at the ballpark as standing in front of a wall full of wrenchs, listening to Dave say, " he starts his wind-up and here comes the pay-off pitch...."
Posted Thu, Nov 11, 9:26 p.m. Inappropriate
Only Mike Henderson could help send Dave Niehaus "to his maker," so-to-speak with such a sincere,and thoughtful testimonial, including a few Joann Byrd-like "nits." What a refreshing contribution, unlike the gushing of unending positives from the mainstream media following Dave's sad passing.
We will so miss barbecuing on moderately warm August nights to the sound of Dave's wonderful story-telling qualities, even through yet another loss. He was truly underestimated by the national media, but we, in Seattle, did and will love him for his great accomplishments that he brought to our community. Thanks, Mike for a wonderful send off to our friend and neighbor Dave Niehaus.
Posted Fri, Nov 12, 12:46 a.m. Inappropriate
A new stadium funded against the voters will, a phoney urbist dream of Sodo as Greenwich Village and lots of horrible seaons later, the guy still never saw any rings. That's the sadness of it.
Posted Fri, Nov 12, 4:29 p.m. Inappropriate
http://www.kuow.org/program.php?id=15451
An interview with Dave by Dave Beck of KUOW - really a cracker.
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