Senin, 03 Oktober 2016

Vin, don't go! Scully is as eloquent as ever in his farewell Dodgers broadcast - Los Angeles Times

He spoke to the game, to its history, to the unique situation of being honored at a retirement party disguised as a baseball game.

He spoke to the adoring folks who filled San Francisco's AT&T Park, to the admiring announcers sitting in the next booth, to family members who surrounded his chair and wrapped him in a giant midgame hug.

Then, finally, after three hours of a brilliant final broadcast that will rank among his finest,  Vin Scully stripped away all the decorations and did what he has done best for 67 years.

He spoke directly to the hearts of Dodgers[1] fans.

He spoke simply, and we understood exactly.

With the cameras focused on the celebrating Giants[2] after their 7-1, wild-card clinching win against the Dodgers, the retiring Scully uttered his final live call of a baseball game.

 "I have said enough for a lifetime and, for the last time, I wish you all a very pleasant good afternoon," he said.

Moments later, at the end of a postgame message taped earlier from the broadcast booth, he signed off for good.

"There will be a new day, and eventually a new year, and when the upcoming winter gives way to spring, ah, rest assured, once again, it will be time for Dodgers baseball!" he said. "So this is Vin Scully wishing you a very pleasant good afternoon, wherever you may be."

 Silence. Chills.

In the coming years, wherever Dodgers fans may be, it will not be the same without him, a fact that rang true again Sunday when Scully officially ended the most legendary career in sports broadcasting history with his usual smarts, humor, and grace.

He focused on the Dodgers' batboy, Champ Pederson, who was celebrating his 29th  birthday.

"The thing about Champ, and he says it, he's outspoken about it, he says, 'Yes, I have Down syndrome but I'm OK.' He's a terrific young man … It's just a marvelous marvelous wonderful note … Champ Pederson, and he is a champ."

Has any play-by-play announcer ever consistently relayed so many life stories with such dignity?

As if sensing that some Dodgers fans were wondering why he would end his career at the park of their hated rivals, he also told a bit of his own life story. He wove the tale of how he became a Giants fan, and a baseball fan, after seeing the score of their 18-4 World Series[4] loss to the New York Yankees[5] posted on a storefront on Oct. 2, 1936.

"A  lot of time has gone by, exactly 80 years to the minute from that day I looked at the line score of the World Series,'' he said. "When I looked at the schedule and knew I was golng to retire, I thought, I have to do that game. It's as if it was ordained that I would do this game. So here we are, hope you're enjoying it, hope I'm not interrupting it too much."

Please, please, interrupt it more, interrupt it forever!

In the fifth, his large family joined him in the booth, prompting him to say, "What a way to celebrate your last game, having a family here with you…. Meanwhile, family, it's time for me to go back to work, so I love you, see you later!"

In the seventh, with prompting from Giants announcer Mike Krukow, a swaying Scully helped lead the crowd in the singing of "Take Me Out to the Bal l Game."

In one of his final moments before his formal farewells, he dropped a final word of wisdom, a slight rewording of a quote from Dr. Seuss.

 "Don't be sad that it's over," Scully said. "Smile because it happened."

Los Angeles is indeed sad, yet Los Angeles is truly smiling.

Godspeed, Vin Scully, wherever you may be.

bill.plaschke@latimes.com[6]

Twitter: @billplaschke[7]

References

  1. ^ Los Angeles Dodgers (www.latimes.com)
  2. ^ San Francisco Giants (www.latimes.com)
  3. ^ Hunter Pence ( www.latimes.com)
  4. ^ World Series (www.latimes.com)
  5. ^ New York Yankees (www.latimes.com)
  6. ^ bill.plaschke@latimes.com (www.latimes.com)
  7. ^ @billplaschke (twitter.com)

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