Vin Scully: "In-VIN-cible"

by Kevin Kernan, New York Post

"The following article about ASA Hall of Famer and "Sportscaster of the Century" Vin Scully was written by Kevin Kernan and appeared in the New York Post on May 12, 2016. I thought it was so good that we should share it with our members." ~ Lou Schwartz

ASA President Lou Schwartz presenting Vin Scully with the ASA "Sportscaster of the Century" Award at Dodger Stadium - 9/24/00


Los Angeles - Vin Scully is the one constant in baseball.

The legendary Dodgers broadcaster will retire at the end of the season after 67 years, and we all will be the sadder for it.

Everyone loves Vin. The fans, media, players — especially the players.

Here is the simple reason behind Scully’s success.

“I very much don’t think I’m broadcasting, I just think I’m talking to friends about the game,” Scully told The Post Wednesday before the Mets played the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium.

“What am I going to miss when I leave? I’m going to miss the roar of the crowd, more than anything.”

He then repeated those words: “More than anything.”

Vin Scully is the game’s best friend.

When Mets catcher Kevin Plawecki homered in Monday night’s 4-2 Mets win, Plawecki had one request. He wanted to get Scully’s call of his home run.

How cool is that?

“My dad texted me and said he got the chills hearing him just make the call,” Plawecki told The Post. “That’s awesome. Just the history he has had, the games he has called, growing up, hearing a Dodger game with his voice, everything is so cool about it.

“And this year, in his last year, to be able to hit a home run, that is really something cool. It will mean a lot to me in the future. That’s exciting.”

“I haven’t had the chance to meet him, but hearing him talk, you feel like you have.”

Do you ever.

When I told Scully what Plawecki said, a broad smile crossed his face. “That’s the nicest thing anyone can say,” Scully said.

“I still love baseball immensely,” he continued. “One of the big reasons is I tried to play it. I played it in high school, I played it in college and I realized they make what are really difficult plays, they make them look routine. [What’s] unbelievable holds my attention, how good they are, people just don’t realize.”

This final go-round is a little difficult on Scully because he never wants to overshadow the game. Friends have gone out of their way to visit him in the booth.

Terry Collins was so nice to come up here and visit,” Scully said. “He and Joe Maddon come up in uniform, amazing.

“And some of the kids who have grown up here and have become big leaguers, they might come up just to say hello. Giancarlo Stanton, he came up with a ball, asked me to sign it, funny things like that. It’s not that I’ve done anything, they were little kids and I’m still here.

“At least for a little while longer.”

That is the delightful impact Scully, 88, has on the game, broadcasting Dodgers games since 1950.

Vin gets it. He is never center stage. He lets the game breathe. Most of all, he knows how blessed he is to have been able to graduate from Fordham in 1949 and become a broadcaster with the Dodgers in 1950 and continue for all this time.

“I’ve said many times I should spend more times on my knees than I do,” said Scully, a devout Catholic. “Because that is all I can think of, it has to be God’s will. I mean to give me a job that I wanted at such a young age and then allowing me to do it for all these years, mil gracias, thank you God.”

In any language, Vin is magic.

“Vin is the greatest friend the game of baseball has ever had,” Mets broadcaster Howie Rose told The Post. “He’s Babe Ruth and The Beatles all rolled into one.

“The fact of the matter is he has set the bar so ridiculously high,” Rose said.

“For a baseball broadcaster who has any sense of what makes the art of broadcasting baseball so special, it’s being able to appreciate what Vin does on that artistic level and try to emulate it, not to copy it, not to steal it, but to say, this is the rung on the ladder that I am reaching for — not just be a screamer or a yeller or a self-aggrandizing person who wants to draw all the attention to himself. Vin represents whatever level beyond the gold standard.”

“I come to the ballpark to see friends,” Scully said.

Vin Scully is the sound of the game.


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