RED BARBER
By Harvery Frommer
“Red
was perhaps the
most literate sports announcer I ever met."-Vin
Scully
In
my early and middle years of writing sports book, I
called on Red Barber to blurb them. He never failed. He along with Mel
Allen
those long ago summer nights spun the
tales of New York City Baseball and hooked me on one day writing books
about
the sport.
Red
Barber was one of my inspirations – listening to him spin the story of
Brooklyn
Dodger and then New York Yankee baseball, made me love, understand the
game,
and write about it. He always came through. I am in his debt.
This profile is for you “Red.”
Walter
Lanier “Red” Barber passed away at the age of 84 from complications
after
emergency surgery on October 22, 1992. His 33-year career as a
play-by-play
broadcaster had many acts, most notably as the top man announcing
Brooklyn
Dodger baseball for 15 years and then as part of the Yankee team with
Mel Allen
for a dozen seasons.
The
“Old Redhead,” the pride of Brooklyn, had his relationship
with “Dem Bums” severed when he was fired or resigned in 1953. One
story
circulated was that Barber’s outlandish salary demands triggered his
departure.
Another was that he was too critical of the team at times in his calls.
No
matter.
The Yankees
scooped him up quickly and
paired him with Mel Allen. The two
men
had contrasting styles but they worked well, even complemented each
other even
though their personalities, approaches, were very different. Allen was
hot, and
Barber was cool. Both would be the first broadcasters inducted into the
National Baseball Hall of Fame's broadcasting wing.
The new announcing job with the
Yankees was quite a comedown for Barber after twenty years as the main
man in
Cincinnati and Brooklyn. The new announcing job with the Yankees was
quite a
comedown for Barber after twenty years as the main man in Cincinnati,
1934-1938. It was there that he introduced such folksy expression like
“tearin'
up the pea patch,” “Rhubarb (fight)” and “Catbird seat (being in
charge.”
The main man on the Yankees and principal
broadcaster was Mel Allen, the most famous sports announcer anywhere. Barber’s role was pregame and postgame shows
on televised home games, working a few innings of play-by-play. He
traveled
with the team occasionally. Despite the down-sizing, the soft-spoken
southerner
accepted his role.
“Mel,”
Barber said, “accepted me as an equal, He could not have been nicer to
me
either then or all through the years we worked together.”
When Barber
joined the Yankees, many of
the colorful expressions he had used broadcasting Dodgers games
belonged mainly
to the past: “Oh-ho, Doctor!” (Wow oh, wow!), the home run call -
"Back,
back, back, back, back, back." He was more restrained, more objective,
highly accurate, even though he was no longer the “main man.”
In
1966, the Yankees were owned by CBS
and were a dismal last-place team. During a home game on Thursday,
September
22, the first for CBS executive Mike Burke as team president, only 413
fans were
scattered around the huge ball park. It was a makeup game against the
White Sox
that most thought would be rained out. The TV cameramen were under
strict
instructions from CBS media relations not to transmit images of foul
balls into
empty seats. Red Barber, truthful to a fault, described the scene on
air. A
week later, Red Barber was invited to a breakfast meeting. Burke
snapped out
the news the legendary announcer would not have his contract renewed
for 1967.
In the space of just a couple of seasons, two incredible baseball
announcers
were let go by the Yankees. It was a sad time for those who appreciated
the
great narratives of Yankee baseball they had provided.
PAUL
DOHERTY: Mike Burke inherited
the Red Barber situation, a situation made apparent long before this
ill-attended game versus the White Sox. Dan Topping (who had just sold
his
interest in the Yankees completely to CBS) left it for Burke to deal
with as
Red’s option was coming due at the ’66 season’s end.
A
non-renewal of Barber’s contract
was also pushed by the head of broadcast for the Yankees, Perry Smith,
a former
NBC executive and a big Joe Garagiola backer (Joe Garagiola had joined
the
Yankees as Mel Allen’s replacement for the 1965 season). Red’s
bitterness over
former-athletes-as-announcers did him in, nothing else. His testiness
on air
with fellow broadcasters Garagiola and Phil Rizzuto won him no fans
within the
organization, let alone with his fellow announcers and Smith.
Nevertheless,
the “Old Redhead” kept busy in the
post-Yankee years, authoring seven books, many articles and reviews,
serving as
a voice in a few documentaries. In 1981, he joined National Public
Radio’s
Morning Edition as a regular commentator.
Walter
Lanier Barber had quite a run broadcasting 13 World
Series, 4 baseball All-Star Games, hosting so many other major sports
events.
He was there when Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in 1947, when
Roger
Maris hit the 61st home in 1961, through all the marker events before
and after
those.
RED
BARBER: I worked day and night to learn my business and I respected it
to the
end. I didn’t win 20 games or hit .350, but I worked harder at my trade
than
any announcer I knew about.
About
Harvey Frommer: One of the most
prolific and respected sports journalists and oral historians in the
United
States, author of the autobiographies of legends Nolan Ryan
Tony Dorsett, and Red Holzman, Dr. Frommer
is
an expert on the New York Yankees and has arguably written more books,
articles
and reviews on the New York Yankees than anyone. In 2010,
he was
selected by the City of New York as an historical consultant for the
re-imagined old Yankee Stadium site, Heritage Field. A professor for
more than
two decades in the MALS program at Dartmouth College, Frommer was
dubbed
“Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their alumni magazine.
His
ULTIMATE YANKEE BOOK debuts this fall. PRE ORDER from
AMAZON: http://www.frommerbooks.com/ultimate-yankees.html .
“As
a lifelong Yankees fan, I was devouring every last delicious
new detail about my beloved Bronx Bombers in this fabulous new book.”
—Ed Henry,
author of 42 Faith: The Rest of the
Jackie Robinson Story
Article is Copyright © 2017 by Harvey Frommer. All rights
reserved
worldwide