In case you were listening to 610 this evening and heard the debate regarding whether Harry Kalas should be put out to pasture, here is the article from Philadelphia Magazine causing all the ruckus.
It’s the bottom of the fourth, two outs and a man on first, with the Phillies losing to the San Francisco Giants on a rain-soaked afternoon at Citizens Bank Park. Crack! The ball sails to center field, and if it’s possible to enjoy listening to a home run more than seeing one, that’s because the man with the call is Harry Kalas. “Home run Ryan Howard!” he yells with those raspy, resonant pipes. The Phils take the lead. It’s a perfect moment, save for one detail — Howard struck out earlier that inning. Aaron Rowand hit the dinger.
Kalas quickly recovered. But this season, such gaffes have become harder to ignore, as blown calls, forgotten names and pauses on close plays have led to whispers among local sports-media types that it may be time for Kalas to hit the showers. “If you’re hearing things are slipping,” says a local broadcaster, “you’re right.” One sports analyst puts it a bit more bluntly: “Harry’s a shell of himself.”
Naturally, no one wants to tell a legend it’s time to go. (Just ask Penn State.) Such reluctance speaks to Kalas’s status as a sports god here, as big as or bigger than most of the athletes he’s covered in his 36-year career. It’s also a result of his public falling-out with on-air sidekick Chris Wheeler in 2004. The upshot: Wheeler was branded as a schemer gunning for Kalas’s job. Unfair as that was, Wheeler’s popularity plummeted, and a lesson was learned: Players and managers may come and go, but Harry is untouchable.
Kalas, 71, says he isn’t considering retirement. “I feel good,” he says. “If it becomes a grind, then maybe I’ll think about it. But that hasn’t happened, knock on wood.” While he has plenty of post-baseball options — an NFL Films insider describes him as “still at the top of his game” as the voice of Inside the NFL — there’s no pressure coming from the Phillies. “Harry leaves when Harry’s ready,” declares Rob Brooks, the team’s broadcasting manager. “He’s still having a great time, and we’re happy to have him.”
Somehow, that’s reassuring. But there’s a lesson to be learned from beloved New York Mets play-caller Ralph Kiner, 84, now afflicted with Bell’s palsy. The fuzzy nostalgia of hearing his voice is tempered by the pathos of his slurred speech. Kalas appears to be in great health. But the day may come sooner rather than later when he’ll have to make the toughest call of his career.
Sorry, but this article is pure blasphemy. How dare this writer suggest that Harry the K step down! Harry and the Phanatic are about the only things that have consistently delivered for this franchise. He should be able to retire when he wants.
However, I will admit that his innings be scaled back. Scott Framzke isn't bad on the radio and should be given a shot on TV. This would let Harry get a rest here and there. Such a move would serve him well and energize him for the key parts of the game.
This town already screwed over my favorite all time Philly announcer, Gene Hart. Let's not see it happen again.
This town already screwed over my favorite all time Philly announcer, Gene Hart. Let's not see it happen again.
1 comment:
I hate to say it, but it'd be better for him to go out while he's on top. Having lived in North Jersey for 20+ years, I saw the same thing happen with Phil Rizzuto and the Yanks. Phil was an institution too. By the time he left, one had to wonder if he still knew that he was calling a baseball game and not something else.
You never want to see someone fail like that, trust me.
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