Al Helfer
Al Helfer | |
---|---|
Born | September 26, 1911 |
Died | May 16, 1975 (aged 63) Sacramento, California, United States |
Known for | Sports broadcaster |
George Alvin "Al" Helfer (September 26, 1911 – May 16, 1975) was an American radio sportscaster.
Nicknamed "Mr. Radio Baseball", Helfer worked seven World Series, ten All-Star Games, and regular season broadcasts for several teams (among them the New York Yankees, Brooklyn Dodgers and Oakland Athletics) and the Mutual network. He also did the broadcast of the Army–Navy Game during the 1940s and 1950s, and several Rose Bowl games.
Helfer was born in Elrama, Pennsylvania. He played football and basketball at Washington & Jefferson College, and took his first job as a sports reporter for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette after graduation, also working the football games of the Pittsburgh Panthers team for radio station WWSW. He started working on broadcasting recreations of baseball games in 1933 for Pittsburgh Pirates games.
He joined Red Barber as the regular broadcast team of the Cincinnati Reds in 1935. He left Cincinnati to join CBS in 1937, working a few baseball games and a lot of football games. Helfer was reunited with Barber (who often addressed him on-air as "Brother Al") on the Brooklyn Dodgers broadcasts in 1939. They worked together until 1941, when Helfer joined the U.S. Navy during World War II.
When he returned the Dodgers job was no longer available, so Helfer started doing "Game of the Day" broadcasts for Mutual. He was paired with Dizzy Dean on the network's broadcasts in the early 1950s, though the two men often argued and never got along.[1] He did eventually rejoin the Dodgers for their last years in Brooklyn, calling their final home game and introducing the players to the crowd for the final time. In 1958 Helfer called Philadelphia Phillies games which were broadcast to the New York market by WOR-TV, helping to fill the void of National League baseball left in the city by the departure of the Dodgers and Giants.[2]
He worked a number of teams after that, including the Houston Colt .45s (1962), Denver Broncos (1962–63), and Oakland Athletics (1968–69).
His second wife was vaudeville performer Ramona; they married on 14 June 1944, and stayed together until her death in December 1972. The following June, he married Sacramento resident Margaret Grabbe, to whom he remained married until his death. He died, aged 63, in Sacramento, California.
Event Broadcast History
- Major League Baseball All-Star Game (1939, 1950–1958)
- World Series (1945,[3][4] 1950–1954, 1957)
- Catfish Hunter's 1968 perfect game
Sources
- ^ Smith, Curt (2005). Voices of summer: ranking baseball's 101 all-time best announcers. Carroll & Graf Publishers. ISBN 0-7867-1446-8.
- ^ Gould, Jack (April 24, 1958). "We Want the Bums!; Phillies Bow as Video Regulars Here, and Brooklyn Was Never Like This". The New York Times. p. 63.
- ^ "1945 World Series Game 3 - Jack Benny OTR Podcast".
- ^ "1945 World Series Game 7 - Jack Benny OTR Podcast".
External links
- 1911 births
- 1975 deaths
- American Football League announcers
- American naval personnel of World War II
- American radio personalities
- American radio sports announcers
- Brooklyn Dodgers announcers
- Cincinnati Reds broadcasters
- College football announcers
- Denver Broncos broadcasters
- Houston Astros broadcasters
- Major League Baseball announcers
- New York Giants (NL) broadcasters
- New York Yankees broadcasters
- Oakland Athletics broadcasters
- People from Washington County, Pennsylvania
- Pittsburgh Pirates broadcasters
- Washington & Jefferson Presidents football players
- Washington & Jefferson College alumni