San Francisco Chronicle

Broadcaste­r called 49ers, much more

BOB FOUTS 1921-2019

- By Steve Kroner Steve Kroner is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: skroner@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @SteveKrone­rSF

Bob Fouts, whose broadcasti­ng career lasted more than a halfcentur­y and included a lengthy stint as one of the 49ers’ main announcers, died of natural causes Sunday in San Francisco. He was 97.

The father of Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterbac­k and current CBS football analyst Dan Fouts, Bob Fouts grew up in Sacramento and went to college at St. Mary’s, where he helped start a student radio station on the Moraga campus.

After serving in the Air Force in World War II, Fouts soon began working on the broadcasts of the 49ers in the late 1940s when they were part of the AllAmerica Football Conference.

The 49ers joined the NFL in 1950, and for the next decadeplus, Fouts alternatel­y called their games on television for CBS and on radio.

“Those football days were the highlight” of his career, Fouts said in a December 2002 Chronicle story.

Longtime Bay Area broadcaste­r Barry Tompkins described listening to Fouts call games as “like sitting around a dinner table with your uncle. … You were part of his family.

“It wasn’t like listening to a broadcaste­r broadcast a game. It was more like a family member telling you about the game.”

Said Dan Fouts, who followed his father into broadcasti­ng: “When I listened to him as a child doing games, I could tell his interest and his investment not only in the teams he was calling but in the work he was doing.”

Bob Fouts’ signature phrase was “red dog,” which he used to describe blitzes by linebacker­s. In fact, “Red Dog” became Fouts’ nickname for many years.

He enjoyed a long and varied career. He was a colonel in the Air Force Reserve. He served as a public affairs director for government agencies.

In baseball, Fouts called games of the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League. In basketball, he called San Francisco Warriors and St. Mary’s games. He worked as a sports anchor for Bay Area radio stations — KSFO (560 AM), KCBS (740 AM) and KYA (1260 AM) — and for Bay Area television stations — KPIX (Channel 5) and KGO (Channel 7).

Into his 80s, Fouts remained a parttime Bay Area correspond­ent for ABC Radio.

Fouts was inducted into the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame in 2008. Also in that 2008 class was longtime Stanford and 49ers broadcaste­r Don Klein, who died Wednesday at 95.

Tompkins broke into broadcasti­ng in the 1960s at KCBS, where Klein and Fouts both worked.

“Like Don, (Bob) just kind of took me under his wing,” Tompkins said. “He accepted me as a peer. You don’t forget things like that — and he never changed. He was like that from the day I met him until the last time I saw him.”

Dan Fouts recalled meeting Willie Mays. “I introduced myself,” Dan said, “and (Mays) said, ‘You’re Bob’s kid?’ And I said, ‘Yeah.’ And he said, ‘Bob’s a good man.’ I heard that from people throughout the football world (and) also throughout the broadcast world.”

Perhaps Bob Fouts’ favorite parttime job came during the three years in the mid1990s when Dan Fouts was the sports director at KPIX. When Dan was off, Bob often subbed for his son.

“I hated it,” Dan said, displaying some of the selfdeprec­ating humor he inherited, “because when I came back to work, everybody said, ‘Why don’t you be more like your dad? He’s good.’ ”

Bob Fouts is survived by his wife, Julie, and five children: Bob, Patty, Nancy, Dan and John. He had 17 grandchild­ren and 27 greatgrand­children.

A memorial service is pending.

 ?? Bay Area Radio Museum Collection ?? Bob Fouts, above and at right in a KSFO promotiona­l photo circa 1958, began working on the broadcasts of the 49ers in the late 1940s. He also called the San Francisco Warriors’ games.
Bay Area Radio Museum Collection Bob Fouts, above and at right in a KSFO promotiona­l photo circa 1958, began working on the broadcasts of the 49ers in the late 1940s. He also called the San Francisco Warriors’ games.
 ?? Kurt Rogers / The Chronicle 2002 ??
Kurt Rogers / The Chronicle 2002

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