Los Angeles Times

The voice of summer

-

Los Angeles is such a complicate­d metropolis of disparate neighborho­ods that it’s hard to imagine a single event truly changing the place. Well, there is perhaps one: the retirement of Vin Scully.

Dodgers fans ( and surely many of the team’s executives) released a collective sigh of relief when their sainted announcer said lastweek that hewould return next year for his 67th season. But tempering that excitement was a warning by the 87- year- old game caller that next season will also likely be his last. More than a year out fromthe day that fans knew would arrive but still dread, some readers are already reacting.

Here are their letters. — Paul Thornton, letters editor

Barbara Pronin of Los Angeles says it isn’t the Dodgers that catch her attention:

For the better part ofmy 70- plus years, Vin has been the voice of summer, a welcome back drop to my sidewalk games, picnics in the park, strolls past open Brooklyn windows and many adult years in Los Angeles.

But thanks to the Dodgers’ egregious cable television

deal, his warmth and wisdom have faded to near obscurity, save for a few radio innings.

A strange and poignant realizatio­n washed over me as I read about Vin’s decision: It’s not the Dodgers I miss anymore. I have learned I can do without them. It’s the voice of summer I have loved and anticipate­d for so many happy summers.

Thanks, Vin, fromthe bottom of my heart, for so enormously enriching my life.

Pacific Palisades resident Dan Caldwell praises Scully the poet:

Agood friend of mine owned a bookstore in Pacific Palisades, where Scully used to live. I asked him if many celebritie­s came to his store; he said that not many did, but Scully was there frequently. I asked if Scully bought sports and baseball books; my friend said hewas mainly into poetry.

We Angelenos who grew up listening to Vinny and who consider Scully and the Dodgers as synonymous are going to miss his poetry.

Mark Judy of Laguna Beach wants to hear Scully call games on TV:

If youwant to hear a Southland ovation that would drown out the cheers at Dodger Stadium in reaction to Scully saying he will return next season, the teamowners should announce thatwe can all hear him next season on television.

San Diego resident Dennis Rohatyn suggests the Dodgers break new ground in replacing Scully:

With Scully retiring, the Dodgers should hire awoman to call the games. Not only would this break new ground in sports, reminiscen­t of Jackie Robinson’s achievemen­t breaking the color barrier in a Dodger uniform ( although neither as dangerous nor as dramatic), but itwould ease the pressure on his successor.

We all have Scully’s voice wired into our souls, available for continuous replay. But that is unfair to whomever replaces him. So let’s give an alto rather than a tenor sax a chance to play the music of the gameand record its rhythms for the Bums’ history and baseball blues’ posterity.

 ?? Alex Gallardo ?? HALL OF FAME broadcaste­r Vin Scully says he will return to broadcast his 67th baseball season in 2016.
Alex Gallardo HALL OF FAME broadcaste­r Vin Scully says he will return to broadcast his 67th baseball season in 2016.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States