USA TODAY Sports Weekly

‘Mr. Baseball’ at 83:

Broadcaste­r’s appeal remains strong at 83

- Tom Haudricour­t @Haudricour­t USA TODAY Sports

Broadcaste­r Bob Uecker remains a treasure to the Brewers and baseball fans as he enters his 47th season with Milwaukee.

Bob Uecker insists he PHOENIX doesn’t think about how much longer he’ll broadcast Milwaukee Brewers games on the radio.

But Uecker is pretty sure he doesn’t want a farewell tour if and when he decides it’s time to walk away.

“The presents would probably be pretty crummy anyway,” he said.

Uecker, of course, was exercising his trademark self-deprecatin­g humor with that remark. But he really has no thoughts at this point of stepping away from the microphone, which is very good news for Brewers fans as well as those who follow him from around the country. The 83-yearold Milwaukeea­n — yes, he is 83, no matter what reference site claims otherwise — is entering his 47th season in the booth and just might go for 50.

“Who knows? It could be next year or the year after that (when he retires),” Uecker said.

One factor that won’t come into play is Uecker’s contract. That’s because the man known as Mr. Baseball has never worked with a formal agreement, beginning with his first handshake deal with former Brewers owner Bud Selig.

“I’ve never had a contract. Never,” he said. “When (principal owner) Mark Attanasio came here, that’s the first thing he asked me: ‘Do you want to work the same way you did with Bud?’ I said, ‘Yeah.’

“I don’t need a contract. If you don’t want me back, tell me. If I don’t want to come back, I’ll tell you.”

Uecker cut back on his road schedule considerab­ly last year and plans to do likewise this season. But if the Brewers are playing at Miller Park, you can bet he will be in his customary seat in the WTMJ radio booth, working games with sidekick Jeff Levering.

“I think I did 110 games (total) last season,” he said. “I’ll probably do about the same this year. I’ll do some road games. I won’t do the West Coast. I might go to Yankee Stadium because it might be the last time.

“Jeff and Lane (Grindle) do such a good job (on trips Uecker misses). It’s time for them.”

‘HE HASN’T LOST A THING’

Uecker has one loyal listener who always knows when to tune in to Brewers games long distance. Robin Yount, who became best friends with Uecker during his 20-year Hall of Fame career in Milwaukee, loves listening in on satellite radio when driving in his car.

“It makes the drive more fun listening to Ueck,” said Yount, who lives in the Phoenix area. “I listen regularly. He’s the best. You hear people say somebody is one of a kind,’ but that’s not always true. With Ueck, it’s true. He is truly one of a kind. That’s not a cliché in his case. I’ve never met anyone else like him.

“There’s no way to replace somebody like that. Hopefully, it never happens. I know it will one day, but I hope that day is a long time away. I tell people all the time, ‘This is the same guy today that I met in 1974.’ He hasn’t lost a thing. He’s the best.”

One by one, Uecker has seen his radio contempora­ries leave the booth. After the 2016 season, fellow Hall of Famers Vin Scully and Dick Enberg retired from calling games for the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres, respective­ly.

“They are such good friends,” Uecker said. “I once apologized to Vin because he had to call games I played in. ‘Tricky’ (Enberg) and I go way back. Back when he was with the Angels, I did a pregame show with him about my ‘Passed Ball School.’ I said I was teaching kids to miss the ball on purpose so the game wouldn’t go into extra innings and their parents could go home (Uecker led the National League in passed balls in 1967 despite playing in only 59 games).

“(Angels owner) Gene Autry called, wanting to know what we were talking about. I offered Autry the California franchise for the ‘Passed Ball School’ if he wanted it. It turned out to be a funny deal.

“Enberg has done so many other things — tennis and football and basketball. He has done it all.”

Baseball fans might not realize it, but Uecker once called other sports on the radio as well in Milwaukee. He did Marquette basketball broadcasts with Tom Collins and worked football and basketball games for Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

“UWM was actually pretty good in football,” Uecker said. “(Safety) Mike Reinfeldt played there (he was captain of the last team in 1974) and went on to be a big-time safety in the NFL.

“When I think back to all those years, working with all those guys, it was something.”

Uecker always knew baseball, his first true love, was where his broadcasti­ng future would unfold. In 1972, when former Milwaukee

Braves teammate and pal Eddie Mathews took over as manager in Atlanta, he offered a coaching position to Uecker, who had just finished his first year in the Brewers radio booth.

“I turned him down,” Uecker says. “I didn’t really have interest in coaching. This broadcasti­ng gig was such a nice thing.”

Over the years, Uecker would venture off into other successful and high-profile endeavors. Remember Monday Night Baseball on ABC-TV? The original broadcast crew was Uecker, Bob Prince and Warner Wolf in 1976, and Uecker later shared that booth with broadcast legends Howard Cosell and Keith Jackson.

His impressive list of credits expanded to more than 100 appearance­s on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, where the Mr. Baseball moniker was born. Uecker also starred on the TV sitcom Mr. Belvedere, which ran for 122 episodes; became more famous in the series of hilarious commercial­s with the Miller Lite All-Stars, and struck gold again with his memorable turn as broadcaste­r Harry Doyle in the Major League movies. A national celebrity was born, but Uecker always returned to the Brewers radio booth when all was said and done. It was his home, literally and figurative­ly, personally and profession­ally.

“The network stuff was fun, but coming back to Milwaukee was always best,” he said. “Being born and raised there, it meant so much to me.

“I enjoyed all the other stuff. Whoever thought Major League would do what it did? They basically let me do what I wanted. I didn’t have a script. I just looked at the scene, and they’d say, ‘Go!’ ”

VICTORY TOUR? NEVER

Uecker will miss one home series for sure this season — three games vs. the Cubs on July 28-30. That weekend, Selig, whom Uecker loves to call “Al” to his face, will be inducted into the Hall of Fame in Cooperstow­n, N.Y., a tribute to his successful 22-year stint as baseball’s commission­er.

“I want to go there and sit back, relax and watch,” Uecker said. “That’s a big day for Buddy.”

Uecker is still renowned for his knee-slapping speech in Cooperstow­n on July 27, 2003, when he was honored with the Ford C. Frick Award for career excellence in broadcasti­ng. Inductees normally are told to get off stage in less than 10 minutes, in part because aging Hall of Famers are sitting there, often under hot and humid conditions, but Uecker was allowed to go twice that long with no complaints.

“In 1967 I set a major league record for passed balls, and I did that without playing every game,” he said during the speech, eliciting laughter. “There was a game, as a matter of fact, during that year when Phil Niekro’s brother (Joe) and he were pitching against each other in Atlanta. Their parents were sitting right behind home plate. I saw their folks more that day than they did the whole weekend.”

And on and on it went. It was a performanc­e of which any profession­al comedian would have been proud.

“The day before, Yogi Berra came up to me and said, ‘Ueck, don’t stay up there too long. It’s hot out there,’ ” Uecker recalled. “But (during his speech), I could hear (the Hall of Famers) laughing and yelling, ‘Keep going!’

“I remember (former) President (George H.W.) Bush, sitting there in the front row of the crowd, laughing his ass off. That was great.”

Uecker hasn’t appeared in a movie since Major League III: Back to the Minors, a box-office bomb in 1998.

“I thought Major League II (in 1994) was pretty good, but the third one, we probably shouldn’t have made,” he said diplomatic­ally.

But is Uecker done making movies? Back home in Milwaukee he has a script on his desk that intrigues him. It’s a baseball film, of course, and he would play a ghost who returns from the past with a specific mission. Suffice it to say his role would be largely comedic, and we’ll leave it at that.

“It’s a decent script,” Uecker said. “I just don’t think I have the time to do it. It depends when they’d do it. I’m in a lot of scenes. I think it would be a good film.”

At this stage, Uecker is hesitant to do anything that draws him away from the radio booth for long. He is intrigued by the Brewers’ rebuilding process and would like to see it through to the other side, which he thinks will be successful.

So Uecker is ready for yet another season, his 62nd overall in the game. No contract. No plans for retirement. And, please, no victory tour.

“I’d never announce it beforehand,” he said. “When I came here, it was no big thing. That’s the way I want to go out.

“I’m not trying to set any records or anything. I still enjoy doing the games. As long as I’m not going to embarrass myself or embarrass the team in any way, I’ll keep doing it. I’d quit immediatel­y if I was doing that.”

 ?? MORRY GASH, AP ?? Announcer Bob Uecker sits next to a statue of himself that was unveiled in 2014 in the upper deck at Milwaukee’s Miller Park.
MORRY GASH, AP Announcer Bob Uecker sits next to a statue of himself that was unveiled in 2014 in the upper deck at Milwaukee’s Miller Park.
 ?? 2003 PHOTO BY MORRY GASH, AP ?? Bob Uecker has had handshake deals with Brewers owners. “I’ve never had a contract,” he says.
2003 PHOTO BY MORRY GASH, AP Bob Uecker has had handshake deals with Brewers owners. “I’ve never had a contract,” he says.
 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Uecker, shown in 1964, likes to joke about the fact that he led the league in passed balls in 1967 despite playing in 59 games.
AP FILE PHOTO Uecker, shown in 1964, likes to joke about the fact that he led the league in passed balls in 1967 despite playing in 59 games.

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