+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 7 of 7

Thread: Put On ESPN-Tribute To Jack Buck

  1. #1

    Put On ESPN-Tribute To Jack Buck

    They are doing a tribute to Jack Buck. I missed the beginning, but it is very beautiful. Tonight is just a short tribute with highlights and the playing of Taps along with the song I Will Remember You. His initials have been carved into the infield. His family is there. It is very touching.


  2. #2
    NYYF Legend

    Gringaloca's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    Deerfield Beach, FL
    Posts
    8,791
    I am watching it also....very moving....

  3. #3
    The memorial will be tomorrow before the game. Tha Angels agreed to playing and flying out later and Joe thanked them for it. Their manager said that for Jack Buck they would have played at midnight. It was too sweet.

    The poem "My Camelot" was read and it was lovely just like Buck. They also sang God Bless America. Too sad. They will be hanging a flag so he will forever be honored with the retired numbers. It was say, "That's A Winner" an expression for which he was known. I can only imagine how incredible tomorrow will be as tonight was awesome and it was just a short
    tribute.

    Well done Cardinals organization. Jack would have been proud.

  4. #4
    ~~N15NY~~ yankeesnum1's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Location
    Yonkers, NY
    Posts
    1,845
    That bits, I missed it, thanks for the heads up anyway LT
    I'm sure I'll see it tonight on Baseball Tonight and on Sports Center

  5. #5
    This is really sweet. What a nice honor for him.

    http://espn.go.com/mlb/news/2002/0619/1396829.html

    Wednesday, June 19

    Cards will hold closed-casket viewing at home plate

    Associated Press


    ST. LOUIS -- Jack Buck, the revered voice of the St. Louis Cardinals, is going to get the biggest baseball send-off since Babe Ruth.


    For 4½ hours on Thursday, the team will hold a public viewing of Buck's closed casket at home plate at Busch Stadium. The 77-year-old broadcaster died late Tuesday night after being hospitalized more than 5½ months.


    ''He's a Cardinal,'' said Red Schoendienst, one of the team's six living Hall of Famers. ''If he was a ballplayer, with his timing, he'd probably have been a .400 hitter.''


    Buck's broadcasting colleagues across the country agreed.


    ''He became a fabric of the St. Louis society, as (Vin) Scully is in Los Angeles and (Ernie) Harwell is in Detroit,'' said Reds Hall of Fame voice Marty Brennaman. ''Those guys were there so long that they became bigger than any player on that team.


    ''I had someone say to me, 'Stan Musial's the greatest Cardinal of them
    all.' I said no he's not, because there are generations of people who have listened to the Cardinals that don't even know who Stan Musial is. They know who Jack Buck is because he's been there through the bad times and the good times.''


    Baseball hasn't had a comparable ballpark ceremony since the Yankees held a two-day visitation for Babe Ruth at Yankee Stadium in 1948 with hundreds of thousands of people paying their respects. Manager Tony La Russa, a close friend of Buck during his seven years with the team, approved of the treatment.


    ''I think it's real appropriate,'' La Russa said. ''I'm sure there are going to be a lot of people here and a lot of people that wished they were here. He's the greatest Cardinal.''


    The team also carved the initials ''JFB'' in the grass just beyond the center field wall and again behind second base. And the bronze bust of Buck at the microphone outside the stadium became a shrine crammed with homemade cards, baseball hats, toy animals, balloons, old framed photographs of Buck and even a transistor radio tuned to KMOX -- the Cardinals' flagship station. Black bunting hung over the statue, alongside an American flag.


    On the dugout wall, reserve outfielder and St. Louis native Kerry Robinson and a clubhouse attendant taped Buck's signature signoff, ''That's a Winner!'' in tiny strips.


    In pregame ceremonies Wednesday, there was a moment of silence for Buck followed by Taps, a video tribute and speeches by team majority owner Bill DeWitt and broadcaster Joe Buck.


    ''Words are hard to come by,'' Buck said of his father. ''He would have loved to be with us tonight and I kind feel like he is.''


    DeWitt said Buck would be added to the list of the team's retired numbers, represented by a plaque and a flag carrying the words, ''That's a Winner!''


    Buck, who in more than five decades as a broadcaster rose from Harry Caray's sidekick to a St. Louis institution, died after a long battle with various ailments. He had been hospitalized since Jan. 3, about a month after undergoing surgery for lung cancer.


    On May 16, Buck underwent another operation to eradicate a series of recurring infections, including pneumonia, and was placed on dialysis. Joe Buck, who announced the death of his father on KMOX late Tuesday, said Jack Buck died with his family by his side.


    ''He made us proud every day,'' his son said. ''He battled for his life.''


    Buck quickly connected with players. Second baseman Fernando Vina, who came to the Cardinals in a 2000 trade with the Brewers, remembers Buck giving him a special silver dollar after he hit his first home run with his new team.


    ''He gave me one for good luck, and I always kept it with me,'' Vina said. ''Now, I just save it in a good place and know he gave it to me. Jack, he had that special aura.''


    Center fielder Jim Edmonds, who also joined the team in 2000, said Buck belonged on ''another tier'' of people.


    ''It's like the president, the pope, whatever you want to call it,'' Edmonds said. ''It's like losing somebody like that.''


    Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully said he'll miss Buck's sense of humor the most.


    ''He was a gruff-voiced guy with a big heart,'' Scully said. ''I can understand why the people of St. Louis and throughout the Midwest especially loved him and put him on the highest pedestal.''


    Buck began calling Cardinals games on radio in 1954, teaming first with Caray. Nationally, Buck called Super Bowls, World Series and even pro bowling for CBS, ABC and NBC.


    Buck was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame broadcaster's wing in 1987. He later became a member of both the broadcasters and radio halls of fame. He was awarded the Pete Rozelle Award by the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1996 and received a lifetime achievement Emmy in 2000.


    Buck, who had six children with his first wife Alyce, and two with wife Carole, is survived by his second wife; sons Jack Jr., Dan and Joe; and daughters Beverly, Christine, Bonnie, Betsy and Julie.

  6. #6
    To hell with all of 'em Chris's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Posts
    5,914
    Originally posted by Luvtino

    Well done Cardinals organization. Jack would have been proud.
    Very well done, very touching. I was incredibly moved

  7. #7
    The Commish YanksRockMan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2000
    Location
    Syracuse, NY
    Posts
    6,640
    It was very moving and very well done.

+ Reply to Thread

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

     

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts