Ken Wilson (sportscaster)

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Ken Wilson
Born 1947
Detroit, Michigan
Residence Portland, Oregon
Nationality American
Education B.A., University of Michigan
Spouse(s) Marlene

Ken Wilson is an American sportscaster, known primarily for his many years as a play-by-play announcer of National Hockey League and Major League Baseball games.

For twenty seasons Wilson called St. Louis Blues hockey on FoxSports Net Midwest, KPLR-TV, and KMOX radio.[1] His famous catch phrase when calling Blues games was 'Oh Baby!', which he yelled during moments of extreme excitement. Wilson also called NHL games for ESPN and SportsChannel America, and spent 24 seasons broadcasting for several Major League Baseball teams.

Life and career

“I try to be very descriptive. That’s essential on the radio and even on TV because folks have trouble seeing the puck and identifying players.”

Ken Wilson[2]

Born in Detroit, Michigan, Wilson earned a degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, then attended business school at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, Hawaii.[2] During this seven year stretch living in Hawaii, he did play-by-play for the Triple A baseball Hawaii Islanders, became sports director of the NBC affiliate in Honolulu, and developed the second-ever sports talk radio show in the United States, Hawaii Sports Huddle[2] In 1976 he received acclaim as Hawaii Sportscaster of the Year. Later Wilson became the first announcer for the Seattle Mariners, along with Dave Niehaus, from 1977-1982. Moving on from Seattle, Wilson did games for the Chicago Blackhawks, and then from 1983-1985 play-by-play for the Cincinnati Reds TV Network. He eventually broadcast 22 seasons in the National Hockey League.

Career Highlights

Here's Ramage, for Federko too far, Federko steals the puck from Reinheart, over to Hunter who shoots, blocked, Wickenheiser scores! Doug Wickenheiser! The Blues pull it off and it's unbelievable!

Ken Wilson calls Doug Wickenheiser's overtime goal during the Monday Night Miracle, May 12, 1986[3]

In 1984, Wilson was approached by Anheuser-Busch, then part owner of the Sports Time Cable Network, to not only announce the Reds games, but move from covering the Blackhawks during the hockey season to the St. Louis Blues. Wilson called his first St. Louis Blues game on October 11, 1984, a 4-2 win for the Blues in Calgary.[2] During his time at Sports Time, he called the U.S. Olympic Basketball Team game against a team of NBA stars, played at the Hoosier Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana on July 9, 1984. The crowd of 67,678 was the largest crowd to see a basketball game in the U.S. at the time. During the 1985 baseball season, Ken Wilson, working with Joe Morgan, called Pete Rose's 4192nd hit that broke Ty Cobb's all time record. Wilson then called one of the greatest games in St. Louis Blues history, known as the Monday Night Miracle, the following year. Wilson's association as announcer for the Blues continued to grow stronger after that. In addition to his hockey work, he continued his work in baseball, announcing St. Louis Cardinals games between 1985 and 1990, California Angels' games from 1991-1995, Oakland A’s[2] games from 1996-1998, and Seattle Mariners games in 2011 and 2012. Wilson is one of a handful of broadcasters to call three perfect games during his big league career (Kenny Rogers, Texas Rangers, 1994; Phillip Humber, Chicago White Sox, 2012; and, Felix Hernandez, Seattle Mariners, 2012), as well as two no-hitters, George Brett's 3,000th hit and Gaylord Perry's 300th victory.

In 1997, Wilson purchased the Zanesville (Ohio) Baseball Club of the independent Frontier League and moved the club to the western suburbs of St.Louis. He formed an investor group and served as managing partner of the River City Rascals, until selling his interest in 2004. He helped form a second group that purchased a Frontier League expansion team in 2000. That club began play in 2001 in the eastern suburbs of St. Louis as the Gateway Grizzlies. Wilson sold his ownership interest in that club in 2013.

Wilson continued announcing for the St. Louis Blues earning the Missouri Sportscaster of the Year award in 2001 along with four Mid-America Emmy Awards for play-by-play. After the 2003–04 NHL season, when his contract was not renewed by the Blues, he moved back to Honolulu, where he spent a year as a reporter on KHON-TV, prior to opening Mama's Island Pizza in 2005.[4] Along with his wife, Wilson operated the restaurant until February 2008. During this time, Wilson also did play-by-play for the Hawaii Winter Baseball League in 2006 and 2007.[5] In 2008 Wilson became President of the West Coast League, a top summer collegiate wood-bat baseball league, serving in that position until 2013. [6] Wilson returned to the Seattle Mariners' television booth on July 27, 2008 to fill in for his former partner Dave Niehaus, who was being inducted to the Hall of Fame on the same day. Wilson returned to the Mariners again for the 2011 and 2012 seasons, providing radio and TV play-by-play as part of a rotating committee of announcers replacing Niehaus, who died on November 10, 2010.[7]

During his career, Ken Wilson has broadcast 2,230 Major League Baseball games and 1,556 National Hockey League games.

References

  1. "Chris Kerber, Kelly Chase Introduced As New Blues Radio Broadcast Team On KTRS". St Louis Blues Online. Archived from the original on 2006-12-16. Retrieved 2007-01-05. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Jones, Pam Droog (April 2004). "KEN WILSON: Bleeding Blue for 20 Years". St. Louis Commerce Magazine. Retrieved 2008-01-04. 
  3. Jennings, Gail (January 2006). "Mama's Island Pizza - Mama Makes Great Pizza and Wings". Hawaii Diner. Retrieved 2008-03-04. 
  4. "Media Views: Holy Cow! Caray and Buck CDs are winners". STL Today. Retrieved 2007-02-02. 
  5. Wilson, Ken. "About WCCBL". West Coast Collegiate Baseball League. Retrieved 2008-07-16. 
  6. "Mariners to use committee to fill Niehaus' spot". MLB.com. 
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