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Pull Up a Chair by Curt Smith
Pull Up a Chair by Curt Smith












Pull Up a Chair by Curt Smith Pull Up a Chair by Curt Smith

The longer I stuck through the more I was disappointed in it, even though it did fill some gaps in my baseball history. The consensus is not wrong about this book. Scully opens each broadcast by wishing listeners, “A very pleasant good afternoon.” Pull Up a Chair will provide a reader with the same. Curt Smith-to USA Today, “The voice of authority on baseball broadcasting”-is the ideal man to write it. The first biography of Vin Scully is long overdue. He has made every sportscasting Hall of Fame received a Lifetime Emmy Achievement award and a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and been voted “most memorable franchise personality.” In 2000, the American Sportscasters Association named Scully the Sportscaster of the 20th Century. His instantly recognizable voice has described players from Duke Snider to Orel Hershiser to Manny Ramirez, with hundreds in between.Īt one time or another, Scully has aired NBC Television’s Game of the Week, twelve All-Star Games, eighteen no-hitters, twenty-five World Series, and network football, golf, and tennis. Recruited and mentored by the legendary Red Barber, the New York–born Scully moved with the Dodgers to Los Angeles in early 1958. Nearly sixty years later he still invites a listener to “pull up a chair,” completing a record fifty-ninth consecutive year of play-by-play. "synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.In 1950, Vin Scully broadcast his first major league baseball game for the then–Brooklyn Dodgers.

Pull Up a Chair by Curt Smith

In 1950, Vin Scully broadcast his first major league baseball game for the then–Brooklyn Dodgers.














Pull Up a Chair by Curt Smith