What's not to love about Vin Scully?
Born and raised in the Bronx, where he delivered beer and mail, pushed garment racks, and cleaned silver in the basement of the Pennsylvania Hotel in New York City. Lost his first wife - of 15 years - to an accidental medical overdose. A year or so later, married Sandra, to whom he remains married 40+ years later. At the age of 8 - this would've been in 1935 - he decided he wanted to be a sports broadcaster. And in 67 seasons of broadcasting Dodgers baseball games he has accumulated a long list of awards - without ever being profane, boorish, self-serving or fodder for the scandal mills.
This writer cannot claim to be any reputable sort of baseball fan. But admirable public figures are in short enough supply that one has to be grateful for Vin Scully.
Giants fans loved having Scully wind up his illustrious career in San Francisco recently, in a stadium with more "Thank You Vin!" signs than orange rally flags. Several signs in the stands read "This Once We'll Be Blue" - in honor of Scully's beloved Dodgers. (The Giants went on to win the game.) But it was up to the New York Times to publish the entire transcript of his narration of the top of the ninth inning - his final words to the listening baseball public, headlined Vin Scully's Final Call: I Have Said Enough for a Lifetime. Enough to include a few nuggets in between the calls ("And the strike...")
"There was another great line that a great sportswriter wrote, oh, way back in the twenties," Scully ruminated on air. "A. J. Liebling. And it said, 'The world isn't going backward, if you can just stay young enough to remember what it was like when you were really young.' How about that one?
"Ground ball foul. 0 and 2 the count to Yasiel Puig..." And later -
"That was awfully nice. The umpire just stood up and said goodbye, as I am saying goodbye. Seven runs, sixteen hits for the winning Giants, 1-4-1 for the Dodgers. ... I have said enough for a lifetime, and for the last time, I wish you all a very pleasant good afternoon."
It was an elegant departure for a good man, ending a long and distinguished career. But this writer's favorite snippet, among all the short tales and one-liners that wound through the reportage, was this:
"I've always thought it was attributed to Dr. Seuss, but apparently not. It's still a good line, and it's one certainly I've been holding onto for, oh, I think most of the year. ... 'Don't be sad that it's over. Smile because it happened.'"
What a treat to have something - someone - to smile about on the national stage today.
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