Puck Daddy - NHL

The Hockey Hall of Fame inductions are this evening in Toronto. Which means Igor Larionov's incredible career and inspiration to younger players shall be rewarded. Which means linesman Ray Scapinello will have a place in history to go along with beloved-figure status in hockey circles. Which means the late Ed Chynoweth will be honored for his contributions to the Western Hockey League. Oh, and Glenn Anderson will be there, too; but we've said all we'll say about that.

But while the hockey world pauses for a moment to give thanks to these now-legends, and expresses the mandatory outrage over snubs like Pavel Bure, we turn our attention to another guy getting honored this evening at the Hall of Fame but absent from most of the coverage: NHL play-by-play man Mike"Doc" Emrick, who will be given the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award for outstanding contributions by a broadcaster to the sport of hockey.

Emrick has given over 25 years to the business, calling games on ESPN with Bill Clement in the 1980s; becoming the voice of the Philadelphia Flyers and the New Jersey Devils; as well as the voice of the NHL for OLN/Versus and NBC, working well with current St. Louis Blues President John Davidson for years.

And god, what a voice: Not the booming baritone many would expect from a legendary broadcaster, but that sing-song purr that rises and falls with the action of the game. Emrick's secret has always been that he's actually calling radio on television, detailing the action with such vivid descriptions that you could be in the other room and not miss a pass.

Oh, but when those passes become chances ... that's when Emrick morphs from your affable accountant friend who loves talking hockey to the staccato-voiced barker of exclamations like"BIG DRIVE!" and "SAVE BRODEUR!" Listen to Emrick on a frantic scramble in the defensive zone, as the goalie gets peppered; his voice grabs you by the eyelids and commands attention. There aren't many others who can.

He's been the voice of the NHL for quite some time; but for how much longer?

I interviewed Emrick for along-gestating book project about the Devils back when OLN was getting ready for its first NHL broadcast in 2005. Talking hockey with the man is talking hockey with someone who balances an enormous knowledge of the game with a scholar's hunger to know more each day. Like, for example, understanding the toll the Stanley Cup playoffs take on a player.

"I remember John Madden, after the 2000 finals, saying that it took until the middle of July," Emrick said, before a patented pause, "before he could wake up and not hurt somewhere. That stuck with me ever since. We don't see these guys after the celebration, or after they get knockedout."

He's also someone who understands how to sell the game, although god forbid the NHL actually seeks the counsel of someone like that. His prediction that HDTV would transform the game has come to pass; his other prediction, that the Rail-Cam would do the same, seems hindered only by technology.

But what was interesting about Emrick in our chat is that he never thought the bells and whistles on TV are what will bring new viewers to the NHL.

"I don't think it has to do with the technology, because we tried so many things. It is an arena sport. What happens in the life of a fan is that he goes to a game, whether it's in Laredo, Texas in the Central League or Indiana in the United League, and he gets hooked on the sport. Then, he becomes a television watcher, because he loves the sport," he told me.

"I think we hook more people in the arena than we do trying to hook them on television. That sounds heretical, but what it means is that with these new rules, we can show them thegame on television and they might stop, because they'll see more action than slowdown. I'm hopeful it becomes more of a TV sport."

Listening back to that interview, it was surprising to hear Emrick opine on several topics quite passionately: Calling the shootout in the playoffs an "atrocity," and guessing that the European leagues embrace it more because of soccer's influence, for example.

That we don't know where Emrick stands on some of the day's issues is, of course, a testament to his professionalism: Call the game, drop some hints but let your partner be the opinionated hatchet man. It's actually a rare treat, as play-by-play men now seem to all believe they're the show rather than someone talking about one (*cough*Joe Buck*cough*).

That is to say that times have changed. And it would be hypocritical of me not to point out that while I've railed against the recycling of NHL talking heads like Brian Engblom and Darren Pang, I haven't called for a changing of the guard for Emrick as a national voice for hockey. Perhaps that time is coming, or has come. Or perhaps we just need to remind the young fans about Doc's virtues by having him call "Gears of War":

For me, Emrick's voice is synonymous with and symbolic of hockey. There's reverence. There's humor. There's the "soft to loud in an instant" aspect that makes the NHL like a great Pixies song. (That's for you, Bucci, if you find yourself here.)

When I used to sit in my basement and play NHL '94 until 3 a.m. on the weekend, I'd call the games like any other loser would. But I wasn't being Mike Lange or Bob Cole or Sal Messina or Bob Miller or any other Hewitt Award winner.

I was yelling "BIGDRIVE!" Or "OH, AND HE JUST MISSED!" Or slowly bringing the whole thing back to earth with an exhausted "Stoppage in play..."

I was parroting a voice that always meant I was watching something worth watching. And that's a gift, Doc.

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  1. Matt J
    1. Posted by Matt J Thu Sep 03, 2009 7:11 pm EDT

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    Emrick's is a total class act. Love his play-by-play.
  2. Blackcapricorn
    2. Posted by Blackcapricorn Thu Sep 03, 2009 3:08 pm EDT

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    Don't like him and his wandering stories, pass.
  3. Mazarin
    3. Posted by Mazarin Thu Sep 03, 2009 7:24 pm EDT

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    Doc and Pat Foley are 2 of the best - only because Eddie O is carrying them both.
    KIDDING!
  4. big audio
    4. Posted by big audio Thu Sep 03, 2009 10:04 pm EDT

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    like "a great pixies song" .... wow, some praise [/eyeroll]
    emrick is a great ambassador for hockey, no question, but to me, his "calling games like he was on radio" while on tv is one of the things that irritate me about him. others hear him and think its acceptable to broadcast that way. coughhowie rosecough. i'm watching the same game you are and i don't need you showing off your vocabulary on a point that has already passed while play continues and new points occur that you can't describe because you are still pontificating about the previous 45 seconds.
  5. big audio
    5. Posted by big audio Thu Sep 03, 2009 10:04 pm EDT

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    mentioning sal "red light" messina is worth bonus points. i miss sal and marv together on radio, providing top notch descriptions and commentary while still busting each other's chops.
    as good as emrick is to those who grew up with cable television, marv and sal were the best team on radio and are sorely missed.
  6. Chemmy
    6. Posted by Chemmy Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:45 pm EDT

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    Emrick might be ok if he didn't use the phrase "DRIVE" as a synonym for "shot" and use it fifty times a game.
  7. jeff
    7. Posted by jeff Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:45 pm EDT

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    Class act. Always loved Doc.
    The unfortunate thing is he calls with Glenn Chico Resch, who is the antithesis of Doc.
  8. carl_vs_mastershake
    8. Posted by carl_vs_mastershake Thu Sep 03, 2009 3:18 pm EDT

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    Doc is like my Grandpa. Used to be cool in his prime but now just an old man telling stories at inappropriate times. I loved Doc on PRISM but it's time him to retire that great voice of his. Hopefully the Mavin will follow soon.
  9. jibblescribbits
    9. Posted by jibblescribbits Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:34 pm EDT

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    Glenn Anderson: getting into the hall of fame, the same way Chris Osgood will get into it in 10 years.
  10. PC
    10. Posted by PC Thu Sep 03, 2009 7:45 pm EDT

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    You say Mike Emrick, I think hockey, you say hockey, I think Mike Emrick.
    Just love the doc
  11. J-D
    11. Posted by J-D Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:31 pm EDT

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    You don't realize how good Emrick is until you DON'T hear him call a game. Try watching a game on Versus when Joe Beninati's Doc starter kit or John Forslund's overmodulated smooth jazz voice are on the mic. It's a huge, HUGE step down.
  12. Bubbabanjo
    12. Posted by Bubbabanjo Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:05 pm EDT

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    Nuthin but the highest man points and respect for Mike Emrick. In a world that stinks you are a breathe of fresh air brutha!
    Wyshynski you stink though!
  13. Tommy
    13. Posted by Tommy Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:55 pm EDT

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    They need to put Doc on the next nhl game.
  14. hockeytown blood
    14. Posted by hockeytown blood Thu Sep 03, 2009 3:42 pm EDT

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    Sorry, I have to pass on the guy too and only wish all this attention finally meant the guy is retiring.
    In spite of how apparently his voice is like phone sex for a lot of you, I can't stand his voice, repetitive moronic catch phrases, and his incessant mundane comments on the rules of play like he's always speaking to first time viewers; not to mention his obvious team bias when he covers games - absolutely blatant during the playoffs last year.
    Granted, most NHL announcing is pitiful across the league - Phoenix game yesterday one of the jerkoffs had his kid in the booth yapping away and both announcers had problems naming players; the south/southwest is abysmal - I would never follow the sport if I had to deal with coverage like that regularly.
    Mickey Redmond any day (or Ken Kal, Ken Daniels, Paul Woods...)
  15. hockeytown blood
    15. Posted by hockeytown blood Thu Sep 03, 2009 3:42 pm EDT

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    oh yeah, #4 + #8 got it perfect too
    he's generally he's off play and wanders like an Alzheimer victim.
  16. RudyKelly
    16. Posted by RudyKelly Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:23 pm EDT

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    I would pay any amount of money to get a Mike Emrick/Darren Pang duo for a hockey game.
    Emrick: Gionta down the wing, DRRIIIVVEE!
    Pang: Holy jumpin'!
    Then they could just get a little chimp and have him eat a banana while the other two are talking.
  17. Al S.
    17. Posted by Al S. Thu Sep 03, 2009 2:51 pm EDT

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    Maybe it's because I've had the opportunity to listen to the other hockey broadcasts in the NYC area, which are terrible, but there's no way he's not the top broadcaster in the league, and def. in most of sportsdom.
    Hell, back in 2004 I used to watch men's water polo at 3AM just to hear the Doc call the game- and I'd bet money that he pronounced every bizarre international name right, because he actually takes the time to find out how to pronounce people's names.
    Sure, he's not as good as he once was. But he still beats every other contender by a mile. Do his stories sometimes run over into play by play? Yes, although he usually self corrects with a "more on that in a minute as Madden wins the faceoff." But even if he doesn't, as you said, he's on TV, not radio, so watch the play yourself for a few seconds. But honestly, give the guy a break, he has to work with Chico on local broadcasts, and actually manages to downgrade by getting Eddie or the Versus clowns on national broadcasts. Even Al Michaels has declined thanks to Madden, so that Doc can still speak with the people he is paired up with is incredible. And he does it well, with just the right mix of descrpition and excitement.
    Every broadcaster in broadcasting school should be forced to break down Doc Emerick game tapes in the hopes of being half as good as him.
  18. Al S.
    18. Posted by Al S. Thu Sep 03, 2009 2:51 pm EDT

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    oh, and at hockeytown- he is supposedly speaking to first time viewers- remember, we use NBC and VS. to get the casual fans who have never watched hockey before. So having someone explain some of that can be, you know, helpful.
  19. onmyown
    19. Posted by onmyown Thu Sep 03, 2009 7:18 pm EDT

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    How easy would it be for us to sit back and watch a game on mute and know exactly what's happening or call the play ourselves?
    Could you get every players name right every time and add some filler commentary into it, along with the ability to express the play in action and show no bias for any team.
    He shows the same hype for every and any team during any game.
    Doc is a hockey god and he knows it and he loves what he does, which makes hearing him calling a game that more entertaining.
    As for Doc & Chico, They are Felix and Oscar together.
  20. Snoop
    20. Posted by Snoop Thu Sep 03, 2009 8:13 pm EDT

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    Mike Emrick is (do I dare say)...an underrated sports announcer here in the States. While the baseball announcers get the praise (the old timers are due, the youngsters, not so much), guys such as Emrick, Chuck Kaiton, Mike Lange, Bob Miller, et al do not get their due dilligence. Thank you for not only giving Emrick his due, but for the oh-so-subtle Joe (never, ever will be as good as his legendary father Jack) Buck snipe!
  21. RoShaCla
    21. Posted by RoShaCla Thu Sep 03, 2009 8:45 pm EDT

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    Doc is the best sports broadcaster in the business. It is hilarious to hear his voice break when he gets excited about something.
    Also: there is no one that says "AND THEY SCORE!" with quite the same gravity or enthusiasm. Squib is also a good word.
  22. Tommy
    22. Posted by Tommy Thu Sep 03, 2009 9:55 pm EDT

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    Doc's voice is so great I don't even tune out when the Devils are getting blown out, which will happen wednesday. =(
  23. njdevils17
    23. Posted by njdevils17 Thu Sep 03, 2009 10:33 pm EDT

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    Doc is simply one of the greatest announcers ever and the best one currently (by far). He's pretty objective through out his Devils games which you don't see a lot of for play by play guys (cough JACK EDWARDS cough). I also love the guy's vocabulary. BIG DRIVE, HIT THE POST WITH THE SHOT! He's also a great guy as he talks to many fans during the intermission. Overall, Doc is a classy guy and a tremendous hockey announcer. He definitely deserves to receive the Foster Hewitt award.
    Go Doc!
  24. onmyown
    24. Posted by onmyown Thu Sep 03, 2009 7:18 pm EDT

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    Hey Wysh,
    You couldn't find or get a pic of the Doc in a Devils hat?
    F'n Pittsburgh?
  25. GT
    25. Posted by GT Thu Sep 03, 2009 4:14 pm EDT

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    Emrick is the best in the US...all the others...learn a thing or two for god's sake.

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