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Radio Head

If you are of a certain generation then your earliest Blazer memories probably didn't start with event tickets or televised broadcasts, but with Bill Schonely's golden tones bringing you the games on the radio.  Back in the day the Coliseum was full and relatively few games were televised.  It just seemed natural to huddle around the radio, living and dying with every possession.

I will admit that I've always loved radio as a medium far more than television.  From music to sports to old-time dramas to talk shows I've just never been able to get enough of it.  There's something more intimate and relational about hearing someone convey meaning using just their voice instead of interpreting what you're already seeing, as with TV.  Some things just transcend the visual, if you know what I mean.

That's not to say that I don't enjoy watching games on television nowadays.  In fact being outside the broadcast area the dish is the only option I have for getting my Blazer fix.  But there are obviously plenty of you who still take in the game the old-fashioned way with Brian Wheeler and Antonio Harvey.  They still broadcast the games so somebody must be tuning in, right?  I am especially eager to hear from you in this post.

Here are three things I'd like to know:

  1.  If you do still listen to the radio broadcast, why?  What draws you to that particular medium when TV is so readily available?
  2.  What do you like best about listening to the game on the radio in general and about Wheels and Harvey in particular?
  3.  For those who don't still listen, sharing past experiences (Wheeler or Schonely) is fine here too.  This is sort of a general radio celebration thread with a tip of the hat to those who still follow that way, but sharing your warm, fuzzy past memories is also great.  What particular calls or situations do you remember?
--Dave (blazersub@yahoo.com)

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Still love radio...
...and you're right on about the mental images that only a good play-by-play announcer can bring. I will often forfeit the tv to get in the car and just drive around listening to a game.

I actually like the Wheels/Harvey team. They work well together. Brian is very descriptive and gets excited like a real fan. Antonio is the 'workin' man's' analyst. He's unrefined, yet gives good insight from a player's perspective - like the guy next door.

Bill Schonely will always be the Voice of the Blazers. He was good, but to me, his defining feature WAS that voice - masculine, crisp with a pinch of a western twang.

As I've mentioned in previous posts, some of my best Blazer memories are of those fist-pumping, high-fiving, laughing/crying moments  with my boys around that old radio.

One particular radio moment forever etched in my heart was a Chicago game in '79 or '80 when the Trailblazers came back from 8 points down with like 15 seconds left to win it in regulation. It was won on an inbounds lob (from Kermit?) for an alley-oop jam to Billy Ray Bates with less than a second left. The Schonz actually squealed like a pig as his voice skipped up about three octaves. That game instilled in me the truth of a  well-worn motto: "It aint over 'til it's over".

The last two CWS runs by the OSU Beaver's baseball team were all radio for me. Mike Parker's calls of those games...well...it doesn't get any better!

In the glory days, seemingly every town in Oregon had a station carrying Trailblazer games. Now I have to pull all the way from KXL in Portland (from southern Oregon). Hopefully that will change as Blazer popularity increases. For now, I've invested in a good radio and still prefer that medium for most games.

" If you can do it in black wingtips, it aint a sport!" Ken

by Dr Dave on Jul 27, 2007 3:22 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Bill Schonley was the Trail Blazers
It was often that when a game was televised, my grandfather and I would turn off the sound and listen to Schonley call the game. When the game was not on television, or at least not on network/local television, we would just listen, and it was as if we were watching it. When Schonley "retired" I lost a lot of interest in the Blazers in general.

But now, I would listen on the radio, or internet radio, even without The Schonz if I could get it here in Indiana, but KXL blacks out their internet feed for Blazer games, making me take a good long look at NBA Pass this next year.

I think my most memorable radio moment, and I can remember for sure whether it was before or after Scholney left (I think it was before, but I'm not 100% positive), was when Mike Rice got himself ejected from the game for yelling at the refs during a timeout.  I have to admit, I thought, "this will be so much better without Rice making off-the-wall comments, but to my surprise, the broadcast was missing something without him.

by T Darkstar on Jul 27, 2007 3:54 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Dr Dave, I'm sure

-that Chicago game was in '77. We won that game WITHOUT the 3 point shot. However, we killed Chicago several times like that with some unbelievable comebacks.
The Kermit HALF COURT lob to Billy Ray was in '84 against Philly with 1 second on the clock here at the MC. Lionel Hollins was guarding Bates and looked to his left for just a moment giving Billy Ray his chance. Bates said later he had to "tip" or "tap it cause he knew it was less than 1 second." And YES, The Schonz "squealed like a pig" but then, so did I. :) Philly were the Champs and I THINK we were the only team to beat them twice that year.
There weren't that many games on tv back then but I only missed I think about 5 radio broadcasts over a twelve year period. Heck, a true Blazer fan ALWAYS turned down their tv and listened to Bill Schonely!! Those were the best of times and the two game I remember most...  

by edgeguy42 on Jul 27, 2007 4:39 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Thanks, edgeguy...
...I probably have about 3 different games all jumbled together in my mind. The one thing that really imprinted was Schonz's (and my) reaction. It was as if we were in the room together. When the subject of 'great comebacks' is tossed around, that memory always comes to mind.
" If you can do it in black wingtips, it aint a sport!" Ken

by Dr Dave on Jul 27, 2007 8:38 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

blazer radio
Memories of my youth! I still try to listen to the radio but KXL makes it extremely difficult. My reception here is at the margins of their range so the static is interrupted by short, teasing intervals of play by play. I try to listen to KXL on the internet but they have some restriction on transmitting the Blazer games. Sometimes you can listen to 1.5 quarters (on the internet)before someone at KXL remembers to push the button. Very frustrating. The best thing is to watch the game and listen to the radio, unless one or the other has a delay. Listening to the radio while watching has helped me to better understand the game and what the roles are. And when I also have face recognition I can put the position together with the action. Oh, I love it! I've been a fan since they announced they brought a team to Portland in 1970 and I'm more excited about it than at anytime since 1977.

by annthefan on Jul 27, 2007 5:07 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Radio Days
First of all, TV is not all that available. I just got cable a few months ago. I don't plan on getting League Pass. I signed up for the radio pass on NBA.com so I could stream Wheels and 'Tone down here in LA. Brian Wheeler's an incredible broadcaster. We're really lucky to have him. Scanning around on the NBA.com radio streams you can hear a lot of terrible announcing. And Antonio Harvey was really bad when he first started, but he's gotten perfectly adequate. They make a fine pair.

I've loved sports on the radio my whole life. Picking up Yankee games on the AM band in my house in rural Pennsylvania was always a neat thrill. I prefer the verbiage and word pictures to the flashy graphics of TV. There's also a strange, hard to describe drama that comes from hearing about action without seeing it. Like the thrill of being led around blindfolded. The alienation hightens the tension.

by Jumbo on Jul 27, 2007 6:35 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

It's Just Tradition, Dave
I used to want to watch the Blazers in the Drexler/ Porter - but I was so broke, being 18-20 and all. Tickets were way out of my reach, and home games on BlazerCable/ Pay Per View were pretty expensive - this was the Top Ramen days. Now and again a few buddies and I would pitch in and get a Cable game ($20 I think?) - but we mostly listened to the Schonz call the games. It was funny, because even when we did chip in for a PPV game, we always turned the audio down and turned up the radio.

Now, a buddy and I split season tix, and when I don't go to games, I always listen to KXL. Wheels is awesome - the guy is really in demand around the league, I think he was a finalist in the L*kers broadcasting interviews two years back. He's rock and roll, man.

I really liked Rice, and was sad to see him go over to TV. (BTW - the NBA schedule has been released to the clubs, and will come to the public on Tuesday. On Courtside last night, the Mikes and Wheels implied that the Blazers will have a CHRISTMAS TV GAME this season. We will have to wait and see.) Tone has grown on me, but I really liked Annie Schatz, the few games she was on the radio.

It's old fashioned, it's glowing tubes and the like, it's slow and not real technocolour. It is NOT DSL. But it's the Blazers to me, and I really like it. When we are not going to a game, I want to be able to say to my kids, "Hey the game is on," and have them dash to the radio, rather than pick up the remote. The Blazers are family, and I feel the radio is an important part of that. It just feels like a good match for me.

Ball Don't Lie

by bothteamsplayedhard on Jul 27, 2007 7:18 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I love the radio, but...
...it's still not the same without the Schonz.  I listen on the radio because I don't have cable or satellite and thus cannot watch games unless their broadcast locally on free tv.  So radio it must remain for me.

by Anthony Stine on Jul 27, 2007 7:52 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

radio radio...
my dad always turned the sound off on the tv & we listened to the radio. i still do that when i can.
the  shonz was one of the all-time greats & is sorely missed. no disrespect to wheels, but he's not shonz...like replacing a hall-of-famer.
the descriptions are better on radio as they have to paint a word picture. the tv guys generally aren't as descriptive & veer off into sometimes useless chatter.
anyone still have the championship record album? go listen to that again! i've picked up a few copies at thrift stores. i can't imagine why someone would throw it away. listening to it still gives me chills.

by the vapor on Jul 27, 2007 8:55 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Brian Wheeler is a champ
I love listening to games on the radio. I take in about half the games that way, when I'm not willing to head to a bar of if it's an East-coast affair that starts before I'm done working. Wheeler has such an amazing range of emotion in his delivery that I find the games more intense via radio than via television. The only thing that bums me out is the monster dunks-- those are better on TV. And 750 KXL is a radio station that absolutely scrapes the bottom of the intellectual barrel with their hideous non-Blazer programming... But I am a huge fan of Wheels and I think Antonio Harvey is hilarious, so I'm a radio guy through and through.

As a side note, I only know of the schonz as a pimp for Standard TV and Appliance, and let me tell you I've grown to hate him and his voice-- wish it didn't have to be that way, but it is.

by grizzo on Jul 27, 2007 9:20 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Currently
I don't listen on the radio much because so many of the games are televised.  Wheeler and Harvey are good enough but don't warrent the treatment Schonz got by my dad as well.  If the game was on TV, turn down the sound and turn on the radio.

(Side note:  The first TV guys I remember for the Blazers were Steve Jones and Pat Lafferty in the mid 80s.  Who was doing TV back in the 70s?)

   

by tssbro on Jul 27, 2007 9:29 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

No one was doing TV in the 70s
because the games weren't televised by the team. Games were really only televised (nationally) during playoffs, and home games were blacked out even if they sold out, except for the Finals...

by Blazerholic on Jul 27, 2007 1:04 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

70's Blazer TV
Oldtimers may recall that Jimmy Jones was the Play-by-play man for tv games in the 1970's.  Can't recall if he worked solo or had a "color" commentator along side.  My fuzzy brain wants to say that he was also the sports anchor for KPTV-12 who may have also broadcast the games.  I vividly remember cringing whenever JJ would announce that a Blazer was 3-for-3 or 5-for-5, etc from the line... nothing closer to a sure bet that the next attempt would clank off the rim as a miss. My family always called it the "Jimmy Jones Jynx"!

by LongtimeFan on Jul 27, 2007 2:47 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Maybe I'm the only one...
... who doesn't have a TV? And even if I did, I wouldn't have cable. So I get to see maybe 2 or 3 games on TV a year on NBC when I'm at the parents' house. However!

I think if I had the choice, I would still listen to the radio, because you can pretty much still go about your business and get things done without being slave to sitting in front of the TV and wasting a good two hours of your day.

I think Wheels is a great announcer, but of course Schonley was pretty much amazing. I've only been adamantly listening for a few years, so I don't remember Rice being on the radio, and I can't imagine it was good for anything but comedic purposes, judging from what I see on TV. But Tone is pretty funny too, in a different way (read: deliberate).

Not many truly memorable moments for me... a consequence of getting really into the team right before they were the worst in the league I suppose. Here's to hoping that changes very soon!

by Sarbonis on Jul 27, 2007 9:36 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I don't even own a TV, man!
Just giving you a hard time :) Seriously, though, even though I have a TV and cable (though being in the Bay Area, I don't get to see many Blazer games), I do like to have the radio on so I can do some work while still following the game. Sometimes this backfires, though--I almost broke some dishes I was washing during one of the come-from-behind Roy-in-the-clutch games from last year.

by abdelnaby on Jul 27, 2007 10:16 AM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

I own a TV...
but it's not the same since the rabbit ears broke.

by ken on Jul 27, 2007 12:53 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Been there
I chose not to have a TV for 10 years and it was fine. Gave me an excuse to go to a pub or friends if I needed to see something. Now I've had TV for years but no cable (since I don't watch it much) but made an effort to watch every broadcast Blazer game last year. Now... I'm looking into what I have to do to get all the games (well, all but 1 if I understand the comcast agreement) here in Canby (a non-comcast community). CRAP that means stepping into the cable/dish vortex.

Help.

by jon on Jul 27, 2007 1:25 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Don't Do It, jon!
stay off the tele-crack! Let the soothing pentamiter of Wheel's voice lull you to a restful respite in the cooler November evenings. Stay TV free! Keep the magic of radio alive! Stay true, old-school dude!
Ball Don't Lie

by bothteamsplayedhard on Jul 27, 2007 2:16 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

As a kid
in the early sixties the velvet, knowledgeable,  soothing voice of Vin Scully beginning each spring was like a warm blanket, a return of a long lost friend, a ray of hope and excitement, a return to that world that was part real, part imagination. Laying in bed, listenning to the Dodger game on my cheap clock radio, "seeing" all the action through Vin's eyes will be with me all my life.  This must be what it's like for some of you who grew up with Schonz.
I watched the Clyde teams on C band satellite for a couple of years, when all games were on for free. Actually for a few years all programming was free.
For the past 4 years I have purchased League Pass and TIVO'd every game. Roseburg does have the radio broadcast of the games, but you can't listen while watching (live, of course) because there is a delay of about 10 seconds. During quite a few games (the bad ones when we were getting killed) I listen to music while watching.
I drive to PDX about twice a month, at night after work, and I listen to the games on Sirius satellite radio. When I get home and watch the game on TIVO, I feel like I've already seen it. That's a tribute to Wheels and Harvey, and the radio medium in general.
I worry (?) that this change away from radio is just one more way that our kids are losing out on an opportunity to develop their imagination.

by crakarjack on Jul 27, 2007 9:40 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I'm only a fan since the mid '90s
and never listened to the radio until the last few years.  But I am a high school basketball coach, so when I am coming to and from my various away games and scouting assigments, I catch what I can of the game on the radio in the car.  To answer #1, I only do this when TV is not availiable.

2.  I think Wheels is very good.  I can't really compare him to Schonley, because I didn't hear Bill a lot, but Wheels is descriptive and I feel like I see the game in my head, which maybe isn't the best thing when I'm driving up the Interstate).  While I'm always sad that I can't watch the game on TV, I feel like I've missed a lot less with a Blazer game than, say, a Duck game.  That's a testament to the announcers.

--Dave

Addicted to Quack SBN's Oregon Ducks Blog

by Addicted to Quack on Jul 27, 2007 10:02 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Wheels is really good
And Tone has gone from abysmal to OK.  I really like listening to the radio with those two especially now that the team is getting good.  They are pretty good homers without being ridiculously scarlet colored in their interpretation of the action.  If Portland looks bad, they say Portland looks bad without making a lot of excuses but when the team looks good, they have as much emotion as anybody in any broadcast booth.  

But the Schonz is a legend.  Schonz had an amazingly unique voice and a fluid delivery to boot.  Even his gimmicky stuff was fantastic.  Loved it.

I do still listen to games on the radio because I don't have cable so that usually means about 10 games a year available without a trip to a friends, bar, or Rose Garden.  The broadcasts are still compelling (when the games are tight) and I have trouble pulling myself away from them.  

I got my front court aLaMOde!!

by shenanigans on Jul 27, 2007 10:07 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Ahh..the Memories...
It was the late 70s, I was a young boy of 6 or so. I remember my mom and dad driving us back from the Oregon coast on a pitch-dark, rainy night. They had the Blazer game on, and somehow the Shonz' voice coming from that old AM radio tamed the darkness.

I listen now whenever I can't watch. I like Wheeler, but am not a huge fan of Harvey, even though he has improved quite a bit since he first came on.

Ideally, I like to have the radio play-by-play on while I watch the game on TV. Over DirecTV there is a delay which confuses me (even more than usual).

During the Schoenley's final years, I remember hearing him make more mistakes, naming the wrong players, mispronouncing names, etc. I felt bad for him. When he left, it took a while for me to enjoy Wheeler's broadcasts.

by SloppyJoe on Jul 27, 2007 10:12 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

radio
In the rip city days of the early 90s, I was a young kid.  I remember sometimes turning down the TV audio when the national broadcaster was annoying and/or knew nothing about the Blazers.  The radio was a second or so ahead of TV but it was worth it to hear Schoenley.

Radio without TV annoys me these days though.  I get more nervous since I can't see what is happening.  Baseball on the radio is a natural fit but hoops on the radio doesn't do it for me.  I still listen sometimes (Wheeler does a fine job and Harvey has improved immensely from awful to solid) but I prefer the medium of TV for Blazer games.  

by jksnake99 on Jul 27, 2007 10:26 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I grew up with radio
My brothers and me would listen to blazer games with Schoenly. Then we lost interest for a few years through the "Jail Blazers" era, but came back when Wheels started broadcasting.

At first I loved Wheels but during the 2005-2006 season something happened and he started turning really, really negative whenever the other team went on a run. He'd start getting this depressed tone in his voice which would make you depressed. I don't want that. I really, really like Mike Barrett. He doesn't get down, always seems upbeat, and does get excited when the team goes on a run. Because of that I'm not as big of a radio fan as before.

However, Wheels is still one of the best at describing the action as several have said and I hope he can get past his negative phase. Maybe with a winning season? :)

by jamon51 on Jul 27, 2007 11:07 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Since '85
I moved up here in '85 after growing up listening to Chick Hearn and the Lakers (see me dodging rotten lettuce and tomatoes thrown by Blazer fans). I'm not bold enough to claim in this forum that I had it better but he was a hall of famer...

Shonz has a great set of pipes and a homey delivery and I liked him, but I got the sense when I moved up here and heard nothing but raves that I had missed something, like he was on the downhill side of the career. I found it frustrating as heck listening to him describe the game because he was too slow to follow the pace of the action. I swear Buck would get a defensive rebound and all of a sudden Porter was "lickety-brindle" down the lane as if by magic. I'm real sure he was better before I got here. I was one of the few people who thought his time had come when they changed.

Wheels is great. He's at the top of his game. Also a great delivery and can talk fast enough to get the action on the court conveyed. Harvey is about as talented a broadcaster as he was an NBA basketball player, but he has good chemistry with his broadcast team. Rice is a goofy distraction at times, but it's a long season for him so I'll cut him some slack. Barrett is serviceable and offers up being a true fan trying to stay somewhat professional and neutral.

All in all I'm happy with the broadcast talent and don't see any reason for them to consider changes.

by jon on Jul 27, 2007 11:41 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

At last, some perspective.
Yes, Schonely is so very much connected to our memories of this team in its glory years (and those pre-Walton early days when the Blazers stunk but we loved 'em). And yes, he had a really distinctively sonorous voice.
But the reverence folks have for him as a play-by-play caller for radio, I adamantly believe, exists because so many Blazer fans from that era simply don't know better. They didn't hear the real masters of the form.
In his last several years, the Schonz was simply terrible, losing track of things often, unable to keep up with the pace of the game. But even in earlier years, he wasted ridiculous amounts of time on useless verbiage ("CLIMBS the golden ladder for the rebound!," etc.) and seemed congenitally unable to describe the action in a visual way. I used to pull my hair out when he'd say(over and over again) things such as "Porter to Drexler, guard to guard exchange" as if that was crucial information. If you follow the team, you know what position they play, and it only matters a little anyway. Where are they on the court?! Help me visualize the action!
Now if you ever heard Chick Hearn, you heard someone with a huge kit bag of colorful catch phrases but a much better feel for the essential action. The revelation to me was sitting out in the garage while my dad worked on the car, the radio tuned to pick up some SF station with Bill King calling the Warriors games. That guy was a play-by-play man! You never had to guess what was happening, he told you, made you see it as well as conveyed the excitement. And I'm certain East Coasters also have their legendary faves from back there.
The Schonz, by contrast, was a good relayer of in-the-moment excitement, but of little else.

by hugs on Jul 27, 2007 10:16 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Loved the Schonz
Moved to Portland in 76. To me the Schonz was and still is the voice of the Blazers. I still can't stand Wheeler after, what is it, 8 years now. I do like Barrett and Rice and wish they were doing both radio and TV.

by TallTimber on Jul 27, 2007 11:43 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Radio days daze
Used to go to the games w/ my father, but when we didn't go we listened.

I still listen to the radio very often. 33% of the time it's because I'm in the car on my way home from the office. 33% of the time it's because my wife is watching the big screen. 33% of the time it's because I can't stand the TV commentators... I'm really not a huge fan of Mike and Mike, but I really liked Steve Jones. I really don't care much for most TV commentators, in fact. It seems fewer of them are really good these days than in years past.

by you'vegottomakeyourfreethrows on Jul 27, 2007 12:47 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I listen to the games because I work nights
and I used to stream the broadcasts off the internet until they shut that down. I try to time my lunch to catch the end of the game in my car.

I've listened since the 70s because there was little TV and it was rare to score tickets to the MC. Like jon, I'm one of the few that called for Schonz to leave early because he couldn't keep up and couldn't understand the public outcry. I liked his voice though, and loved to hear those Rip City! calls.

I loved Wheels and Rice, they were the best team in the league. Especially Rice's potshots at opposing players, coaches, and fans that had me cracking up.

One thing I can't stand are the catch phrases "bingo bango bongo" "lickity-brindle up the middle" and "boom chakalaka". That stuff is totally unnecessary. But I love to hear Wheels say "he jams it!" on a Blazer fastbreak.

by Blazerholic on Jul 27, 2007 1:17 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I mostly agree about catch phrases
but I'm willing to let Wheels have his "Boom Chakalaka!" because he seems to break that out when a dunk or whatever genuinely excites him. It fires me up too. I also have to admit a soft spot for his alliteration when the opposing coach has to call a timeout to try to end a Blazers run ("And Van Gundy is befuddled! Bewildered! And beside himself!").

by abdelnaby on Jul 27, 2007 2:48 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Radio
I'll never forget moving to Ashland, OR in the early 70's.  Attending a new Jr. High, I was having a problem making new friends at the time (new kid in town).  I listened to Schonz at night on the radio in my room and he introduced me to the Blazers. I listened religiously and he made me the big fan I am today.  I think of those days often, and miss them...  77 was the big year, I also graduated from HS that year. I'll never forget it.

by johnv59 on Jul 27, 2007 1:39 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

One More Thing about Wheels
It's funny, but if I tune into a Blazer game..Before hearing the score, I can usually tell by the tone of Wheels' voice whether we are down big, up big, or playing a close game.
I don't remember being able to read the Shonz like that!

by SloppyJoe on Jul 27, 2007 2:45 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I remember once...
getting a good read on the Shonz.  It was about the middle of the first half and the game didn't look good.  Schonely and Rice were still talking it up, of course, then they went to a commercial, or so they thought...  You then heard Schonely say, "I don't like what I'm seeing."  Rice answered, "I know what you mean."  Then they broke away for the commercial.

When they came back they were both talking upbeat again.

Now that I think about it, this might have been a TV broadcast, I'm not certain.

by ken on Jul 27, 2007 3:09 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Harvey
Antonio used to live next to me in Garden Home. My best friend used to babysit his kids. He is a very nice and funny guy. He used to come to my rec basketball games in high school. I am also one of those people who listen to the radio and watch the game with the sound off. It is also nice to drive home after a blazer game and listen to the post game interviews and analysis. Cannot wait till the season starts. Also, is anybody else excited to get NBA Live and tear it up as the Blazers online against dumb laker fans? Oden swattin bryant shots all day.

by Sabonis4Ever on Jul 27, 2007 2:45 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Antonia Harvey
is the worst analyst in the history of the nba.  this guy talks like he knows about the game and yet he couldn't get off the bench... wheeler is the best so they offset eachother and each time i listen to a game on the radio, not by choice, i listen on my sirius and can't stand kxl750's right wing propoganda.
M. E.

by midget on Jul 27, 2007 2:54 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

YOUVE GOT TO MAKE YOUR FREE THROWS
 the shonz is the man...if the blazers wanna really connect to the community they should flip flop rice and bill

by lyfefindsaway on Jul 27, 2007 3:56 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

You Got to Make your Free Throws...
Oh man, I remember Shonz saying that for so many years. I even used that phrase on the youth teams I coached, and my sons. Classic saying, especially when he would say it with some disgust...slowly...we would all cringe and agree.

by johnv59 on Jul 27, 2007 4:19 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Bill Schonely
Maybe it is because I did not become a Blazers fan until after I moved to Oregon in the late 90's, but I have never liked Schonely.  Has always seemed like a Harry Carary to me.  I can see how everyone loved either guy, but they both reached a point where they became caricatures of who they used to be.  It would be like Jack Nicholson playing the Leonardo DiCaprio role in The Departed.

I could even say the same for Vin Scully (he does the Dodgers games).  His delivery is flawless but it does not appeal to me.  It sounds like the war/new coverage in old movies.  

If I grew up listening to those guys, they would probably be beloved to me.  Instead they are just broadcasters that do not know when retire, and they take away from the entertainment of the game.

Aaron Brooks the 2007 ROY.

by tominhawaii on Jul 27, 2007 8:38 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Radio
I'm still a fan of radio as well, as I wrote on my site a few weeks ago...

The Return of Rip City
http://idiotscollective.blogspot.com/2007/06/return-of-rip-city.html



Idiot's Collective: the only thing not under water in Tuvalu.

by iCollective on Jul 27, 2007 8:55 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

schonley/rice
for me, i highly doubt any sporting event will ever match the excitement of listening to these guys in late 80s & early 90s.  it was like something out of a corny movie about the innocence of childhood and the power of sports and other cheesy crap like that.  so great.

by game sink on Jul 27, 2007 9:47 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Antonio
I also agree that "Tone" has come a long way since his first broadcasts. Another guy who made major strides was Geoff Petrie, who went from putting you to sleep in his early days to being confident and colorful by the time he left Schonz and went upstairs.

by t jay on Jul 28, 2007 2:13 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I agree
that Antonio has made good strides since he first began. I reffereed a couple of his sons soccer games and listening to Antonio playfully challenging my calls was pretty funny
Greg Oden Rap

by JTDuck22 on Jul 30, 2007 4:18 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

I "knew" Schonley
before the Blazers existed.  He was the sports guy on a Seattle radio station (KVI?) that I listened to regularly while I was living there.  When the Sonics came into existence they reached to Portland for broadcaster Bob Blackburn so I always thought it was fitting that the Blazers snatched Schonley from Seattle a few years later.  (I was still in Seattle at the time.)  When I came to Portland in the early 70's it was nice to hear a familiar voice.  (Portland also had acquired some tv news people from Seattle.  Richard Ross, who died recently, was originally on Seattle tv and that's still how I remember him.)

Blazer radio was not the same w/o Schonley.  I am often yelling at some player "you've got to make your free throws!" in the same tone he always used.  Some of those phrases will live forever.

This past season I TiVo'd the games, but wouldn't start watching for a half hour so I could fast forward through the commercials.  I'd also fast forward through some dull or bad parts of the game.  I like Mike Barrett a lot and I've finally come to tolerate Mike Rice.  One thing I like is MB's humor regarding MR. Sort of like an indulgent Dad who smiles while rolling his eyes at something his wise-acre kid might say.

I do like listening to the games on radio now other than the inability to rewind!  I can do other things at the same time and still keep up with the action. And never do I miss a play because Rice is talking about something other than the game.  I'm often saying "who got the assist?" to the tv.  Then I'll replay to get the information the announcers didn't give me.

My radio sports listening goes back to Seattle minor league baseball.  None of the away games were live; the announcer, Leo Lassen, recreated them from play by play that came in by teletype.  I watched him at the station one night and it was amazing.  Imagine having to "call" a game from a piece of paper.  He'd cue up crowd noises and the crack of the bat was actually him tapping a wooden pencil on the microphone.

by jorga on Jul 28, 2007 7:29 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

huh
I always thought shonelly was kind of goofy. I used AM radio repeatedly over the years to catch a Blazer game. It has been a mainstay when the games were not televised. I just do not watch much TV anyway except sporting events when I can. I wish him well in his retirement but the rest are good enough, if not better for me. i also listen to post game commentary on AM radio should I miss the play by play. I just love the blazers.

by irishda on Jul 29, 2007 12:23 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Mike Rice's ejection
My favorite radio moment is an odd one because it is one I saw and heard at the same time.  Growing up, my family had one of the old-school dishes that could pick up the local broadcasts of other NBA teams, so I got to watch many Blazer away games that weren't on KOIN or KGW TV.  One day there happened to be a live feed of the Blazers playing against Indiana.  I was about 15 or 16 years old at the time so that was probably about 12 or 13 years ago.  

The audio coming over the video feed was the Blazer broadcasting crew.  So I was watching the game and listening to an unedited live feed of the radio team.  Because it was on satelite, there were no radio commercials, AND THE MIC WAS LEFT ON so you could hear Rice and Doucette's comments when there were timeouts, commercials, etc.  That guy who should be arrested for impersonating a ref (Steve Javie)had really blown a call and Mike Rice was ticked off by it.  During commercial, Mike Rice yelled to Javie that he blew a call.  Steve Javie came over to him and made some snotty remark back.  Mike Rice went into sailor mode and told Javie that he was a stupid jacka@@ along with a few other things I can't type here.  I couldn't believe what I was hearing.  I yelled out, "Go Mike!" Then Steve ejected him from the game.

I'll never forget that.  I was shocked, but it was cool to see Mike's true passion for this team.  He is a great character and I hope he is around for years to come.

Here is a link to a cool article about him from 2 years ago.

http://www.portlandtribune.com/sports/story.php?story_id=28801

Mike Rice needs another shot.

by silkybrown on Jul 29, 2007 1:48 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Brian Wheeler is a baby, Antonio Harvey has shown
improvement.  First, Wheeler is the definition of a homer in terms of broadcast style.  Which is fine, I guess.  My biggest complaint is that he overdoes it in games that really aren't important.  I mean c'mon Portland vs. Milwaukee in March when Portland is out of the playoffs is a tough go but if you listened to Wheels you would think that the Blazers were competing for the title.

Harvey was an insult to broadcasting in his first year.  With a bad speech impediment and the need to say "we" was a disgrace.  In listening to broadcasts at the end of last season, he was much better.

by Runtmg on Jul 29, 2007 8:11 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Wheels
I don't detest Wheels, as some here do.  That said, his threshold for calling a great play is pretty darn low.  Any old pick-n-roll jumper is described as worthy of Sportscenter at the least and the big screen in Springfield at the most.  Wheels calls the game with the excitement of a housebound dog that's being taken for his weekly walk.  It's a bit phony.  Part of the announcers job is to project the overall mood of the game and emotions of the players and coaches.  Not a Wheeler strength.

At least we don't have the Miami arena announcer.  That alone makes everything else okay.

by Engineering Problem on Jul 29, 2007 9:55 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Radio
I still like to listen to the radio while I'm doing other projects and there is a real art to a good play by play announcer.  I'm in the minority, because I never had very high regard for Shonely other than his enthusiasm.  The current situation is not good.  First because they are on KXL, which is a disgusting, racist, hate-mongering radio station; second because Wheeler is only fair, not great; and third because Antonio Harvey (while probably a good guy) is a pathetic color commentator.  The Blazers do a pretty good job with Courtside Thursday Night (no wait , it's Tues. this week and Wed. the following week and any guess the following week) and the 5th Quarter.

by reffster on Jul 30, 2007 4:16 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

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