H oyea#0;* his time around the ice. Goldberg, 32, is the man in the broadcasting booth at Joe Louis Arena who an- nounces the play-by-plays for the Detroit Red Wings hockey games on Channel 50 and on PASS. He re- placed Dave Strader, who went to ESPN last August. Before coming to Detroit, Goldberg was based in Chicago and worked for ESPN and the SportsChan- nel, covering everything from sky surfing to Chicago Bulls championship games. Goldberg looks back on his childhood and chuckles. "My parents lied. I was supposed to be 7 years old [for the Teepee league]. We changed the year on my birth certificate so I [could] start playing at the age of 5," he confides. Goldberg is the product of an intermarriage. When Eli Ronald Goldman married Patricia Ross Farley, nei- ther was overly concerned with their mixed-religion background. He was Jewish and she was Catholic. "You really can't get more to the opposite ends of the spectrum than that," says Goldberg, who was named Michael Francis after his mother's father. "My parents have been married for 33 years," says Goldberg. "I have a great respect for both of their re- ligions. My brother and I see it as an opportunity to join both cultures. My Jewish grandmother would say that we benefit from the best of both worlds," he ex- plains. Goldberg's grandparents on his father's side came to the United States from Russia and Poland. 'We cel- OPEN MIKE page 86 Left: Mike Goldberg: "Every game is a story within itself." THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Red Wings play-by-play announcer Mike Goldberg reveals his love for hockey, family and Detroit. MEGAN SWOYER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS 7 11111wenty-seven years ago, a little boy named Michael moved, with his parents and younger brother, from Cincinnati, Ohio, to his new home in Southfield, Mich. The 5-year-old had never seen a hockey stick. His father, a traveling salesman for Revlon, never had given much thought to the game of hockey. But once they settled in, lit- tle Mikey and his family discovered that Detroiters take hockey seriously. It seemed the kids were always playing street hockey or skating on nearby ponds long past the din- ner hour. So his parents enrolled their son in a ju- nior Teepee hockey league. He started to love hockey ... and he grew to be extremely competitive. When Mike was 13, he lost his two front teeth on the ice in a Bantam league and begged his mother not to re- place them. He wanted to be like his toothless hero, Philadelphia Flyer Bobby Clarke. By the time Mike had entered college, he was good enough to play for Miami of Ohio. Today, Mike Goldberg continues to spend most of PHOTO BY DANIEL LIPPITT Bottom: Former Wing Mickey Redmond and Mike Goldberg announce 75 hockey games a year.