The Michigan Daily - Sports Monday - October 12, 1 - - Page 3 lc&A', B'aeaoaacauelto . Miller John Niyo r. Iii i [ I 1 IT' The voice of the Oriol es and E S PN's sses Sunday Night Ba seball discu * various aspects of our national pastime. Since ESPN won the rights to televise baseball, Baltimore Orioles announcer Jon Miller has become one of the most recognized broad- casters of America's pastime. Along with Hall of Fame second baseman Joe Morgan, Miller has transformed an ordinary Sunday night game into an event. Miller en- tertains fans during games with im- pressions of some of the baseball's most famous announcers, including Harry Caray and even Vin Scully in Japanese and Spanish. Besides ESPN, he also does radio and televi- son for the Orioles. Daily Sports Writer Chad A. Safran spoke with Miller about life as an announcer. Daily: How do you feel about Oriole Park at Camden Yards? Miller: I think obviously it is a beautiful ballpark. To me one of the keys to the ballpark is that it is a completely state-of-the art, high- tech, ultra-modern ballpark in every respect. Yet it still has the feel of some of the older ballparks in the best sense - the sense of intimacy. The seats are real close. Very little foul territory. And there are unique things about the ballpark. The way the game is played in the ballpark, I think over the years that is going to give it some of the flavor that one stretch of baseball buildings did not incorporate with it. The big round ballpark. It starts with the warehouse out in right field which a lot of people wanted to tear down to give you a clear vista to the Inner Harbor, the skyline and what not. But they dis- covered something like the ware- house would give you all the things you wanted in a ballpark without making it a confinement because you could build an odd-shaped ball- park in the middle of a field some- where with a 37-foot high wall but it would be a total contrivance. Keep- ing the warehouse they were able to duplicate the brickwork, the arch- ways, things like that and the outer facade of the ballpark looks like very much like the warehouse. The two look like they have been side- by-side for one hundred years. By keeping the warehouse, that helps you justify the odd dimensions in right field, the big wall. It is an innner-city ballpark that celebrates the fact that it is an urban structure. D: What is your favorite stadium to broadcast from? M: Tiger Stadium. You are right on top of the game. You hear things, much less see the ball and all of that. Every other ballpark after you have done a series at Tiger Stadium, you feel like you are eight miles away (from the action). That's always * been my favorite. I like the feel of the ballpark. You can hit home runs there. It is exciting and home runs there have dimensions. There are home runs that go over the fence, there are home runs that hit the fa- cade of the upper deck or home runs that make it into the upper deck. Or hit the roof or even go over the roof. Simply, from a radio standpoint, that brings a home run to life. In most other ballparks, it's just a mat- ter of degree. It reaches the seats. Did it go way back in the seats? At Tiger Stadium, without even getting into it you just say "It hits the upper deck," or "It hits the roof," or even "It's over the roof." D: You mentioned Tiger Stad- ium. What do you think should be done in terms of the ballpark? - Should they build a new one or ren- 0 ovate the old structure? M: I'm not as familiar with the whole situation there as I am with the one here, but you know if it can be preserved, as a baseball fan then I would be all for that. I think there are certain aspects of Tiger Stadium that are not good. Is it conducive to fans wanting to go there? Out of the 50,000 seats, how many of them of- fer a real good view of the game? How many are behind poles or how many are backed up underneath the overhang in the upper deck where you can't see any ball in the air or the scoreboard? There are a consid- erable number of seats like that. This reduces their season tickets. You don't have many optimum season tickets that, say, a coroporation would want to buy to entertain clients and that sort of thing. cause with radio you have the per- sonal relationship with the audience. It is just you as the conduit between you and the audience at home. Whatever you decide is rela:ent, that's what you tell them about. It simplifies the game, but it is very satisfying to speak directly to the fans. Television, particularly an ESPN Sunday night telecast, it is almost like a military expedition. We've got 11 or 12 cameras. We've got the blimp. We've got seven or eight slo- mo machines. We've got a crew of 40 or 50 people. The booth looks like you are surrounded by secret service agents because there are so many people in there. Radio, they set you up a microphone, fill out your scorecard, open the mike, that's I've always contended that a Tiger fan would listen to a game with Ernie Harwell; now, they use their imagination to get a picture of what Ernie is describing based on his description. televison where you don't see the flight of the ball. A big home run - you never saw the ball, in effect. You saw the outfielder go back to the wall. It hits the roof. Maybe, you see it hit the roof or maybe they didn't get it. Radio - Ernie would describe it for you. He would tell you it hit the roof, and in your mind's eye you're sitting in the first base stands, upper deck. You saw the flight of the ball, the incredible arc, you saw it hit that wall and you're astounded and you never saw any of it. That's part of the romance of radio. In other words, a game on televison is the movie version and a game on radio is reading a novel. D:Is it important as a broadcaster to be very objective or do you think if you are the "homer" announcer you get the fans more involved? M: I think when you start out ob- jectivity is the No. 1 goal because as a broadcaster on a local basis, you've got to convince the fans that you've got credibility. Fans, they'll be there. You can count on them to do that but they need to count on you to tell them the truth. If you're at some ballpark and the fans per- ceive you are not telling the truth about the home ballclub, then you've lost everything. You have to start from there. The fans have to believe you are telling the truth at all times, then they'll buy the rest of the product. D: How did you get your start in radio? M: I always wanted to do base- ball on the radio. When I was a little kid, I played Strat-O-Matic baseball and broadcast the games in the basement or my room. It's kind of a bizarre thing to do in northern California at that time. Everyone else was spending summers at the beach and I've got the Cardinals and Cubs in a big four-game set. So I guess there was always some ro- mance to being a fan of the game and listening to Russ Hodges and Ron Simmons. They brought the game to me, and, looking back, I re- alize that everyday they emphasized the notion that baseball is good and healthy. Baseball is a pastime, and baseball on the radio, particularly, is good company. Good versus Evil: The other big game Nothing beats a good rivalry. Except, well, beating up a good rival. Michigan did just that to Michigan State twice this weekend, though the first instance passed with much less fanfare than the last. Everyone knows what happened Saturday. The Spartans, as has become customary, lost. Michigan won, proving once again that we are simply much, much better than they are, right? Right. For further proof, you need only to rewind the tape back to Friday afternoon, when the Michigan Daily soundly thumped the Michigan State News in the annual battle of good versus evil on the soggy turf of Palmer Field. The men and women in Maize and Blue, doing their best impersonation of "the 22 arrogant asses who put on the gloves of green," ran over, around and through the Jolly Green Giants. Bob Ufer, bless his soul, would have been proud.* We played for upwards of two hours. Tackle football, first one to score five touchdowns wins. The final score was Us 35, Them 7. Metaphorically speaking, we kicked their butt. It was a two-man show on offense. With Thom Holden, who actually looks like a football player, at quarterback, and Jim Foss at wide receiver, there was little that MSU could do but beg for mercy. Defeat - something the bad guys have endured for two straight years now - was inevitable. Foss, a senior who is majoring in intramural sports at Michigan, hauled in no less than four TD catches from Holden - each time running deep routes and then leaping over hapless defenders for the r grab. It would have been more ' than four TDs, were it not for the whining State players and fans insisting on "do-overs" after phantom penalties and obscure out-of-bounds calls. "They took more touchdowns away from me than their whole team scored," said Jim Foss lunges for one of his four Foss, who was playing in his touchdown catches Friday. third Daily-State News football contest. He has also helped lead the Daily over the green-and-white freaks in basketball two years and counting, last year with 41 points in a 162-79 (no joke) thrashing. Meanwhile, Holden, who might be a good enough punter to play on Saturday instead of Friday next year, was busy directing the offense when he wasn't launching bombs to Foss. He played a part in the fifth and final touchdown as well, on an option play when he pitched the ball to Mike Rancilio, who scampered in for the score. But enough about the game. Rivalries are about more than just off- tackle runs and post patterns. What did Elvis Grbac say about Michigan State after the real game Saturday? "We wanted to destroy them. We wanted to rip them apart." Ditto. There were at least three full-scale fights in Friday's game. Probably could have (and should have) been a few more. It just wouldn't have been Michigan-Michigan State if we hadn't brawled. There were big hits, cheap shots and plenty of unfriendly conversation. It was war. Some twisted knees and ankles, a few pulled muscles, scores of cuts and abrasions, some unbelievable bruises ... and some cold beers and cigars for the Victors when it was all over. 35-7. State Pride is truly ours. * Ufer guru Sanjay Daga contributed to this story. It has a lot of huge disadvantages economically. Can Tiger Stadium be renovated to become a ballpark that features luxury suites and still main- tain the aspects of Tiger Stadium that the fans love? The proximity to the field, the dimensions. All of those kind of things. If they can then I would be all for that. If they are going to do the new ballpark, can it be built downtown to help down- town Detroit like this ballpark has helped downtown Baltimore. All the questions have to be asked. Selfish- ly, I've been able to go to Tiger Stadium for a good long time but also I know the kind of seats that we get in the broadcast booth at Tiger Stadium. The fans themselves don't get that view there. D: Which do you enjoy doing better, television or radio? M: I enjoy doing television from the standpoint that you reach a big audience with it. You've got the former player who is the expert. You have the televison replays. So you can really get inside the game. There's a lot of things you can learn about the game on televison. You can replay things the fans want to see again, but radio is the most satis- fying from a personal standpoint be- all there is to it. D: Doing radio is almost like po- etry, in which you have to describe everything in a style that attracts the listener. M: For me, listening to the game can be very satisfying as opposed to television because as a listener you are also personally involved. If the game is well described, then, for in- stance in Detroit with Ernie Harwell for years, I've always contended that a Tiger fan would listen to a game with Ernie Harwell; now, they use their imagination to get a picture of what Ernie is describing based on his description. Then my contention is that a fan will see what Ernie is talking about at Tiger Stadium from the vantage point at which they watch games when they are at Tiger Stadium. So if you sit in the upper deck, first-base side, when Ernie is describing the thing to you, you're seeing it from that vantage point. So it is very personal just for you because on television you only see what the director chooses to show you. Sometimes great moments in a ballgame, the memory of them, can be more vivid from of a radio broad- cast because of that personal in- volvement than having seen it on Congratulations on the 81st Birthday of THE REPUBLIC OF CHINA ON TAIWAN First Republic in Asia, a Government of the People, by the People and for the people Sole Sanctuary for Chinese Culture U. S. 6th Largest Trade Partner Book A Novel by Robert Grudin The wildest, wooliest academic satire since Lucky Jim--a brilliantly on-target send-up of contemporary campus fads and follies. The English department at the University of Washagon is in an uproar. Professor Adam Snell--humanist gadfly and faculty pariah--has disappeared without a trace. Stranger still, all copies of his obscure but brilliant novel also seem to be missing. Has he been murdered? 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