Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Uecker to Become a Permanent Part of Miller Park


“Can you do games, can you do play-by-play almost every day through a deep summer and not be located in some version of the past?”
--Underworld by Don DeLillo (15)

Earlier today the Brewers announced that a statue honoring Hall of Fame radio voice Bob Uecker will be placed near Miller Park’s Home Plate Plaza. Uecker will be honored in a ceremony this summer on August 31st. The Journal Sentinel’s Tom Haudricourt, in an article announcing the ceremony and statue, wrote of Uecker, “Uecker’s name is synonymous with summertime in Wisconsin as he has brought Brewers baseball to generations of fans listening to games on the Brewers Radio Network. His irreverent style and knowledge of the game are unrivaled, and Uecker’s talents have been known to audiences worldwide for years through his work on television and film projects.”
Uecker announced his first Major League Baseball game fifty years ago and was a catcher in the league for six years before that, and though his roots will always be in baseball, Uecker has made a career in television, film, and even published a book. Uecker has certainly left his mark.
            The statue to honor Uecker comes as no surprise. As Brewers chairman and principal owner Mark Attanasio puts it, “[Uecker] is an iconic figure for the franchise, and his passion for the Brewers is second-to-none. Bob is a national treasure who calls Wisconsin home.” In other words, Uecker has made his mark in the history of baseball, not only for the Brewers, but for fans everywhere. As DeLillo writes in his book Underworld, “When you see something like that, a thing that becomes a newsreel, you begin to feel you are a carrier of some solemn scrap of history” (16). Uecker is, without a doubt, a part of the history of baseball. His statue at Miller Park will only further solidify the mark he has made. It’s a special thing becoming a part of the history of America’s greatest pastime.
            Underworld, which opens with the legendary baseball games played between the Dodgers and Giants in New York in 1951, is a book centralized around the themes of nostalgia and history, more specifically how history is made.  DeLillo brings up the idea that longing makes history, that longing brings groups of people together. It couldn’t be more true in baseball. Fans long to be a part of the game, feel a part of the action. Perhaps that is why announcers like Uecker become so special to us. Uecker is someone who never failed to leave audiences laughing, who experienced great moments in baseball with thousands of fans over the years. When you experience great moments with someone you feel a connection. Sports are no exception.
As DeLillo says of baseball’s history in Underworld, “That’s the thing about baseball, Cotter. You do what they did before you. That’s the connection you make. There’s a whole long line. A man takes his kid to a game and thirty years later this is what they talk about when the poor old mutt’s wasting away in the hospital” (30-1). Baseball is a sport with a rich history. Part of what makes it so great is the connection fans feel to baseball history. Great radio voices like Uecker who have an extensive knowledge of baseball’s history and can deliver it in their commentary, help fans to feels even more connected to the game. “This is the people’s history and it has flesh and breath that quicken to the force of this old safe game of ours. And fans at the Polo Grounds today will be able to tell their grandchildren--they’ll be the gassy old men leaning into the next century trying to convince anyone willing to listen, pressing in with medicine breath, that they were here when it happened” (60). Baseball’s history is the people’s history. It has its own life, and fans take pride in being able to retell their own versions of the history that they experienced, later in life, the experience that they got to share with their kids, with other fans, with their teams, and for many, with Bob Uecker. 

2 comments:

  1. This is a really refreshing post to read considering the majority of the others have been targeting the marketing strategies and rapid decline of the well-being of the sport through vapid business proposals and greedy players asking for bigger payouts/contracts. I think Uecker represents a more innocent time in not just Wisconsin baseball, but to the general lifestyle and mindsets of people in past generations. Nostalgia is not a bad thing, it keeps individuals connected to a time in their life where everything was in working order. There is no harm in paying tribute to that aspect of the mind. It simply makes the future seems that much more bleak.

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  2. I agree that finally a post is upbeat and well developed around our readings. I think if anyone deserves to be an icon in Milwaukee, it should definitely be Uecker. I think you bring up an exceptionally poignant that to be an icon now, you no longer even have to apart of the actual game or team. This idea spreads the context of the team and initiates questions of the fan and worker of baseball. Nowadays we see not only players being revered but also the mechanical employees that bring the game to us in a narrative way. Really good read.

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