Your legs?Few men who ever lived possessed a voice as powerful as Wilson's. Listening to him call 15 minutes of a game while on the way home was exposure to enough pure manliness for me to need to shave again.
Your legs?Few men who ever lived possessed a voice as powerful as Wilson's. Listening to him call 15 minutes of a game while on the way home was exposure to enough pure manliness for me to need to shave again.
Dave Shea told a friend of mine that he preferred baseball to hockey and if he had his way he would "rather make a living doing Red Sox games than Bruins games..."I remember when all televised games were on TV38. Then NESN game along and got the home games while TV38 did road games. I think back in the mid 80's to maybe the mid 90s it was Fred and Derek on the road and Fred, Derek and Dave Shea at home?
Derek and Dave would get into it a little from time to time, usually Derek got the last word in. Dave liked to use replay to prove his expertise in Dereks words.
“Oh my”.....As a young bout in the early 70'sway up here between London and Toronto Ontario, about 6:30 pm WBZ's signal was just strong enough that I could pick up games. When the energy crisis hit and the USA decided to move the clocks ahead in an attempt(?) to save power, and Canada didn't follow, I was royally ticked off as it would mean I'd miss about an hour of the game because it wouldn't come in.
But as a kid, we didn't have access to Bruins TV broadcasts. So to me, Bob Wilson was and always will be the voice of the Bruins.
Dave Shea told a friend of mine that he preferred baseball to hockey and if he had his way he would "rather make a living doing Red Sox games than Bruins games..."
Dave left Boston during the lost season and got the job as Washington's baseball play by play announcer. The team was appalled at how little preparation he did for each game and was fired.
The problem Dave had with Fred and Derek was they did not see the need for a third person in the booth.
In a side note. The game during this era was much less violent it seems. Forgot how different it was. You can see guys letting up all the time. The lack of armor helps this.
You mean 93 years young!Johnny Peirson is still with us - he is 93 and doing well.
In 5th and 6th grade, I may have learned more about the subtleties of the game from Johnny than I did from my coaches.All I remember with Peirson was him between periods going over plays with a marker (or something like that)
Loved Fred and Bob Wilson. LOVED
That was "Peirsons Pointers". I loved that.All I remember with Peirson was him between periods going over plays with a marker (or something like that)
Loved Fred and Bob Wilson. LOVED
And "It just means no salt on the steak for a couple days. No big deal".That was the arrangement, as I recall.
"Lost a couple o' chicklets on that play, Fred."
Dave left Boston during the lost season and got the job as Washington's baseball play by play announcer. The team was appalled at how little preparation he did for each game and was fired.
The problem Dave had with Fred and Derek was they did not see the need for a third person in the booth.
All I remember with Peirson was him between periods going over plays with a marker (or something like that)
Loved Fred and Bob Wilson. LOVED
I remember sitting in the Porter Sq parking lot as my mother shopped at Star Market. It was a Saturday in the seventies and the Bruins were playing an away game somewhere. I had just gotten my license and my dad did me a "favor" by letting me drive her the few miles there. Bob Wilson bellowing out: "SHOT SCOOOOORE, BIG WALTER McKEK!!!" Walter McKecknie had just come to the Bruins a week or two before. I believe (not sure) that they were playing the cellar dwelling Pittsburgh Penguins at the time.
Awww dooood, Nothing? The Steven James house, the new RedLine extension and Sears, the Averof Greek Restaurant, Porter Dodge and Harvard Square 3/4 of a mile away....1] This was just before Walt McKechnie was traded to the Red Wings.
2] I lived in the Porter Square area in '85. There was *nothing there.* Nothing. I can only imagine what it looked like in '74.
Awww dooood, Nothing? The Steven James house, the new RedLine extension and Sears, the Averof Greek Restaurant, Porter Dodge and Harvard Square 3/4 of a mile away....
Well then, you know Sumahville better than me. I can only say, in 1985, Porter Square reminded of Government Center. And not in a good way.
But we like what we like, my friend, and I'm glad you liked your Porter Square.
When I moved to my then girlfriend's apt. on the corner of Mass Ave. & Comm Ave., I had to get rid of the many, many beer bottles I'd lazily discarded on the fire escape outside my bedroom window. (Er, "Bartles & James" anyone? "Thank you for your support.")
And too, I had a kitchen & a large central living room as well. These days I couldn't afford a "half bath" for the price.
Aah, you were on the Somerville side. I lived in Cantabrigia... I didn't like it, but my parents moved us there in 1970. I actually hated it but that's another story. Back then Davis Sq Somerville was a high crime area plagued with arson. Porter Sq was an afterthought that the Cambridge City council didn't know what to do with. Cambridge stagnated, Somerville was almost in receivership in the late seventies. Cambridge fire and police were patrolling Somerville's streets for a year or two around 1978-'79. In the early to mid '90s Massachusetts voters did away with rent control and then Cambridge/ Somerville real estate sky rocketed. These days you can't buy a 3 decker in the area for less than $1.5 million.
Aah, you were on the Somerville side. I lived in Cantabrigia... I didn't like it, but my parents moved us there in 1970. I actually hated it but that's another story. Back then Davis Sq Somerville was a high crime area plagued with arson. Porter Sq was an afterthought that the Cambridge City council didn't know what to do with. Cambridge stagnated, Somerville was almost in receivership in the late seventies. Cambridge fire and police were patrolling Somerville's streets for a year or two around 1978-'79. In the early to mid '90s Massachusetts voters did away with rent control and then Cambridge/ Somerville real estate sky rocketed. These days you can't buy a 3 decker in the area for less than $1.5 million.
Davis Sq in the late '70s was rough as was most of the city.
Where the T is now located was a dive bar called the Railside and some guy named Bulger was the 'manager'. Down the street was the Rosebud which would open at 3 AM and have a full bar including many on duty cops.
A couple I know bought a house that was in worse shape than George Bailey's house in the late 70's for 14K - They sold it last year for $1.4 MILLION.
The subway opening in 1984 changed everything.