Chick Hearn passes....Lakers Basketball will never be the same

Personally this hits me hard…Lakers and Chick were synonmous during the 80-90 Showtime season. I will miss him terribly

LOS ANGELES –– Play-by-play announcer Chick Hearn, who made phrases like “slam dunk” and “air ball” common basketball expressions during his 42-year career with the Los Angeles Lakers, died Monday. He was 85.

“Chick Hearn passed away at 6:30 this evening,” Los Angeles Lakers spokesman Bob Steiner told a hushed news conference outside Northridge Medical Center Hospital, where Hearn was taken Friday night after suffering a fall.

Hearn fell Friday in the back yard of the Encino home he shared with wife, Marge. The two would have celebrated their 64th wedding anniversary on Aug. 13.

Surgeons operated twice on Saturday to relieve swelling in his brain, but he never regained consciousness.

Whether Hearn was the most famous Laker of them all can be debated, but his career with the team was far longer than such standouts as Jerry West, Elgin Baylor, Wilt Chamberlain, Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Jamaal Wilkes, James Worthy and Michael Cooper.

And he was calling games long before current stars Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant were born.

Hearn called a record 3,338 consecutive Lakers games starting in 1965 before missing one because he had to have an operation in December 2001 for a blocked aortic valve.

While recovering, he fell and broke his hip.

Hearn returned to work April 9 and broadcast the Lakers’ playoff run to their third consecutive NBA championship.

He called his first Lakers game in March 1961. His last game was June 12 when the Lakers beat the New Jersey Nets 113-107 in East Rutherford, N.J., to complete a sweep of the NBA Finals and earn their ninth title since moving from Minneapolis in 1960.

During the finals, he told The Associated Press he was getting stronger every day and planned to work at least one more season. And he said he believed his call of the Lakers’ Game 7 victory over Sacramento in the Western Conference finals might have been as good as any in his career.

As recently as last week, he drove to Las Vegas with his wife to speak at a fantasy basketball camp.

Born Francis Dayle Hearn on Nov. 27, 1916, in Aurora, Ill., Hearn peppered his rapid-fire delivery with terms like “no harm, no foul,” “the mustard’s off the hot dog,” “ticky-tack foul,” and “faked him into the popcorn machine.”

Whenever he believed a Lakers victory was clinched, Hearn would say: “You can put this one in the refrigerator. The door’s closed, the light’s out, the eggs are cooling, the butter’s getting hard and the Jell-O is jiggling.”

Hearn’s unique “words-eye view” provided the soundtrack for nine NBA championships – one with West and Chamberlain, five with Johnson and Abdul-Jabbar, and the last three with O’Neal and Bryant.

When it came time to give out rings, raise championship banners, emcee victory parades or retire uniform numbers, Hearn was the master of ceremonies.

Hearn also broadcast other historic Lakers accomplishments, such as the night in Las Vegas when Abdul-Jabbar broke Chamberlain’s NBA career scoring record and when Johnson broke Oscar Robertson’s career assist record.

Hearn also was a comforting voice to fans in difficult basketball times – helping fans cope with Johnson’s HIV announcement in 1991 and Loyola Marymount star Hank Gathers’ death in 1990.

When the Lakers moved from the Forum in nearby Inglewood to the downtown Staples Center in 1999, the press room was named in Hearn’s honor.

He has been immortalized with a star on Hollywood’s “Walk of Fame,” and appeared as himself numerous times on television shows – including the TV movie “The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan’s Island.”

And he hosted the TV show “Bowling for Dollars.”

Hearn missed just two games before his unprecedented streak – one because bad weather kept him grounded and one because he had another broadcast assignment.

The first game of the streak was Nov. 21, 1965, at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. Johnson was in grade school and Abdul-Jabbar was still Lew Alcindor and a teenager.

Throughout his career, Hearn refused to call in sick. He came to work when he wasn’t feeling well – including a couple of times with laryngitis that forced him to sit out the second half.
:frowning: :frowning: :frowning: Goodbye Chick…for us fans, you will always be the voice of the Lakers

Wow, what a year for broadcasters. We lose Jack Buck and Chick Hearn and Ernie Harwell is retiring.

I have no special memories of Chick other than hearing his voice on my 1989 Piston championship video. I knew who he was but didn’t realize what a legend until he missed that game in December and I started to hear stories about him. Having Ernie Harwell in Detroit, I can appreciate what Laker fans feel towards him.

My Dad took me to my first Laker game sometime around 1969 in the days of Chamberlain, Bailor and West. I watched Pat Riley the player many years before he was coach. I watched them win their first championship on local TV. Chick was there.

I was in High School in the days of Magic, Abdul Jabbar and later Worthy. That was back in the days before Hollywood took interest in the Lakers. You could get into the cheap seats for half price with a student ID on the day of the game. It cost me $3.50 to see the Lakers. I was there, at the Forum, to watch Game 6 of the 1982 Finals when the beat the Sixers, so was Chick.

I was out of town for college during all of those great years when it was the Lakers and the Celts and later the Pistons in the Finals. I followed my team religiously, always turning off the audio and playing Chick on the radio.

Now it’s Shaq and Kobe. I still would watch the games on TV but turn off the sound so that I could listen to Chick on the radio. He’d definitely lost a step over the years but he was always a joy to listen to. Chick always spoke his mind. If a Laker was playing poorly, he’d say so. If the Lakers got a lucky call, he’d be the first to admit it.

The way he’d turn a phrase…make up a phrase really…was amazing. Even Stu Lantz, his long time color man, would be shaking his head and laughing and some of the things that came out of his mouth. Chick made the game so much more fun, so much more colorful. Never has the phrase “end of an era” been more appropriate.

I’m going to miss listening to him so much. He’s just always been there, since just before I was born. For the 30+ years I’ve been following my Lakers, he was there and now he’s gone, one of the last vestiges of my childhood. I am so sad.

GO LAKERS! Win another one for Chickie Bird!

Haj

God damn. I grew up listening to Chick. Laker games won’t ever be the same.

I won’t go on to say how great and impressionable Chick Hearn was. I have had the opportunity to grow up listening to Chick and Vin Scully.

The sadest thing is that the way sports and broadcasting is today, when Vin eventually passes, hopefully a long time from now, there really aren’t many/any sportscasters with that kind of longgevity that are synomynous with the team they are broadcasting.

RIP, Chick.

The local news had live coverage last night. “We’ll let you know of any changes when they happen.” I decided I didn’t want to participate in a “death watch”, so I changed channels a few minutes before Hearn died.

Those of us from Los Angeles will look back to the 70s as a golden age in sports broadcasting. We were treated to Chick Hearn calling basketball, Vin Scully working for the Dodgers, and Dick Enberg for the Angels.

RIP, Mr. Hearn, and thank you.