Denny Matthews

Dennis G. "Denny" Matthews (born November 14, 1942) is an American sportscaster, best known as a play-by-play announcer for Major League Baseball's Kansas City Royals since the team's inception in 1969.

Denny Matthews
Born
Dennis G. Matthews

(1942-11-14) November 14, 1942
Sports commentary career
Team(s)Kansas City Royals (1969–present)
Genre(s)Play-by-play
SportsMajor League Baseball

Early history

Matthews grew up in Bloomington, Illinois and attended Illinois Wesleyan University, where he played baseball and football, and belonged to the Sigma Chi fraternity. He worked for local radio and television stations in Peoria and St. Louis before his hiring by the Royals.

Broadcast career

Matthews has broadcast for the Royals since their inception in 1969, when he was the sidekick to Bud Blattner. Blattner retired in 1974, and Matthews has been the Royals' top broadcaster since then. From 1974 to 1998 – a stretch that includes the best seasons in the Royals' history – Matthews was paired with Fred White. In 1999, the two also teamed up to write a book called Play by Play: 25 Years of Royals on Radio, which recounts anecdotes from those seasons. Matthews also called baseball events for the national CBS Radio network in the 1980s.

In 1999, the Royals fired White and replaced him with the younger Ryan Lefebvre. Despite a tremendous age difference, Matthews and Lefebvre integrated their styles well and their dry wit and rapport became popular with Royals fans.

In 2008, Matthews cut back on his broadcast schedule, traveling to fewer road games, turning many of those chores over to Bob Davis and Steve Stewart (who succeeded Lefebvre in the Royals' radio booth while the latter shifted to television). However, Matthews broadcast the first road trip of that season from Detroit and Minnesota while Davis was broadcasting the Kansas Jayhawks' run to the national basketball championship. Matthews handled most of the home schedule and much of the September slate, when Davis turned his attention to broadcasting Jayhawks football games. Steve Physioc replaced Davis on the Royals' broadcast team in 2009.

Matthews' broadcasts and longevity have made him a popular figure in Kansas City. Baseball historian and statistician Bill James is among his fans, and has written:

His voice has a pleasant timbre which suggests a cheerful occasion. His inflection varies naturally so it's neither falsely enthusiastic nor boring. He has a dry, understated humor that drifts through much of his audience undetected. One cannot learn these things at a microphone; they are given.[1]

Following the retirement of longtime Los Angeles Dodgers announcer Vin Scully (who'd been calling that team's games since 1950) at the end of the 2016 season, Matthews' tenure with the Royals was the second-longest continuous tenure with one team among active Major League Baseball announcers, trailing only that of the Dodgers' Spanish-language broadcaster Jaime Jarrín (1959–present). In January 2015, Matthews signed a contract extension to keep him calling Royals games through his and the team's 50th season in 2018.[2]

Awards

Matthews was inducted into the Royals Hall of Fame in 2004[3] and the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame in 2005.[4] He was presented with the Ford C. Frick Award by the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2007.[5][6]

Bibliography

  • Denny Matthews, Fred White, and Matt Fulks (1999). Play by Play: 25 Years of Royals on Radio (ISBN 1-886110-78-6)
gollark: Abusable how? It's not much different from multiple tabs of ARs, but more convenient.
gollark: If it was actually something people wanted, I mean.
gollark: Has anyone made a multi-egg AR thing so you can stare at lots and AR more efficiently? If not, I probably could.
gollark: 11953 now.
gollark: I've sent 11950.

References

  1. The Bill James Baseball Abstract, 1983
  2. "Royals broadcaster Denny Matthews' new contract ties him to team through 50th season". The Kansas City Star. January 31, 2015. Retrieved February 3, 2015.
  3. http://kansascity.royals.mlb.com/kc/hall_of_fame/member.jsp?name=Matthews
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-11-28. Retrieved 2013-08-24.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. Lifetime achievement (sic) last accessed February 23, 2007.
  6. Royals announcer Matthews wins Ford C. Frick Award last accessed February 23, 2007.
Preceded by
None
Voice of the Royals
1969 Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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