St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh
Pirates, Chicago Cubs and New York Giants
Legendary NBC Baseball Announcer and 1946 St. Louis Cardinals World Series Champion!
Joe Garagiola
Single Signed Official
National League (Giammatti) Baseball!
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Joe Garagiola
Joseph Henry Garagiola Sr.
(February 12, 1926 – March 23, 2016) was an American professional baseball
catcher, and later a radio and television personality with a varied career.
He played nine seasons in Major
League Baseball (MLB) for the St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates, Chicago
Cubs, and New York Giants. He was later well known outside baseball as one of
the regular panelists on The Today Show, but he was best known for his many
years as one of the lead baseball announcers on NBC, frequently amplifying, for
comedic effect, remarks attributed to his old friend Yogi Berra (whether Berra
had made them or not); he also made numerous appearances as a host and panelist
on a range of talk and game shows.
Early life
Born in St. Louis, Missouri,
Garagiola grew up on Elizabeth Avenue in an Italian-American neighborhood in
the south of the city called the Hill, just across the street from Yogi Berra,
his childhood friend and competitor, who was a year older. As teenagers, almost
all baseball scouts rated Garagiola the better prospect. Still, it was Berra
who went on to a Hall of Fame career, while Garagiola was a journeyman. About
living across the street from Berra during their youth, Garagiola often quipped,
"Not only was I not the best catcher in the Major Leagues, I wasn't even
the best catcher on my street!"
Baseball career
Garagiola with the Pirates
Garagiola was signed at age 16 by
the St. Louis Cardinals organization. At age 17, he remains the youngest player
in Columbus Red Birds history. Garagiola advanced to Columbus of the Class AA
American Association in 1943 and was with them when he was drafted into
military service on April 24, 1944. After undergoing basic training at
Jefferson Barracks, Missouri, Garagiola was sent to Fort Riley, Kansas, where
he quickly established himself as the catcher for the Fort Riley Centaurs, with
teammates Rex Barney and Pete Reiser.
Garagiola was sent to the
Philippines in 1945, where he played ball for Kirby Higbe's Manila Dodgers. He
was discharged from service in early 1946 and was just 20 years old when he
joined the Cardinals. Garagiola made his major league debut in 1946.
As a rookie in 1946, in his only
World Series appearance, Garagiola batted 6-for-19 in five games, including in
Game 4, when he went 4-for-5 with three RBIs. On September 11, 1947, Joe
Garagiola and Jackie Robinson were involved in an incident at home plate.
Garagiola allegedly spiked Robinson's foot in the second inning, and when
Robinson came to the plate the next inning and made a comment to him, Garagiola
reportedly responded with a racial slur. An argument ensued and umpire Beans
Reardon held back Garagiola while Robinson responded with a mock clap.
Garagiola never quite lived up to
the promise of his youth, appearing in only 676 games over nine seasons for
four National League teams. He was a mediocre hitter (though certainly good for
a catcher) in the majors, which featured in his self-deprecating humor. He once
told this story himself: "He knew that it was time to retire when he was
catching, and his ex-teammate Stan Musial stepped into the batter's box, turned
to Joe, and said, 'When are you gonna quit?'"
Looking back at his career in
1970, Garagiola observed, "It's not a record, but being traded four times
when there are only eight teams in the league tells you something. I thought I
was modeling uniforms for the National League."
After baseball
Books
After his retirement from
baseball, Garagiola lent his name to a 1960 book, Baseball Is a Funny Game,
which sold well upon release and helped establish Garagiola as a
"personality." The book—largely ghostwritten—was a collection of
humorous anecdotes surrounding his upbringing and his playing career, and it
showcased the folksy, humorous style that became his trademark as a
broadcaster.
Garagiola also wrote It's
Anybody's Ballgame (1988) and Just Play Ball (2007).
Baseball broadcasting
Garagiola turned to broadcasting
following his retirement as a player, first calling Cardinals radio broadcasts
on KMOX from 1955 to 1962.
As an announcer, Garagiola was
best known for his almost 30-year association with NBC television. He began
doing national baseball broadcasts for the network in 1961 (teaming with Bob
Wolff). Garagiola called several World Series on NBC Radio in the 1960s,
teaming with announcers including By Saam and George Kell. After Mel Allen was
fired, Garagiola was added to the New York Yankees broadcast team, where he
worked with lead announcer Phil Rizzuto from 1965 to 1967; in May 1967, he
called Mickey Mantle's 500th home run. Garagiola subsequently returned to
broadcasting NBC baseball, and in May 1973, became the host of the pre-game
show The Baseball World of Joe Garagiola;[8] he then became a play-by-play announcer
beginning in 1974.
Garagiola alternated play-by-play
duties with Curt Gowdy on NBC until 1976, when he assumed the role full-time.
He teamed with color commentator Tony Kubek from 1976 to 1982; in 1983, he
shifted to color commentary as Vin Scully joined the network as lead
play-by-play announcer. (Kubek was demoted to NBC's #2 baseball broadcast with
Bob Costas.) Aside from working the Saturday Game of the Week for NBC, Scully
and Garagiola called three All-Star Games (1983, 1985, and 1987), three
National League Championship Series (1983, 1985, and 1987), and three World
Series (1984, 1986, and 1988).
After calling the World Series
with Scully in 1988, Garagiola resigned from the network in November[9][10]
following a contract dispute. His slot on NBC's baseball broadcasts was
subsequently filled by Tom Seaver.
Post-NBC, Garagiola spent a year
(1990) as a cable-television commentator for the California Angels. From 1998
to 2012, he performed part-time color commentary duties for the Arizona
Diamondbacks, where his son Joe Jr. was general manager. Garagiola officially
announced his retirement from broadcasting on February 22, 2013.
Other broadcasting ventures
Besides calling baseball games
for NBC, Garagiola served as a co-host on Today from 1967 to 1973 and again
from 1990 to 1992. He occasionally guest-hosted The Tonight Show Starring
Johnny Carson, including the only live appearances by members of The Beatles on
the program while still a group, when John Lennon and Paul McCartney appeared
in May 1968.
In the late 1960s and 1970s,
Garagiola hosted the game shows He Said, She Said; Joe Garagiola's Memory Game;
Sale of the Century; and To Tell the Truth, as well as the short-lived Strike
It Rich. Garagiola was a guest celebrity panelist on Match Game in the late
1970s. He hosted the St. Louis area professional wrestling show Wrestling at
the Chase for three years from 1959 to 1962 (his brother, Mickey, was the ring
announcer) and was a regular host of the Orange Bowl Parade in Miami on New
Year's Eve. Garagiola achieved a new field of fame as co-host of the
Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show for USA Network from 1994 to 2002, remarking:
I say to some people, "I
played in the World Series, and I broadcast the World Series. I broadcast the
All Star Game. I've done the Today show, The Tonight Show, The Tomorrow Show,
the Yesterday Show, the Day After Tomorrow Show". And people come up to me
and say, "I love you in Westminster".
From 1969 to 1970, Garagiola was
the Saturday afternoon host of the program Monitor. During the 1960s, he
contributed commentaries to Monitor for several years and had a daily
five-minute morning drive-time sports commentary program on the network.
From 1977 to 1983, his name was
attached to the PGA Tour's Tucson Open tournament, broadcast by NBC.
One of Garagiola's first
appearances on TV was in 1960, when he appeared onstage at a campaign event for
John F. Kennedy. Surrounded by politicians including former President Harry S.
Truman, Garagiola put his arm around the former president and, knowing that his
father who had often questioned his son's career choices would be watching the
event on television, looked into the camera and said, "Hey Pop, I just
want you to see who I'm hanging around with."
Testimony at Curt Flood trial
In 1970, Garagiola appeared at a
preliminary trial following former Cardinals outfielder Curt Flood's lawsuit
against Major League Baseball, challenging the game's reserve clause.
Testifying before Judge Irving Ben Cooper in New York, Garagiola defended the
clause, a stance he later deemed a "terrible mistake."
Politics
Garagiola and President Ford
watching the returns for the 1976 presidential election, for which they had
done a series of television ads together
In the 1976 presidential
election, Garagiola enthusiastically supported the candidacy of President
Gerald Ford. During the fall campaign, the Republican National Committee hired
Garagiola to do a series of television ads with Ford, with Garagiola talking to
Ford in a relaxed, informal setting. Derided by Ford's critics as "The Joe
and Jerry Show", the ads in their opinion were considered to have
negatively affected the Ford campaign.
The two men became close friends,
and on election night in November 1976 Ford invited Garagiola to be one of his
guests at the White House to watch the results on television. Ford lost to
Democrat Jimmy Carter, the former governor of Georgia.
Advocacy against chewing tobacco
Garagiola was an advocate against
the use of chewing tobacco. He had picked up the habit during his playing days
with the Cardinals, but quit cold turkey in the late-1950s. He annually visited
major league teams during spring training with players from his generation who
have suffered from oral cancer related to the addiction, and he always made
comments about it on broadcasts whenever the camera would be on a player
chewing tobacco.
Society for American Baseball
Research
Garagiola was the keynote
luncheon speaker at the 2007 convention of the Society for American Baseball
Research held in St. Louis.
Honors
Garagiola was inducted into the
Missouri Sports Hall of Fame in 1970. He was presented with a Peabody Award in
1973 for his NBC work. In 1991, he was honored by the Baseball Hall of Fame
with the Ford C. Frick Award for outstanding broadcasting accomplishments. He
was inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall
of Fame in 2004. He has also been given his own star on the St. Louis Walk of
Fame. The St. Louis Wrestling Hall of Fame inducted him in 2008 for his
Wrestling at the Chase broadcasts. In 2012, he was honored by the Catholic
Community Foundation of the Diocese of Phoenix, receiving its inaugural Legacy
Award at its 24th Annual Crosier Gala for his tireless help and generosity with
the St. Peter's Mission School on the Gila River Reservation. (The American
Sportscasters Association also honored him for his work with the St. Peter's
Mission School with its Humanitarian Award in 1995.)
On December 4, 2013, Garagiola
was named as the 2014 recipient of the Buck O'Neil Lifetime Achievement Award,
presented once every three years by the Baseball Hall of Fame for positive
contributions to Major League Baseball. The Hall's official announcement
specifically cited his advocacy against smokeless tobacco, as well as his role
as a founder of the Baseball Assistance Team, a charity that provides grants to
needy members of the professional baseball community.
In the 2013 film 42, Garagiola
was portrayed by actor Gino Anthony Pesi.
In the 1990s, Garagiola began
working with the St. Peter's Indian Mission Catholic School, a poorly-funded
educational facility on the Gila River Indian Reservation, south of Phoenix.
During his many years of charity work with the school he helped facilitate the
repair or construction of an all-purpose facility, a basketball court, a soccer
and track field, a library and computer learning center and extensive repairs
on the old mission church.
For his work, he was honored by
tribal leaders with the nickname "Awesome Fox" and today his name can
be seen on The Joe Garagiola Learning Center and Awesome Fox Field at the
mission school.
Personal life
Garagiola married Audrie Ross,
the organist at the Cardinals' ballpark in St. Louis, in 1949; their two sons
later had an association with baseball. Joe Jr., was the general manager for
the Arizona Diamondbacks, and later senior vice president of baseball
operations for Major League Baseball. His other son Steve is a retired
broadcast journalist as well; he served as a reporter and anchor for WDIV-TV,
the NBC affiliate in Detroit.[18] His daughter, Gina, has also worked in TV
news, as a field reporter for Phoenix television station KTVK, and is now a
freelance writer. Garagiola Sr. had eight grandchildren. One of those
grandchildren, Chris, was named the radio play-by-play announcer for the
Diamondbacks in December 2023.
Death
Garagiola died on March 23, 2016,
at age 90, in Scottsdale, Arizona. The Diamondbacks wore a patch in his memory
on their right sleeve for the 2016 season, a black circle with "JOE"
written in white in the center, with a catchers' mask replacing the O.
Garagiola's funeral mass was held
on April 13 in St. Louis at St. Ambrose Catholic Church, the same church where
he was baptized. He was interred at Resurrection Cemetery in St. Louis.
Ball B224