AA Fan Forum - MLB Announcers I

Last week we introduced a new way for you to interact with Awful Announcing and let your voice be heard. The AA Fan Forum will be the place to go for you to rant about or praise announcers. Throughout August, we'll be featuring your submissions into our AA Inbox regarding the local MLB announcing teams that we may not have time to cover extensively. This first edition features baseball fans, AA readers, and fellow bloggers giving their take on their MLB announcers and below you can find your way to submit your own thoughts to us for the AA Fan Forum. Without further adieu, here's what the fans have to say...
Phillies: Tom McCarthy and Chris Wheeler. Wheels has been on our TVs since the 1970's and has made us want to hit the mute button ever since. The chriswheelerglossary.com website lists many of his catch phrases. Tom McCarthy has had the unenviable task of following Harry Kalas as lead PBP guy, but his cadence (and the SIIIIIIDE is RETIRED...) and awful segues (Hey, speaking of...) are brutal.
Tom Asher
Twitter: tom_asher
When people think of Brewers announcers, the first name they'll come up with is Bob Uecker, and rightfully so -- he's an institution in Milwaukee, and from an entertainment standpoint, I don't know if there's anyone better. In terms of play-by-play, though, he's starting to slip in his advancing age. He'll have trouble reading flyballs from time-to-time, to the point of starting up his "Get up, get up, get outta here, gone" home run call, only to have to correct himself to "get off that wall" halfway through. Overall, though, he's still worth listening to. Cory Provus does a very good job playing the straight man to Uecker, and his play-by-play is typically crisp and informative, which is a plus on radio.
On the TV end, the consensus seems to be that Brian Anderson and Bill Schroeder make a pretty solid team, at least among those who have had the misfortune of listening to other teams' crews on MLB.TV. Anderson has always done a good job of letting the pictures do most of the speaking, which is an underrated attribute when it comes to TV announcers. Schroeder is your typical homer color analyst (to be expected from a former Brewers catcher), although he won't refer to the Brewers as "we" like some others. Together, they seem to work much better together than Schroeder and Daron Sutton ever did before Sutton left for Arizona. Sutton was (and still is, from what I can tell) truly an Awful Announcer. Anderson, on the other hand, is very good, and it's no surprise that TBS has started to trust him with some more important postseason series.
Jaymes Langrehr
The Brewers Bar
Twitter: BrewersBar


















