One of the first rules of
live radio that I learned early in my career was the show must go on. That adage has been tested more than once in
my career as the “radio voice” of UW-Whitewater football.
Topping my list occurred on a beautiful fall colored Saturday on Oct. 15, 1994. Bob Bass talked me into a picturesque drive along the Rock River from Rockford, Illinois to Davenport, Iowa as the autumnal colors were spectacular that morning. Our destination was UW-Whitewater’s non-conference football game vs. St. Ambrose University in Davenport, Iowa.
The beautiful scenery was energizing as we drove along US Highway 20 through Freeport, Illinois. I was driving the funky colored rolling billboard - the WFAW Suburban. A pickup a couple hundred feet in front of us signaled to turn left. We slow, the pickup begins to turn. All of a sudden the front passenger door of the pickup flies open and a kid falls out onto the pavement. I scream “oh my God” as the driver jumps out of his pickup and literally throws the kid back in the front seat and “lays rubber” taking off down a side street.
Topping my list occurred on a beautiful fall colored Saturday on Oct. 15, 1994. Bob Bass talked me into a picturesque drive along the Rock River from Rockford, Illinois to Davenport, Iowa as the autumnal colors were spectacular that morning. Our destination was UW-Whitewater’s non-conference football game vs. St. Ambrose University in Davenport, Iowa.
The beautiful scenery was energizing as we drove along US Highway 20 through Freeport, Illinois. I was driving the funky colored rolling billboard - the WFAW Suburban. A pickup a couple hundred feet in front of us signaled to turn left. We slow, the pickup begins to turn. All of a sudden the front passenger door of the pickup flies open and a kid falls out onto the pavement. I scream “oh my God” as the driver jumps out of his pickup and literally throws the kid back in the front seat and “lays rubber” taking off down a side street.
This was very early-on in cell phone coverage. I dialed
9-1-1 on the mobile phone in the truck. I got an operator located about 60
miles from our location. She needed to know my exact location. It took over 10
minutes for her to determine exactly where we were. She asked us to wait for
authorities. She dispatched police. We waited about 10 more minutes before an
Illinois State Trooper arrived at our location to have us explain what we
witnessed.
He thanked us and sent us for the remainder of our trip to Davenport. I was shook, but Bob was shaking in the wake of the disturbing incident.
60 minutes later we arrived at the stadium with both of us mentally and emotionally drained. The Warhawks won the non-conference game that afternoon but honestly I have no recollection of it.
It wasn’t until the following Monday that I got the official story from the Winnebago (Ill) Sheriff’s Department. The driver of the pickup had rushed his son to a nearby hospital. The boy was in stable condition after suffering a broken arm and leg with significant abrasions along the right side of his body. No charges were filed in the case.
In the Warhawks 1991 season opener we were in Joliet, Illinois taking on NAIA power St. Francis College. It was 93 degrees and extremely humid at kickoff. The press box at Joliet Memorial Stadium could have been used as a “hot box” in a prison camp. No air conditioner, no window to open and no air circulating. Five minutes after arriving I realized I was having trouble breathing.
Three minutes into our pregame show I faint. Boom! I collapse onto the floor. Bob Bass, my broadcast partner thought I had a heart attack. He tells the studio we were having “a technical problem” and ends the broadcast as he has a St. Francis official summon paramedics. By the time they arrived (approximately 3 minutes) I already had ‘come to.”
He thanked us and sent us for the remainder of our trip to Davenport. I was shook, but Bob was shaking in the wake of the disturbing incident.
60 minutes later we arrived at the stadium with both of us mentally and emotionally drained. The Warhawks won the non-conference game that afternoon but honestly I have no recollection of it.
It wasn’t until the following Monday that I got the official story from the Winnebago (Ill) Sheriff’s Department. The driver of the pickup had rushed his son to a nearby hospital. The boy was in stable condition after suffering a broken arm and leg with significant abrasions along the right side of his body. No charges were filed in the case.
In the Warhawks 1991 season opener we were in Joliet, Illinois taking on NAIA power St. Francis College. It was 93 degrees and extremely humid at kickoff. The press box at Joliet Memorial Stadium could have been used as a “hot box” in a prison camp. No air conditioner, no window to open and no air circulating. Five minutes after arriving I realized I was having trouble breathing.
Three minutes into our pregame show I faint. Boom! I collapse onto the floor. Bob Bass, my broadcast partner thought I had a heart attack. He tells the studio we were having “a technical problem” and ends the broadcast as he has a St. Francis official summon paramedics. By the time they arrived (approximately 3 minutes) I already had ‘come to.”
As I remember the paramedics diagnosed me with heat stroke and wanted to have me transported to a hospital just across the street. With the water I was given and the cold towels over my head and around my neck I was feeling much better. I was feeling strong and ready to get the game back on the air. I must have been convincing because after about 15 minutes the paramedics agreed.
Bob argued that we should “scrap” the broadcast and head home. Actually to a bar just across the street. I remember telling him that the show must go on. That we have Warhawk fans expecting to hear the game. Let’s do it!
We got back on the air late in the first quarter and didn’t once mention the situation that had just occurred. As we got back on the air my first words were “Welcome back we have fixed our technical problem.”
I was able to make it through the broadcast. Unfortunately the Warhawks lost 28-17.
We spent three hours following the game at a sports bar just across the street owned by the father of Chicago Bears quarterback Jim Harbaugh.
Bob Bass was an incredible broadcast partner. He was the hardest working “color analyst” in my radio career. Bob enjoyed his beer and liked his peppermint schnapps. Just prior to our Warhawk broadcasts it was not unusual for Bob to enjoy a shot or two of schnapps to relax him.
Peppermint schnapps was the reason we were able to get UW-Whitewater’s 1998 game at Eau Claire on the air.
UW-Eau Claire decided to move its home games in 1998 from Carson Park to a new on-campus facility located behind the McPhee Physical Education Building.
The field was OK
but there was a delay in building a press box.
A temporary open air “press box” was located on top of the new facility’s
concession stand. The only way the “press”
was able to get to the roof of the concession stand was by way of being
elevated by a “cherry picker lift.”
Bob had great fear over heights. When told a coupe hours prior to the game he would have to get into the “cherry picker” he was ready to quit his job on the spot. I believed him. I said “Bob, its not that bad. Look at everybody already up there. I need you buddy. You can do it!”
I was busy getting ready for our broadcast thinking I would likely be going solo. Bob had gone to his schnapps for liquid encouragement. Sure enough, about 20 minutes prior to going on the air, Bob gained the courage to take the “cherry picker” ride up to our broadcast location.
The broadcast went on with one of the WFAW broadcast team that afternoon just a wee bit tipsy! The Hawks lost the game 31-28 in overtime.
Bob had great fear over heights. When told a coupe hours prior to the game he would have to get into the “cherry picker” he was ready to quit his job on the spot. I believed him. I said “Bob, its not that bad. Look at everybody already up there. I need you buddy. You can do it!”
I was busy getting ready for our broadcast thinking I would likely be going solo. Bob had gone to his schnapps for liquid encouragement. Sure enough, about 20 minutes prior to going on the air, Bob gained the courage to take the “cherry picker” ride up to our broadcast location.
The broadcast went on with one of the WFAW broadcast team that afternoon just a wee bit tipsy! The Hawks lost the game 31-28 in overtime.