With the Super Bowl out of the way and March Madness on the horizon, we’re clearly on the way to a new season of baseball. It ...
The Milwaukee Brewers found a unique way to honor Mr. Baseball at Spring Training. The team has memorialized Bob Uecker's ...
Plot: Comedy/Indie film. A stand-up comedy veteran hits the road to a small Wisconsin town to try to impress a "Tonight Show" ...
The Milwaukee Brewers will honor legendary broadcaster Bob Uecker during the 2025 season with a tribute patch. Major League Baseball shared a look at ...
Uecker ended his major league playing career with a 200 batting average in 297 games. He had some big moments, including a hit off Sandy Koufax. And he could boast that he caught two of the best pitch ...
I want to take a few minutes to tell you about my good friend, Bob Uecker. I should preface these remarks by noting that my personal interactions with Bob were very, very limited, and he likely did ...
Bob Uecker died on Jan. 16 at age 90 ... For those of us who watched, worked or played at Braves Field in the 1950s and early ‘60s, Uecker’s passing brought back fond memories of a time ...
Former Milwaukee Braves catcher and current Brewers announcer Bob Uecker shown at work in the Milwaukee County Stadium broadcast booth. The Braves released Uecker in 1968, and the organization ...
Bob Uecker, whose name is synonymous with Milwaukee ... Known lovingly as "Mr. Baseball," Uecker started on the field with the Milwaukee Braves and went on to become a star behind the microphone ...
(His former team the Braves moved from Milwaukee to Atlanta ... The final home run call of Bob Uecker’s career? Believe it or not, it was calling a grand slam off the bat of Jackson Chourio.
Jeff Levering, the Swiss Army knife of the Brewers’ broadcast team who bounces between radio and television depending on the need, has a voicemail from Bob Uecker which he will treasure forever. It is ...
Bob Uecker died today at the age of 90 ... He broke in with his hometown Milwaukee Braves, then won a World Series as a backup catcher for the 1965 St. Louis Cardinals. He got into 53 games ...