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Vince Lloyd - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vince Lloyd

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cubs broadcasters, June 11, 1981 - Vince Lloyd, Lou Boudreau, Milo Hamilton, Jack Brickhouse
Cubs broadcasters, June 11, 1981 - Vince Lloyd, Lou Boudreau, Milo Hamilton, Jack Brickhouse

Vince Lloyd Skaff, (June 1, 1917 - July 3, 2003) who worked under the name Vince Lloyd, was a radio announcer for Major League Baseball's Chicago Cubs for over 30 years.

During the 1950s, Lloyd was the sidekick to Jack Brickhouse on Cubs and Chicago White Sox television broadcasts, during a time when WGN-TV covered both team's home games and selected road games. When beloved Cubs radio play-by-play man Jack Quinlan died in an auto accident during spring training, 1965, Lloyd was promoted to that position and Lloyd Pettit was brought in to back up Brickhouse.

Lloyd then began more than a 20-year radio run partnered with Hall of Fame shortstop Lou Boudreau. Between Lloyd's enthusiastic play-by-play description and Boudreau's expert analysis of game strategy, as well as the constant by-play, discussion of food sent by fans to the portly pair, and so on, the two made a memorable and well-loved team.

Various announcers have punctuated particularly exciting moments during a game with the exclamation "Holy..." something: Harry Caray and Phil Rizzuto invoked "Holy cow!" Milo Hamilton's was "Holy Toledo!" For a while, Vince was known for "Holy mackerel!" During the 1970s, a fan sent the broadcasting team a cow bell, and when a Cubs player would hit a home run, Lloyd and Boudreau would ring the bell as Lloyd proclaimed, "It's a bell-ringer!"

Vince Lloyd was also the first baseball announcer to interview a current US President on TV, when he spoke to John F. Kennedy during the White Sox TV pre-game show for the traditional Washington, D.C. season opener, at Griffith Stadium on April 10, 1961.

Lloyd died of stomach cancer on July 3, 2003, in Green Valley, Arizona.


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