Oakland Raiders vs.
San Diego Chargers
KGO Radio 81
|

|
|

Bill
King
|
|

Raiders
quarterback Kenny Stabler (left) and head coach John Madden.
 |
Sunday, September 10, 1978
Featuring Bill King and Monty Stickles
In the recorded history of sports on radio, only
a handful of broadcasts stand out as true classics — instances where
the announcing itself nearly transcends the event being described. One
example is Russ Hodges and his famed call ("The Giants win the
pennant! The Giants win the pennant!") of Bobby Thomson's
"Shot Heard 'Round The World," the home run that defeated the
Brooklyn Dodgers and sent the New York Giants to the 1951 World Series.
In the second week of play in the NFL's 1978 season,
another such broadcast took place. The game itself, pitting a pair of
longtime West Coast rivals, the Oakland Raiders and the hometown San
Diego Chargers, would not decide a championship. In fact, the rivalry
was decidedly on the wane: the Raiders had won 18 of the teams'
preceding 22 meetings, including a stretch of ten consecutive victories
from 1972-1977.
In spite of the potentially mundane battle projected
between the two teams, the game's final play would become legendary as
one of the most bizarre and unbelievable to ever occur on a gridiron.
After the Chargers built up a 20-7 lead with 12:42 left
in the game — a lead that could have been 21-7, save for a missed
extra point off the foot of kicker Rolf Benirschke (who, oddly enough,
was the Raiders final draft choice the previous season and one of their
last training camp cuts) — but the Raiders struck back quickly with a
44-yard touchdown strike from Ken Stabler to Morris Bradshaw with 8:26
left on the clock. Errol Mann's PAT brought the score to 20-14.
Each team's subsequent drive resulted in a punt, after
which San Diego got the ball back and managed to drain more than five
minutes off the clock, leaving the visiting Raiders with possession on
their own 20 yard line with only 1:07 to play. The stage was set for the
Raiders to attempt their comeback.
This partial recording, which includes the earlier
Stabler-to-Bradshaw scoring pass, builds to its dramatic conclusion as
the Raiders embark on their final drive, heard in its entirety, complete
with Bill King's incomparable call of the implausible ending and the
ensuing events.
King, the nonpareil of Bay Area sportscasters, migrated
here from Illinois and was the third man in the Giants broadcast booth when the
team moved west in 1958. In 1962, he became play-by-play voice of the
San Francisco (later Golden State) Warriors, a job he held for 21 years.
In 1966, King took the microphone for the Oakland Raiders, continuing in
that role for two decades. In 1981, he moved into the Oakland Athletics'
broadcast booth (with Lon
Simmons), a position he held for a quarter of a
century. Bill King died suddenly on October 18, 2005, at age 78
following hip surgery.
His command of the language and ability to paint word pictures
was matched by few in
broadcasting, let alone sports announcing; his rich, distinctive voice
was instantly recognizable
in a sea of carbon copies; his knowledge of sport — as well as music
and literature — was boundless. The rare and virtuoso talent of Bill
King may have suited him well for announcing symphonies on a classical
station. Sports fans should rejoice that he preferred greenswards and
hardwood courts.
King's partner as color analyst on Raiders broadcasts in
1978 was Monty Stickles, a former 49er tight end who was once described
as the dirtiest player in the NFL. (He was also the first-ever draft
selection by the Chargers in 1960 as an All America from Notre Dame, but
chose to sign with the 49ers, who had made him their top pick that
year.) Following his retirement from the game in 1968, he became sports
director of San Francisco's KEST Radio, handling play-by-play for University
of San Francisco basketball, while also filling in as weekend
sportscaster for KGO-TV (Channel 7).
In April 1973, Stickles moved to KGO Radio as weekday sports
reporter and analyst on University of California football. He appeared
in the 1974 movie "Freebie and the Bean." He currently resides
in the Bay Area, operating a beer distributorship and pursuing his hobby
as a collector of fine art.
RELATED EXHIBITS:
|