... | 🕐 --:--
-- -- --
عاجل
⚡ عاجل: كريستيانو رونالدو يُتوّج كأفضل لاعب كرة قدم في العالم ⚡ أخبار عاجلة تتابعونها لحظة بلحظة على خبر ⚡ تابعوا آخر المستجدات والأحداث من حول العالم
⌘K
AI مباشر
195415 مقال 299 مصدر نشط 38 قناة مباشرة 8209 خبر اليوم
آخر تحديث: منذ 0 ثانية

Ducks broadcaster Steve Carroll hangs up headset after 27 years: 'I've been very fortunate'

سياسة
The Athletic
2026/04/16 - 14:20 501 مشاهدة
AtlanticBruinsCanadiensLightningMaple LeafsPanthersRed WingsSabresSenatorsMetropolitanBlue JacketsCapitalsDevilsFlyersHurricanesIslandersPenguinsRangersCentralAvalancheBlackhawksBluesJetsMammothPredatorsStarsWildPacificCanucksDucksFlamesGolden KnightsKingsKrakenOilersSharksScores & ScheduleStandingsPodcastsFantasyNHL OddsNHL PicksPlayoff projectionsNHL Draft rankingRed Light NewsletterDucks broadcaster Steve Carroll hangs up headset after 27 years: ‘I’ve been very fortunate’Anaheim Ducks radio broadcaster Steve Carroll (center) poses with his wife, Rhonda, (right) and Ducks president Aaron Teats to honor Carroll's career before a game on Dec. 19, 2025. Kirby Lee / Imagn Images Share articleLADERA RANCH, Calif. — It has been almost two decades now, but the memory of calling the Anaheim Ducks’ 2007 Stanley Cup-clinching victory still lives in Steve Carroll’s mind. As Game 5 wound down at Honda Center and a packed arena was reaching fever pitch, there was just one persistent thought as he called the game. “Just make sure you don’t screw it up,” Carroll said, laughing as he munched on some breakfast at a neighborhood restaurant. The last few weeks have been full of joy, laughter, tears and sadness for a 70-year-old man who once carried a transistor radio into the original Busch Stadium in his native St. Louis so he could listen to Jack Buck. And if he wasn’t listening to Buck doing the Cardinals games, it was the equally legendary Harry Caray. It was Dan Kelly describing the fast-paced action of the Blues. Bob Starr doing St. Louis Cardinals football. Bob Costas as the voice of the ABA’s Spirits. These were Carroll’s heroes, the people who made him want to become a sports broadcaster. After 50 years of building his own career and reaching a place he thought he’d never get to professionally, Carroll has hung up his own headset. On Sunday, Carroll called his final game as the audio play-by-play voice of the Ducks, the job he’s had for the last 27 years. His employer made it memorable. Before the Ducks took on the Vancouver Canucks, Carroll walked to center ice where he was feted and applauded with his wife, Rhonda, by his side. Tears managed to sneak out of his eyes. They did again during the game, when a video of his calls of the franchise’s greatest moments played and a sellout crowd rose to salute him. “I couldn’t believe it,” he said. “Because I’m not one that looks for stuff like that. Just glad to be there.” It was also wistful. Carroll won’t broadcast the Ducks’ upcoming games in the Stanley Cup playoffs. Anaheim has ended a seven-year run of springs without postseason hockey, and he won’t be calling the action. There is a reason. On March 18, the Ducks announced that Carroll would retire at the conclusion of the season to focus on his health. It’s a call he made. He had missed a handful of games and others have filled in on play-by-play alongside color analyst Emerson Etem over the last few weeks. Carroll is keeping the specifics of his medical issue to himself, but said, “It’s something I have to take care of.” But it is bringing about a premature end to a career in sports that began when he called games for the Mineral Area junior college men’s basketball team at radio station KREI in Farmington, Mo. He had hoped to do one more Ducks season. That gave Sunday’s game an added layer of melancholy. “I can’t say I wasn’t disappointed,” Carroll said. “But I wasn’t disappointed at losing a job or having to stop. It’s just when you’ve been doing something so long and it’s your passion, you just love what you’re doing. And I’ve been very fortunate.” The announcement has given Carroll time to reflect on the great moments he’s had in the booth, the long and winding road he’s traveled to his dream job and the endless players and people he’s met and known along the way. There were unforgettable moments with the Ducks. The unexpected, incredible 2003 march to the Cup Final. They were the Mighty Ducks then, and an underdog group got to Game 7 only to lose 3-0 to the New Jersey Devils. “To come that close,” Carroll said, “Because you’re a fan, you’re a fan up there as a broadcaster. I felt bad for the team because I thought we had a really good opportunity to win the game. Granted, up against a pretty good hockey club with some veteran players in that. But for me as a broadcaster, I had never been able to do a playoff series that got to that point.” The importance of the games is what guided him. It brought him an added focus throughout their run of upsets that began with stunning the powerful Detroit Red Wings in the first round. “It’s like you better be prepared,” he said. “You can’t make a mistake. People are going to be listening. And just to be in the atmosphere here — and for really the first time in the franchise’s history, that you had something just very special happen. The crowd got into it. Because I’m a fan of this, it was just disappointing that we fell short.” While he thought that run would be the start of something special, it took four more years for the Ducks to reach the pinnacle. Some players remained from that 2003 club — notably Conn Smythe Trophy winner Jean-Sebastien Giguere in goal — but the return of Teemu Selanne and the additions of Scott Niedermayer and Chris Pronger proved pivotal. The Ducks beat the Ottawa Senators in Game 5 to win the Stanley Cup. One of the things Carroll contemplated in his head as the final minutes ticked down was whether he might get a championship ring. “To be a part of a team that goes that far,” he said. “And you just had a sense that if you could get to the final — and this is nothing against a team like Ottawa — you got a good chance to win once you got there. A lot of players contributed to that. And the atmosphere in the building was just really special.” There have been singular plays, including Selanne’s overtime goal in Game 5 after Andy McDonald forced a turnover that swung the Western Conference final against the Red Wings in their favor. “I couldn’t believe it,” Carroll said. “You know, that happened in a hurry. And it’s like, really? This is special. You knew something good was gonna happen after that play.” In that moment, he thought back to the calls Buck or Kelly would make. And what not to do. “It’s funny, you can dream as a kid,” Carroll said. “And all I did was follow sports, especially hockey. But you want to make sure when you get into broadcasting, if you get in a situation like that, where you know the game’s on the line, don’t mess it up. Don’t mess it up. So, you’re going through all these things in your mind.” And there was the Comeback on Katella, the miraculous Game 5 rally in 2017 to beat the Edmonton Oilers, during which the Ducks forced overtime with three goals in the final three-plus minutes of regulation. “First of all, disbelief,” he said. “I couldn’t believe it was happening. It’s like, ‘Holy cow, we just witnessed something that doesn’t happen very often, and it also happens in a playoff game and you’re calling it.’ So that’s a memory that you have. That’s not to be conceited or anything. It’s just, I’m so happy I got to call an event like that.” Good fortune was Carroll’s reward for all the nights calling games in hockey’s lower leagues, such as the USHL, ECHL or American Hockey League. Or the hot days working Double-A and Triple-A baseball in cities such as Nashville, New Orleans and Des Moines, Iowa. For being the voice of Vanderbilt University football and basketball. For calling Division I hockey in Huntsville, Ala. Carroll’s first chance at the big time came in 1995, when he was hired by the Philadelphia Flyers as their radio play-by-play voice when Jim Jackson moved to television. It lasted a year as he didn’t mesh well with his analyst. “Ninety-nine percent of the people were great,” he says of his Flyers experience. While announcing for the AHL’s New Haven Nighthawks, Carroll was persuaded by team executive Roy Mlakar — who eventually served as president of the Los Angeles Kings and Ottawa Senators — to go after an opening in Anaheim. Mlakar knew Mighty Ducks president Tony Tavares. A week after meeting with Tavares in California, he had the job. And he’s been there ever since. It was the break he needed. Brent Severvyn, once a hard-nosed NHL defenseman who was Carroll’s analyst from 2005-09, calls his former broadcasting partner “a wonderful man” who helped him develop a second career after playing. “I had never done the job before,” said Severyn, who now works on the Dallas Stars telecasts. “He is so good at his job that you could just let him go. And that allowed me the space and the time and the experience to get better. Because he did it all. Honestly, the play-by-play guy runs the show, and they have to be good. And Steve is so skilled and such a professional. You saw his passion for the game and how much he loved what he was doing. “There was no way to get around it. You would just be sucked into wanting to be a good broadcaster for him.” There was a time when Carroll didn’t think he’d last longer than his first day at the radio station in Farmington. He was supposed to deliver the farm market report, but arrived late for his 5:30 a.m. shift. A kindly general manager gave him another shot. Before that, he played drums in a band and spun records as a disc jockey. Now he’s got a place in the Southern California Sports Broadcasters Hall of Fame. And he’ll have a spot at Ducks games, where the team has given him a lifetime seat. He wants to continue speaking for the Ducks in the community. Years of fundraisers and visits to hospitals, barbecues, schools and even meetings with inmates in prisons reflect his desire to connect with the public. It’s been quite a ride for Carroll, and while his broadcasting career ended sooner than he hoped, he counts himself lucky. “It makes you feel like all those years of struggling — and I was never one that cared about making tons of money — but you’re in the minor leagues, you have no guarantees, then you lose a job like in Philadelphia, it’s like, what did I work all these years for?” he said. “And then this job comes along, and to be here for, what, 27 years? It’s unbelievable.” Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Eric Stephens is a staff writer for The Athletic NHL based in Southern California. Eric has been writing and talking about sports for newspapers and media outlets for more than 30 years. He has previously covered the NHL for The Orange County Register and Los Angeles Times. He is also an occasional contributor on NHL Network. Follow Eric on Twitter @icemancometh
مشاركة:

مقالات ذات صلة

AI
يا هلا! اسألني أي شي 🎤