Younger Marv Albert |
David Halberstam for the Bleacher Report writes, Radio still
filled many voids in 1963. Ground-breaking play-by-play announcers—Mel Allen
and Red Barber on baseball and Marty Glickman on football and
basketball—delivered graphic word-pictures that mesmerized New York audiences.
Glickman authored basketball’s nomenclature on radio, and
his pioneering broadcasts after World War II fostered interest in the game.
Albert chased his dream. He became a ball boy for the Knicks
in the 1950s and got to know Glickman, who helped him steer his early career. Glickman
critiqued the teenager’s practice tapes, gave him an opportunity to assist on
game and studio broadcasts and even let the budding announcer read high school
scores on the air.
The National Basketball Association was in its 17th season
when WCBS Radio picked up the Knicks package in 1962-63. Timing was awful. The
club languished through a feeble 21-59 season, the worst record in a fledgling
league of only nine teams.
As fate would have it, when announcer Glickman was delayed
returning from Europe on January 27, 1963, he convinced his bosses to have
Albert, his 21-year-old protégé, fill in for him in Boston, where the Knicks
were playing on that Sunday night against the Celtics.
The game was hardly the highlight of WCBS Radio’s Sunday
schedule. In fact, the station chose to run the Texaco Metropolitan Opera live
and the Knicks-Celtics game on tape.
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