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Herb Carneal’s Pal: Halsey Hall

Posted on April 13, 2007February 9, 2012 by David Shama

Herb Carneal passed away earlier this month but another legend he shared a radio microphone with in the 1960’s and 1970’s has been gone for almost 30 years now.  Halsey Hall and Herb worked together on Minnesota Twins games, forming a broadcasting duo that some believe will never be equaled.              

Herb was the low-key, smooth delivery play-by-play guy giving listeners a clear and concise description of the game action.  Halsey was the color man and we should write color with a cap C.  The loveable Halsey always was ready with a story, witty comment or baseball insight.   

Just looking at Halsey, or listening to him, made you feel good.  He had the appearance of anybody’s overweight grandfather.  He often had a smile on his face, a cigar or green onion in his mouth, and greeted you with, “Hi, kid.” 

Halsey had been a sportswriter and sportscaster in Minneapolis for many years before the Twins started playing here in 1961.  Over the years he had accumulated so many experiences and stories that I would look forward to rain delays during Twins broadcasts when Halsey had even more air time.   

Even the other team’s broadcasters sought Halsey during a rain delay. “If you had 30 minutes to kill there was nobody better,” said Dave Mona who covered the Twins for the Minneapolis Tribune in 1968-69.   

The Halsey wit was captured in Stew Thornley’s 1991 book, “Holy Cow! The Life and Times of Halsey Hall” (Nodin Press, Minneapolis).  Halsey was fearful of flying in airplanes and was famous for this quip:  “I’d like one chance to Chicago, please.”  He adored baseball including stories about the minor league Minneapolis Millers and their rickety old stadium, Nicollet Park:  “Every time a foul ball hits the roof, all the toilets flush.” 

Mona likened Halsey as a story teller to “an early Garrison Keillor” and recalled that before and after games other writers and broadcasters would gather around him. “Halsey would hold court,” Mona said.  “He’d be eating his scallions and drinking whatever beverage they were serving in there. Both before and after the game, as long as there was a crowd, he’d stick around.”   

“He was as funny a man as I’ve ever been around,” Herb Carneal said several years ago. He and many others thoroughly enjoyed telling stories about Halsey, not just hearing them.  One of Herb’s favorites, and Mona’s, was a day the Twins were playing the White Sox in Chicago.  Halsey was smoking his cigar and flicking ashes on the press box floor.  The ashes made contact with paper on the floor and set off a small fire.  Halsey’s sport coat, hanging on a chair, also caught fire.  

“Players came out of the dugout, everybody in the stands turned around because there was a substantial amount of smoke coming out (of the press box) and after the game the players wanted to know what happened,” Mona said.  “Jerry Zimmerman (Twins catcher), who was never really that good with a quote, had the best line…‘Halsey Hall is quite a guy. He can turn an ordinary sport coat into a blazer in nothing flat.’” 

Halsey’s trademark expression was, “Holy Cow!”  When something out of the ordinary happened during a game he would let loose with it.  Halsey historians claim he was using the term on radio before broadcasters Harry Caray or Phil Rizzuto made the expression better known across America to millions of baseball fans.   

What else would you expect from an original?

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Posted on April 13, 2007February 9, 2012 by David Shama

Sidney Ponson makes his second regular season start for the Twins tomorrow at home against Tampa Bay.  He gave up eight earned runs in five-plus innings in his start against the New York Yankees last Monday.  His 12.71 ERA follows an okay spring training where he was 2-1 with a 4.29 ERA.  

Prior to Monday’s game, Ponson hadn’t pitched since March 31 in Florida but he said of his performance against the Yankees:  “I am not going to use it as an excuse.”   The Yankees had five runs in the first two innings but Ponson did hold them without a run in the third, fourth and fifth innings before giving up three more runs in the sixth.   

Ponson plans to throw a lot of sinkers at the Devil Rays tomorrow.  “That’s my thing,” he said. “I have a great defense behind me. …I have seven guys behind me who can catch the ball.  I am going to use them.  I don’t like to strike people out.  I am just going to throw the ball and let them hit into the ground and get them out.” 

Hopes are Ponson will help shape a successful starting pitching staff. The 30-year-old right-handed Ponson signed with the Twins during the off season after having arm trouble in 2006.  He appeared in 14 games with St. Louis and five with the Yankees, with ERA’s of 5.24 and 10.47. 

He said he didn’t feel pressure in trying to make the Twins roster in the spring.  “Not really. I knew the situation I found myself in with the Minnesota Twins,” he said. “I just had to go out there and pitch and get people out, and get my arm in shape.  If I made it, I made it.  If I don’t, I don’t.  And now it’s getting there. …It’s a long season.  I have about 30 more starts and we’ll see what happens.” 

Ponson said the Twins’ “World Series potential” was a reason he joined his new team. 

Comments Welcome

Worth Noting

Posted on April 13, 2007February 9, 2012 by David Shama

Wouldn’t it be interesting if former Gopher assistant basketball coach Jimmy Williams ends up as an assistant to new Kentucky coach Billy Gillespie?  Williams resigned as an assistant at Oklahoma State last week and speculation was he would join former Kentucky coach Tubby Smith’s staff at Minnesota.  A source told Sports Headliners last weekend that Williams won’t be hired here. 

There’s been no official announcement yet but the Gopher home football games with Bowling Green, September 1, and Purdue, September 22, will be 7 p.m. kickoffs. 

Don’t write off the possibility of a comeback season by Troy Williamson this fall. The Vikings’ 2005 No. 1 draft choice had a better rookie year than he did last season when injury held him back, plus he’s expected to benefit from the coaching of new wide receivers coach George Stewart. 

The Wild will host a rally on Sunday from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at Rice Park in downtown St. Paul.  There will be live music from Martin Zellar, food and beverage, free face painting and appearances by celebrities including team owner Bob Naegele, Jr. and Brad Bombardir, a member of the 2003 Wild playoff team. The event will take place prior to game three of the Wild’s Western Conference quarterfinal series against Anaheim at 7 p.m. at Xcel Energy Center.

Here’s the TV schedule for the Wild-Anaheim playoff series:  tonight, KSTC, 9:30 p.m.; Sunday, FSN North, 7 p.m.; Tuesday, KSTC, 8 p.m.  If games five, six or seven are necessary in the best of seven series the TV schedule will be: Thursday, FSN North, 9:30 p.m.; Saturday, April 21, TBD; Monday, April 23, KSTC, 9 p.m.  Because of FCC licensing restrictions that limit broadcasting to the metro market, KSTC games will not be available outstate on satellite or cable systems. 

Although dinner and program tickets are sold out, program-only seats remain for the University of Minnesota Alumni Association’s annual celebration event featuring Tony Dungy as a speaker.  Association volunteer president Denny Schulstad said a record attendance of over 4,000 is expected for the May 8 event at Mariucci Arena.  For ticket information call 612-624-2345, or www.northrop.umn.edu

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