A race caller is a public-address announcer or
sportscaster who describes the progress of a race, either for on-track or radio and TV fans. They are most prominent in horse racing, auto racing and track-and-field events.
Among the jobs of a race caller is to identify the positions of various entrants during the race, and point out any sudden moves made by them. In horse racing, many callers also point out the posted fractions—the times at which the lead horse reached the quarter-mile, half-mile and similar points of a race.
A race-caller who specifically describes the event over a racetrack's public-address system is the ''track announcer.''
In horse racing, track announcers handle up to nine or ten races per day; more on special stakes-race days.
Most horse-race callers memorize the horses' and
jockeys' (or drivers in
harness racing
Harness racing is a form of horse racing in which the horses race at a specific gait (a trot or a pace). They usually pull a two-wheeled cart called a sulky, or spider, or chariot occupied by a driver. In Europe, and less frequently in Austral ...
) silks and the horses' colors before the race, to be able to quickly identify each entrant. During a racing day, track announcers also inform patrons of scratches, and jockey/driver and equipment changes (for example, whether a horse is wearing "quarter inch bends" or "mud caulks").
History
USA
The earliest known race calls occurred with megaphones long before the
Public address system
A public address system (or PA system) is an electronic system comprising microphones, amplifiers, loudspeakers, and related equipment. It increases the apparent volume (loudness) of a human voice, musical instrument, or other acoustic sound sou ...
existed. In horse racing, the most well-known gentlemen was Jack Adler who started getting involved in racing as early as 1877 as a teenager. The
Guttenberg Racetrack had an official announcer who broke down providing a segue to announcing for Jack in the early 1890s. He was famous for the phrase "ALLLLLLL Right!!!" In auto racing,
Frederick William Burns
Frederick William Burns (July 7, 1860 – June 21, 1923) was an American professional sports announcer. He is the earliest known sports announcer credited with creating the profession at the Staten Island Athletic Club games in 1884.
Early Years
...
gets the nod. In November 1900, he was the announcer at the very first
New York Auto Show
The New York International Auto Show is an annual auto show that is held in Manhattan in late March or early April. It is held at the Jacob Javits Convention Center. It usually opens on or just before Easter weekend and closes on the first Su ...
but, Fred's racing days go all the way back to Bicycle racing in the late 19th century whereby he became well-known as the First Professional Megaphoner. Fred Burns was the first announcer of any kind in athletics dating back to 1884 and Staten Island Athletic Club games. As an aside, Jack Adler and Fred Burns were friends, worked in boxing together and even announced baseball as a tandem for the
New York Giants
The New York Giants are a professional American football team based in the New York metropolitan area. The Giants compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member club of the league's National Football Conference (NFC) East divisio ...
.
An early race call happened at Agua Caliente Racetrack at Tijuana. On February 5, steward George Schilling called their first race. He started immediately to develop future race callers Clem McCarthy and Joe Hernandez.
Among the earliest prominent race callers was
Clem McCarthy. According to the book ''Sports on New York Radio'', McCarthy was hired in 1927 as the first track announcer at
Arlington Park
Arlington International Racecourse (formerly Arlington Park, the name was Arlington Park Jockey Club from as soon as 1948 up to 1955) was a horse race track in the Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights, Illinois. Horse racing in the Chicago reg ...
in Arlington Heights, Illinois, one of the first Thoroughbred racetrack with a public-address system. He later gained national fame calling important horse races for the
NBC
The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is an American English-language commercial broadcast television and radio network. The flagship property of the NBC Entertainment division of NBCUniversal, a division of Comcast, its headquarters ...
Radio Network, including the
Kentucky Derby
The Kentucky Derby is a horse race held annually in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, almost always on the first Saturday in May, capping the two-week-long Kentucky Derby Festival. The competition is a Grade I stakes race for three-yea ...
, starting in 1929.
Other prominent race callers were early sportscasters
Ted Husing
Edward Britt Husing (November 27, 1901 – August 10, 1962) was an American sportscaster. He was among the first to lay the groundwork for the structure and pace of modern sports reporting on television and radio.
Overview
Early life and caree ...
,
Bill Stern, and
Marty Glickman, all of whom called horse racing and track-and-field events during their careers.
The best-known horse-race callers since the dawn of the television age have been Chic Anderson, Dave Johnson,
Trevor Denman and To
Durkin All four gained acclaim not only as public-address announcers but network sportscasters, providing pre-race analyses and features for national fans as well as the race calls.
Other prominent horse-race callers past & present day include Marshall Cassidy, Cawood Ledford, Fred Capposella, Luke Kruytbosch,
Michael Wrona, Joe Hernandez, John Dooley, Frank Mirahmadi, Robert Geller, Phil Georgeff, Kurt Becker, Vic Stauffer, Mike Battaglia, John Scully, John Curran, Dave Rodman, Paul Allen, Richard Grunder and Terry Wallace. Terry called over 20,000 races in a row at Oaklawn. Harness racing fixtures past & present are Ken Middleton, Shannon 'Sugar' Doyle, Larry Lederman, Roger Huston, Jack E. Lee, Sam McKee & Ken Warkentin
In New England, at Suffolk Downs and Rockingham Park, a legendary announcer named Babe Rubenstein called races for decades, starting in the 1930s. Rubenstein, it was said, never miscalled a race. He was working at Rockingham Park on the day of the 1938 hurricane, when the winds are said to have blown off the broadcast booth from the top of the grandstand. An often told story in the 1950s had it that Babe was contacted by one networks, for possible employment on a national level, as opposed to his work in New England. The story went that as part of the proposed contract Babe would have to change his name. He refused, saying, "I was born Babe Rubenstein and I will die Babe Rubenstein." Jim Hannon was another prominent race caller in New England.
AUSTRALIA
Arnold 'Ike' Treloar was the first person to call the races on radio when he broadcast the thoroughbred events at Port Adelaide, South Australia, in 1924 for radio station 5CL. As one of the pioneers of race calling in Australia, he broadcast for the next 21 years, mostly for the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC). Within a year, race callers were describing events across Australia for their radio audiences. The earliest callers included Mick Ferry in Sydney, Bill Priestly in Melbourne, Keith Gollan in Western Australia and Mick Flanagan in Brisbane. Priestly became the first person to call the famed
Melbourne Cup
The Melbourne Cup is a Thoroughbred horse race held in Melbourne, Australia. It is a 3200-metre race for three-year-olds and over, conducted by the Victoria Racing Club on the Flemington Racecourse in Melbourne, Victoria as part of the Me ...
when he described the win by Windbag at Flemington Racecourse in 1925.
In the early years in Australia, race callers were forced to broadcast from structures outside the racecourse, as the race clubs objected to them, fearing that patrons would listen to the radio rather than attend the track and patronise off-course bookmakers. Buildings and temporary stands overlooking the tracks, even trees, were utilised by the pioneer callers. The issue came to a head in 1937 when the Victoria Park Racing Company, the organisation that conducted race meetings in Adelaide sought court orders to prevent Cyril Angles, one of the most popular callers of the pre-war era, broadcasting from an elevated platform outside the course. Eventually the High Court of Australia found in favour of the broadcasters, the Chief Justice, Sir John Latham, observing that "some people prefer hearing about the races as seen by Angles to seeing the races for themselves."
As radio audiences surged in the pre-war years, more stations employed race callers. The leading callers of the era included Jim Anderson at 4BC Brisbane, who had started his career on the course public address system; Eric Welsh, the doyen of Australian race callers, who commenced with 3AR, Melbourne, in 1926 (which became the ABC in 1932) until joining 3DB in 1934, where he remained for the next 20 years; Lachie Melville in Sydney; and Fred Tupper in Sydney and Melbourne.
Post World War II
A new generation of race callers filled the airwaves after World War II. Three of the greatest broadcast from Melbourne, Joe Brown, Bert Bryant and Bill Collins. A fourth, Ken Howard, filled the airwaves from Sydney.
Starting as an assistant in Hobart in 1946, Joe Brown won the premier caller role for the ABC in Melbourne in 1947, following the retirement of Jim Carroll. Brown called Rimfire's win in his first broadcast of Australia's most famous race, the 2 mile (now 3,200 metres) handicap, the Melbourne Cup, in 1948. For the next three decades, millions of Australians listened to his calls, both on the national broadcaster and on-course at the four Melbourne race courses - Flemington, Caulfield, Moonee Valley and Sandown Park - before he retired in 1981, having broadcast a record 34 Melbourne Cups.
His smooth, lucid style was typical of the Australian callers in the post-war period. After attending the races in Melbourne during his coverage of the 1956 Olympic Games, the famous American sports writer,
Red Smith, wrote about Joe Brown: "Flemington's incomparable race caller described every stride with vivid detachment . . . No matter how great the field, he calls every horse at every post, salting it with enlightened comment."
After starting his career at country race tracks in New South Wales,
Bert Bryant rose to prominence as one of Australia's most colourful callers at Radio 3UZ in Melbourne, where he was the number one caller for 30 years. His witty descriptions are fabled: a front runner had "a wing on every foot"; a horse racing wide on the home turn "covered more ground than the early explorers"; and a runner tailed off would "need a lantern to find his way home", amongst them. Bryant called 28 Melbourne Cups and many other prominent races, including the famed match race between Rain Lover and Big Philou in the 1970 Queen Elizabeth Stakes. His call of Think Big's win in the 1974 Melbourne Cup was an example of the colourful style that attracted many listener
1974 Melbourne Cup- Think Big - YouTube
Known as 'the accurate one',
Bill Collins started his race calling career when the regular course commentator failed to arrive at the Lindenow races in East Gippsland in 1943. He subsequently called for Radio 3TR Sale, before joining Radio 3DB Melbourne as an understudy to Eric Welsh. He became the chief caller in 1954, calling Rising Fast's win in his first Melbourne Cup description that year. Collins went on to call 34 Melbourne Cups in a long career. His famous calls included the WS Cox Plate when Kingston Town won for a third time in 198
Kingston Town 1982 Cox Plate Full Replay - YouTubeand the great duel between the New Zealand thoroughbreds, Bonecrusher and Our Waverley Star, in 198
1986 Cox Plate (Bonecrusher vs Our Waverley Star) - YouTubeCollins was a talented commentator, regarded by many as the best in the nation when Australian callers were the best in the world, also calling both Harness Racing and the Olympic Games. He was a versatile media performer, appearing on television regularly, and winning a television Logie in 1959.
Ken Howard called his first race in New South Wales in 1936 before joining Radio 3XY Melbourne in 1939. When the Melbourne station discontinued race broadcasting, Howard returned to Sydney joining Radio 2UE in 1941 and 2GB in the early 1950s.Despite coming from Sydney, Howard called 32 Melbourne Cups during his annual coverage of the Flemington Spring Carnival. A recording of his 1941 Melbourne Cup, won by Skipton, portrays the voice familiar to radio listeners for decade
Ken Howard Calls the Melbourne CupHoward's description of an odds-on favourite, as "London to a brick on" has become one of the best-known sayings in Australian racing.
His great rival on the Sydney airwaves was Des Hoystead, who worked for a number of radio stations before a 20 year stint at 2UE from 1964-1983. Hoystead called 20 Melbourne Cups during annual visits to Victoria for the spring carnival.
The other renowned Sydney race caller of the era was Geoff Mahoney, who worked as an understudy for Ken Howard before replacing Lachie Melville as the chief caller for the ABC. Mahoney was also a sought-after caller of boxing during his career. Many of the leading Sydney race callers were nurtured in their careers by Clif Cary, the prominent sports editor of the era.
Other leading callers of the era included Bert Day and John O'Neil in Adelaide and Vince Curry in Brisbane . O'Neil who had started his career at the Barmera Trotting Club in 1949, went on to call 27 Adelaide Cups and 27 Great Eastern Steeplechases at Oakbank in a long career. Although most callers worked for radio and television stations, a few were chiefly the course broadcaster, notable amongst them, Frank O'Brien at the Flemington and Moonee Valley racecourses in Melbourne.
The television era
By the early 1980s, a new generation of race callers were broadcasting on radio and television. In Melbourne, they included John Russell, Bryan Martin, Bruce McAvaney, Clem Dimsey and Greg Miles. Russell had commenced calling both professional athletics and horse racing in the mid 1950s for 3UZ. Clem Dimsey was the chief caller for the 0 - 10 television network having called his first race at age 17 at Quambatook. He worked with Bill Collins at 3DB and then for 3MP before joining the Ten Network.
Bryan Martin began his radio career with 3AW, Melbourne, in the mid 1960s before moving the 5DN Adelaide as a junior race caller. He returned to Melbourne's 3UZ in 1972 before joining 3DB in 1984. He became the chief caller at Radio 927 in 1988, TVN in 2005, retiring in 2007. His memorable calls include Fields of Omagh, a horse he co-owned, twice winning Australia's premier Weight-for-Age race, the WS Cox Plate at Moonee Valley; and Better Loosen Up's victory in the 1990 Japan Cup. Martin called races in Dubai, PNG, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Canada. He called 20 Melbourn
Cups and was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for his services to racing and charity.
Bruce McAvaney commenced his celebrated sports commentary career as a race caller with Radio 5DN, Adelaide, in 1976 before joining Television station ADS-7. He moved to Melbourne in 1983, broadcasting for Television 10. He called the Melbourne Cup from 1985 - 1988. McAvaney has called the Olympic Games since 1980, Australian Rules Football, tennis, athletics and motor racing. He was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in 2002 and inducted into the Sports Australia Hall of Fame the same year.
Greg Miles called his first Melbourne Cup in 1981 at age 22 after Joe Brown retired from the ABC. He went on to call a record 36 Melbourne Cups, broadcasting for the ABC, Sky, Radio 927, and Racing.com in a 40 year career. His last Group 1 call was the William Reid Stakes at Moonee Valley i
2017 Miles was the course broadcaster at Flemington, Caulfield, Moonee Valley and Sandown racecourses in Melbourne. He was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia in 2016.
Ian Craig and John Tapp became the leading callers in Sydney. Craig began his career calling greyhound races at Richmond, NSW, and harness racing. His first thoroug