Take a stroll through Uecker's portfolio of pop culture. Bob Uecker as a Milwaukee Brave in 1963. 'The easiest way to catch a knuckleball was to wait until it stopped rolling and just pick it up ...
Sure, we'll know him as the voice of Brewers baseball forever, but we'll always have a career full of laughs from Ueck, as well. On Thursday, Milwaukee, and all of baseball, lost an icon in the ...
Bob Uecker was a famously mediocre Major League hitter who discovered that he was much more comfortable at a microphone than home plate. And that was just the start of a second career in entertainment ...
Unfortunately for The Boss, Bob Uecker wasn’t for sale. On Wednesday, Yankees TV announcer Michael Kay revealed that Steinbrenner tried luring Uecker away from Milwaukee “a few times” on his ...
For 54 seasons of Major League Baseball, Milwaukee Brewers fans experienced one constant: Bob Uecker. Moments after a heartbreaking loss in the National League Wild Card series to the New York ...
Bob Uecker has died. Although best known for his legendary stint as the play-by-play radio announcer for the Milwaukee Brewers—a job he held for 54 years, continuing into the 2024 season ...
Summertime in Milwaukee will never be the same. For the last 54 years, Bob Uecker's voice let Milwaukeeans know that another long, cold winter had come to an end, that spring had finally arrived ...
Bob Uecker, the Hall of Fame baseball broadcaster with a quick wit and an unending love of the game, died Thursday. He was 90. Uecker had been battling small cell lung cancer since 2023 ...
Family of Bob Uecker held a family memorial and burial for the Hall of Fame Brewers announcer on Friday, Jan. 24. The Milwaukee Admirals announced on Wednesday, Jan. 22 the ways in which the team ...
The YouTube video “Bob Uecker – Mr. Baseball | Carson Tonight Show,” provides a nostalgic look back at Uecker’s classic moments on “The Tonight Show.” As we remember Bob Uecker ...
MILWAUKEE — Bob Uecker, who parlayed a forgettable playing career into a punch line for movie and TV appearances as “Mr. Baseball” and a Hall of Fame broadcasting tenure, has died.