Merle Harmon , who brought energy and warmth to the Rangers ' television booth for most of the 1980s, died Wednesday at Texas Health Arlington
Merle Harmon , a versatile sports broadcaster whose career spanned 45 years, died Wednesday afternoon at Arlington (Texas) Memorial Hospital
near the Lake of the Ozarks, and grew up listening to Harry Caray, then the voice of the St. Louis Cardinals, and Merle Harmon , who broadcast Kansas City Athletics games from 1955 to '63. Irwin served in the U.S. Army in Korea and then enrolled
outside the home television booth honoring the late Merle Harmon . An Arlington resident, he died in April at 82. Harmon ..... play-by-play announcer and great friend of the Texas Rangers . Merle Harmon called games with distinction and grace in his nearly
them put the ball in play or get them to start swinging at balls that are off the zone," Macha said. Harmon dies Merle Harmon , the first radio voice of the Brewers , died Wednesday in Arlington, Texas, at age 82. His broadcasting career spanned
its weekend coverage, the most since 47.9 million in 2001 and up 6 percent from 39.7 million last year. ... Merle Harmon , the veteran announcer who called Texas Rangers games on radio during the latter stages of his career, died Wednesday
Cruz hit a grand slam. * Thanks for the memories: Merle Harmon . Harmon broadcast Rangers games from 1982-89 and I remember as a kid going into his Merle Harmon Fan Fair stores and thinking, "Cool -- this is the
who holds the longevity record for Twins coaches at 29 seasons. "Actually, feels pretty good." Briefly: A moment of silence was held before the game to recognize former Twins broadcaster Merle Harmon (1967-69), who died Wednesday.
its list of the top 50 all-time sports broadcasters, did not include Brewers broadcaster Bob Uecker in the top 50. Merle Harmon is on the list at No. 46, but not Uecker. Nothing against Harmon, but a list big enough to include him - or Bill
and said that it will honor the scholarships to players who want to continue working toward degrees. - Broadcaster Merle Harmon , who in a career spanning more than 40 years called professional and college sports for NBC and ABC, died yesterday