A KC masterpiece heads to Cooperstown

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Denny Matthews, who has been the Voice of the Kansas City Royals since their inception in 1969, will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on July 29 in Cooperstown, N.Y. He grew up in Bloomington, the oldest of four boys, including Steve of Princeton. (Photo courtesy Kansas City Royals)

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Steve Matthews remembers his oldest brother, Denny, playing with his baseball card collection in Bloomington, announcing the players as he shuffled his cards.

Their dad’s radio would be tuned into St. Louis Cardinals’ broadcasts on 1230 AM on the radio dial of WJBC, with the voices of Harry Caray, Jack Buck and Joe Gariogola echoing through the house.

“I remember him making up games and announcing the players. All kids have their fantasy world they live in,” said Steve, the retired principal at Princeton High School. “He thought he was going to be a player.”

Those card games turned into the real thing years later, when Denny landed a broadcasting job for the new Kansas City Royals baseball franchise in 1969. He had been picked out of cast of more than 250 applicants.

Matthews has been the “Voice of the Royals” ever since. On July 29, he will make a call from Cooperstown, N.Y., where he will be honored as the 2007 recipient of the Ford Frick Award. It’s an honor that was bestowed upon him by his colleagues in the business, including Bob Uecker, Ernie Harwell, Vin Scully, Harry Kalas, to name a few.

“My dad said a long time ago that if you hang around long enough, you work hard, you do a good job and you buy a tux, you should get an award here and there,” Matthews told mlb.com.

“I still don’t have a tux but I guess I’m getting a pretty cool award.”

“I’m very proud of him,” Steve Matthews said of his brother. “That’s the peak of your profession. It doesn’t get any better than that. To see what somebody wanted to be at a very young age and reach the top of his profession is special.”

All four of the Matthews boys wanted to be ball players growing up and would play high school ball for Trinity School in Bloomington, now known as Central Catholic. Denny, 64, was the oldest followed by Steve, 60, Doug, 57, and Mike, 53.

They were taught the game by their dad, George. He was captain of the baseball and basketball teams at ISU and selected to the U.S. Pan Am squad to play in Latin America. He received offers from the White Sox and Reds, but elected to stay home to play for the State Farm Chiefs ASA softball team, instead of going pro.

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