Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Bruce Martyn

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
broadcaster

Years active
  
1950–1995

Name
  
Bruce Martyn


Bruce Martyn upshfcomimagesupshfbrucemartynjpg

Mccarty goal 1997 finals game 4 with local wjr radio call bruce martyn


Bruce Martyn (born 1930) is a former American sportscaster, logging over 45 years behind the mike. Martyn was the radio voice of the Detroit Red Wings from 1964–1995.

Contents

Bruce Martyn httpsstatic01nytcomimages20121014sports

After earning his degree from Michigan Tech at the Soo now Lake Superior State University in his hometown of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, Bruce Martyn started in broadcasting doing play-by-play for the Soo Indians of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association on WSOO-AM in 1950. It was there he met wife Donna, a rabid hockey fan in her own right.

Bruce moved his career south to the Detroit market at WCAR-AM in 1953. He could be heard on radio assignments throughout Michigan on the weekly syndicated talk show This Week in Michigan, as well as coverage of Michigan State Spartans football, the Detroit Pistons and Detroit Lions. After 10 years, he moved to TV and the UHF station WKBD-TV, then a station devoted to sports.

It did not take long for Martyn to be discovered by the Red Wings, who offered him a job broadcasting home and away games in 1964. Martyn served the team for 31 seasons, most partnered with NHL icon Sid Abel. He became best known for the phrase, "He shoots, he scores!"

Martyn retired after the 1994–95 Red Wing season, but returned in 1997 to call the second period of the team's Stanley Cup clincher. He was presented with the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award for broadcasting by the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto in 1991 and inducted into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame in 1996. He is an Honorary Lifetime Member and a Past President of the Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association.

Wkbd detroit october 10 1979 bruce martyn season preview


References

Bruce Martyn Wikipedia