Sneha Girap (Editor)

Jim Robson

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Spouse(s)
  
Bea

Occupation
  
former broadcaster

Name
  
Jim Robson

Jim Robson BC Radio History and Jim Robson
Born
  
January 17, 1935 (age 89) (
1935-01-17
)
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan

Residence
  
Vancouver, British Columbia

1994 stanley cup final game 6 jim robson s famous call he will play trevor linden


Jim Robson (born January 17, 1935) was a radio and television broadcaster for the Vancouver Canucks from 1970 to 1999. His family moved to British Columbia when he was eight years old and he eventually graduated from Maple Ridge Secondary School.

Contents

Jim Robson Jim Robson 05112010 Vancouver Canucks 40th Anniversary

CHB TV Episode 10: One-on-one with Jim Robson at Scotiabank Hockey Day in Canada


Broadcasting career

Robson started his career at the age of 17 covering senior men's basketball for CJAV radio station in Port Alberni. In 1955, Robson started working for CHUB radio in Nanaimo covering the Mann Cup lacrosse finals.

By 1956, Robson found himself in Vancouver covering the BC Lions football team, the Vancouver Mounties baseball team and the then WHL Vancouver Canucks hockey team on CKWX.

Vancouver Canucks

Jim Robson Happy 80th Birthday Jim Robson Jan 17 2015 YouTube

When the Vancouver Canucks became an NHL expansion team in 1970, Robson moved to CKNW where he was known as the voice of the Canucks for nearly three decades. For the first seven years, he usually worked alone. For road games, he would broadcast the game without a colour commentator and also provide the pre-game, intermission, and post-game shows. In 1977–78, he began working alongside former BC Lions player and broadcaster Tom Larscheid. From 1983–84 until 1987–88, his broadcast mate was ex-Canuck Garry Monahan, before Larscheid returned in 1988–89.

Robson stepped down as the radio voice of the Canucks in 1994, choosing the lighter workload of television. His last radio broadcast was Game 7 of the 1994 Stanley Cup Finals between the Canucks and New York Rangers. Robson continued as the Canucks television voice for five additional seasons, working alongside colour commentators Darcy Rota (1994–95 to 1995–96) and Ryan Walter (1996–97 to 1998–99). His replacement on radio was Jim Hughson, who later moved to Rogers Sportsnet, and then to CBC's Hockey Night in Canada. In his final year, Robson split television play-by-play duties with rookie John Shorthouse, who is now the primary voice of the Canucks on TV and radio.

National television

Jim Robson also did additional work for CBC's Hockey Night in Canada, covering games primarily from western Canada. It was for HNIC that he broadcast the Canucks' first NHL game, a 3–1 home loss to the Los Angeles Kings on October 9, 1970. His reputation as one of the top broadcasters in the business became apparent and he was assigned to the Stanley Cup Finals in 1975, 1980, 1982, which involved the Canucks, as they faced off against the New York Islanders, and 1983. The previous year, he called the series when it was at the Nassau Coliseum on the radio with Larscheid. However, when the series was in Vancouver, he called the games on the CBC with Gary Dornhoefer and Howie Meeker.

In addition, he covered the NHL All-Star Games in 1977 (Vancouver), 1981 (Los Angeles), and 1983 (Long Island). He left HNIC after the 1984–85 season, but made a couple of national appearances afterward, for CBC in the 1987 playoffs and Global for the 1988 Smythe Division Final between the Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames.

He also covered the Vancouver Canucks on television broadcasts on BCTV, CHEK-TV and VTV from 1985–86 through 1998–99. From 1987–88 to 1993–94, Robson provided both radio and television play-by-play for the Canucks on simulcasts, alongside colour commentators Monahan and Larscheid.

Nationally, Jim Robson is probably best remembered for his call of Bob Nystrom's Cup-winning overtime goal for the Islanders in 1980. Locally, his voice is linked to every significant Canucks moment in the '70s, '80s, and '90s, particularly the 1982 and 1994 Stanley Cup playoffs.

Robson was also well known for taking time to say "a special hello to all the hospital patients and shut-ins, those of you who can't make it out to the game", during each of his broadcasts, both on radio and TV.

Achievements

Off-the-air, Jim was involved in the community being in-demand as a guest speaker for numerous fund-raising dinners and banquets throughout the province of British Columbia. He served as a Director of the BC Benevolent Hockey Association and the Canucks Alumni.

Jim became inducted to numerous halls of fame, such as the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1992, the B.C. Hockey Hall of Fame in 1998 and the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame in 2000.

In 2002, at the Canadian Association of Broadcasters annual meeting in Vancouver, Jim Robson was inducted to the CAB Broadcast Hall of Fame.

The Broadcast booth in Rogers Arena is named after him.

Personal

Jim and his wife Bea currently reside near Vancouver's False Creek.

Memorable calls

The pass, right on the stick of Tonelli. Coming in with Nystrom, Tonelli to Nystrom, HE SCORES! Bob Nystrom scores the goal! The Islanders win the Stanley Cup!

Babych, long shot. Potvin has trouble with it. Adams shoots, SCORES! Greg Adams! Greg Adams! Adams gets the winner fourteen seconds into the second overtime! The Vancouver Canucks are going to the Stanley Cup Finals!

He'll play, you know he'll play. He'll play on crutches.

References

Jim Robson Wikipedia