Why would he do this?  Just up and move to New York?

Does he want to wake up in a city that doesn’t sleep?

To find he’s king of the hill…  Top of the heap?

 

 

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI

Bob Parks Realty, LLC

Real Estate Broker

145 Maple Row Blvd

Hendersonville TN 37075

Phone: 615-826-4040

Mobile: 615-972-4239

 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Shane Ford
Sent: Friday, July 03, 2015 9:42 AM
To: GatorNews
Subject: [gatornews] [SUN]: Vettel leaving behind career as Gator icon

 


Vettel leaving behind career as Gator icon






By  <http://www.gatorsports.com/personalia/patdooley> Pat Dooley
Gainesville SUN Columnist




Published: Friday, July 3, 2015 at 6:01 a.m.


Last Modified: Thursday, July 2, 2015 at 5:13 p.m.


He thought he was holding it together pretty well. Larry Vettel had a game plan 
and it included staying upbeat all day and not letting the finality of the 
situation reach his tear ducts.

Then, came the first call of his final WRUF radio show.

It was his daughters, Dana from New York and Jennifer from Tanzania where she 
is working on her master's.

“I was hopeless after that,” Vettel, 57, said.

That was last Thursday, when Vettel signed off for the final time in 
Gainesville. In two weeks, he and his wife, Quenta, will begin a new journey in 
New York City, where his life began.

You can call Vettel a lot of things, and many of his callers to his different 
radio talk shows have. A Gator sports icon. A pioneer in Gainesville talk 
radio. A teacher who has sent many success stories into the broadcast world.

I've been privileged to call him a friend for many decades.

Vettel has been one of the main voices of Florida athletics during that time. 
He has done thousands of Gator broadcasts in every sport for both television 
and radio. His talk show has been a staple for Gainesvillians who want to both 
be entertained and need a place to vent.

After 34 years, he's ready to do something else.

“It has been a great ride,” he said. “I'm very appreciative of what I have had. 
It's just a time in my life when I need a new challenge. New job, new career. I 
don't know what that will be, but I need to take some chances.”

It all started when Vettel's family moved to Port St. Lucie when he was in the 
third grade because his mother wanted to get away from the crime of New York. 
There, he was handed the job of being the public address announcer for high 
school baseball games.

“I was better at that than at pitching,” he said. “And right away, I knew this 
was what I wanted to do.”

When he was 15, his aunt gave him a book about Red Barber, the legendary 
sportscaster who attended UF. 

“The parts about WRUF intrigued me,” he said. “I decided I wanted to go to 
Florida and win the Red Barber Award.”

He did just that in 1981 and by then was already into a career that would last 
more than three decades. 

It started with Dial-A-Score, back in the days before instant news. You 
remember Dial-A-Score. Back in 1979, when Vettel started, there was no Internet 
or crawls on ESPN to find out who won the big games of the day. Fans would call 
the show to find out who won and then offer their opinions about different 
teams, mostly the Gators.

It was also the year Florida went 0-10-1 under first-year coach Charley Pell.

“Not a lot of people were happy after those games,” he recalled. “I got to 
learn how to handle the angry and the inebriated. It was great combat training.”

It was while he was starting his career that he met his wife, who was working 
for the Florida sports information department. 

In 1980, he started one of the state's first weekly talk shows, then turned it 
into a daily show in 1989.

That show became a staple for Gator fans in the area.

“I always thought of myself as a voice of reason,” he said. “When they were too 
ecstatic, I tried to calm them down. When they were too glum, I tried to cheer 
them up.”

Vettel left WRUF in 1998 to work for WMOP/WGGG because he wanted an afternoon 
show. I worked with Larry on those stations as a twice-a-week guest. It never 
felt like work, just two guys talking about sports. That was the genius of 
Vettel, the ability to make guests and callers feel like they were having a 
conversation.

Never short on opinions, Vettel was never afraid to ruffle feathers in the 
athletic department. Yet he built lasting relationships — and friendships — 
with Gator coaches and athletes.

In 2005, he went dark. He decided it was time to step away from radio, although 
he continued his extensive TV work. That has included being the sideline 
reporter for Gator football games and live broadcasts of all the other sports.

In 2010, WRUF convinced him to return to the airwaves where he had been 
producing daily commentary and interaction with fans until last Thursday. A 
week later, the City of Gainesville proclaimed “Larry Vettel Day.” 

Haven't they all been?

“It's time. It's that simple,” Vettel said. “It's been a long run. It will be 
weird not doing the preparation for the Florida-Georgia game, not doing the 
scouting reports for the Quarterback Club. It's going to be strange.”

Weird. Strange. For all of us.

Contact Pat Dooley at  <tel:352-374-5053> 352-374-5053 or at  
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]. And follow at 
Twitter.com/Pat_Dooley.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Sent From Shane's iPhone

Go Gators!   &   Skål Vikes!

ALPCA #8756 

Europlate #1045

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GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions 2006 
National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 National 
Football Champions | 
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim 
Tebow (2007)
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