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Pat Hughes (radio sports announcer)
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Pat Hughes (radio sports announcer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Pat Hughes (radio sports announcer)

Vergil Patrick "Pat" Hughes (born May 27, 1955 in Tucson, Arizona) has been the play-by-play voice of the Chicago Cubs since 1996. He partnered with color commentator Ron Santo, former Hall of Fame third baseman for the Cubs from 1996 to 2010, until Santo died of diabetes. Their unique on-air chemistry came to be known as the "Pat and Ron Show." Prior to joining the Cubs broadcast booth, Hughes spent 12 years calling games for the Milwaukee Brewers, with legendary broadcaster Bob Uecker. Hughes also spent 17 years as a radio television play-by-play man for Marquette University basketball.
==Broadcasting career==
Hughes might be best known for his call of Mark McGwire's 62nd home run in 1998. That home run broke the single-season home run record, and the Hughes narration of the hit is the most often-played call of that moment:
In most other instances, his home run call is "That ball's got a chaaaance...GONE!" On longer home runs, Hughes' call often includes the phrase "Get out the tape measure". Another Hughes catchphrase as the first pitch of the game is thrown is "And away we go..." In times of great excitement at the ballpark he will say, "Listen to these fans!" or "They're on their feet at Wrigley." As an intro to the show he will say, "Chicago Cubs baseball is on the air! From Beautiful Wrigley Field in Chicago (whatever other stadium they may be playing at ), it's the Chicago Cubs taking on the (team )."
If the Cubs have a narrow lead going into opposing team's final half-inning, Hughes exclaims, "Fasten those seatbelts!"
Hughes' broadcasting career includes stints as a broadcaster for the Milwaukee Brewers baseball team, the Minnesota North Stars hockey team, and minor league baseball teams the Columbus Clippers and San Jose Missions. He has also broadcast college games for Northwestern University, San Jose State University, University of Wisconsin–Madison and the Marquette University men's basketball team, as well as announcing games for ESPN.
The National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association has given Hughes six Illinois Sportscaster of the Year awards (1996, 1999, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2014), in addition to three Wisconsin Sportscaster of the Year awards (1990–92).
Hughes graduated from San Jose State University where his father had served as a professor and where Hughes also did some announcing.
Hughes appeared in an uncredited voiceover role as the basketball announcer in the 1997 remake of the Disney film ''Flubber''.〔http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1219852/〕
Hughes has produced, written, and narrated a series of book-and-CD sets on great baseball announcers entitled ''Baseball Voices''. Featured announcers in the series include Hughes' former colleagues Harry Caray, Ron Santo, and Bob Uecker, as well as Red Barber, Marty Brennaman, Jack Buck, Milo Hamilton, Harry Kalas, Dave Niehaus, Bob Prince, Russ Hodges, and Lon Simmons.
In July 2008, Hughes' voice was featured in a State Farm commercial, calling the end of a walkoff win for the Cubs, in which a ball was hit onto Waveland Avenue and caught by a teenager who then gives the game-winning ball to a young fan of the Cubs.
After Santo's death in December 2010, Hughes got a new radio partner, former Cub Keith Moreland. The two called Cubs games during the 2011, 2012, and 2013 seasons, before Moreland stepped down to spend more time at his home in Texas.
In December 2013, former big leaguer Ron Coomer was named Hughes's new partner. The two called Cubs games in 2014 on WGN radio, switching to WBBM radio in 2015 after the Cubs ended their 90 year partnership with WGN radio.〔http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/columnists/ct-sherman-media-spt-0926-20140926-column.html〕
In 2014, Hughes was inducted in the WGN Radio Walk of Fame, the eleventh such honoree and only the third sportscaster to be honored.
In 2012, Hughes was inducted into the Branham High School Athletic Hall of Fame in San Jose, CA.

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