Pedro Septién: Difference between revisions
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==Profile== | |||
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|name=Pedro Septién | |name=Pedro Septién | ||
|realName=Pedro Septién Orozco | |realName=Pedro Septién Orozco | ||
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|obituarydate=[[December 18]], [[ | |obituarydate=[[December 18]], [[2013]] - [[Mexico City]] | ||
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One of the most famous Mexican sportscasters and a member of the Mexican Baseball Hall of Fame. He first called the World Series in 1939 and last called it in 2011. His most distinctive qualities were his vast vocabulary and his meticulous research. | One of the most famous Mexican sportscasters and a member of the Mexican Baseball Hall of Fame. He first called the World Series in 1939 and last called it in 2011. His most distinctive qualities were his vast vocabulary and his meticulous research. | ||
In wrestling, he was the voice of wrestling when it first appeared on television on the 1950s. Wrestling ended up banned from Mexico City television after only a few years, but, some thirty years later, when announcers were needed for Pavillón Azteca broadcasts and for Galavisión's transmissions of the EMLL Friday night shows, Septién resumed calling wrestling action. He started to get phased out of a prominent role shortly after Mexico City | In wrestling, he was the voice of wrestling when it first appeared on television on the 1950s. Wrestling ended up banned from Mexico City television after only a few years, but, some thirty years later, when announcers were needed for Pavillón Azteca broadcasts and for Galavisión's transmissions of the EMLL Friday night shows, Septién resumed calling wrestling action. He started to get phased out of a prominent role shortly after wrestling began airing in Mexico City again. By then in his mid-70s, he went from calling entire falls to brief analysis between falls. | ||
[[Category:Mexican announcers]] | [[Category:Mexican announcers]] | ||
[[Category:Deceased staff]] |
Latest revision as of 04:17, 16 August 2023
Profile
Pedro Septién | |||||||||||||||
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Biography
One of the most famous Mexican sportscasters and a member of the Mexican Baseball Hall of Fame. He first called the World Series in 1939 and last called it in 2011. His most distinctive qualities were his vast vocabulary and his meticulous research.
In wrestling, he was the voice of wrestling when it first appeared on television on the 1950s. Wrestling ended up banned from Mexico City television after only a few years, but, some thirty years later, when announcers were needed for Pavillón Azteca broadcasts and for Galavisión's transmissions of the EMLL Friday night shows, Septién resumed calling wrestling action. He started to get phased out of a prominent role shortly after wrestling began airing in Mexico City again. By then in his mid-70s, he went from calling entire falls to brief analysis between falls.