When baseball fans tuned into the first Toronto Blue Jays telecast in 1977 they heard the voice of Don Chevrier calling the action. Chevrier died suddenly in Florida on Monday after suffering from a ...
Don Chevrier, 69, a longtime broadcaster who covered several Olympics and called the Toronto Blue Jays’ first game, was found dead Monday at his home in Palm Harbor, Fla., according to his daughter, ...
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Don Chevrier, the longtime Toronto Blue Jays broadcaster who called the team’s first game in 1977, has died. He was 69.
TORONTO, Dec. 19 (UPI) -- Former television broadcaster Don Chevrier, the first voice of the Toronto Blue Jays, has died at 69 of undisclosed causes at his home in Palm Harbor, Fla. The team said on ...
TORONTO — When Don Chevrier realized he would never play sports at the highest level, he found another way to the big show. The journey took the broadcaster with the big voice around the globe, from ...
Most of the obituaries of legendary broadcaster Don Chevrier, who died this week, pointed out he was the play-by-play man of the first broadcast of Blue Jays baseball. There were also numerous ...
several Olympics and the Toronto Blue Jays' first game, has died. He was 69. Chevrier was found Monday at his home in Palm Harbor, Fla., him can attest, Don was one of the true gentlemen in our ...
If there was a sport Don Chevrier couldn’t call, it was probably only because he hadn’t been asked. Chevrier, one of the giants of broadcasting in both Canada and the United States, died Monday at his ...
TORONTO — Don Chevrier, the longtime Toronto Blue Jays broadcaster who called the team’s first game in 1977, has died. He was 69. NBC, his employer during the past two Winter Olympics, confirmed his ...
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