![]() Bill Roemer says his highlight was the '86 Cats.
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CORT Warehouse Supervisor Health Care Rio Salado College PA's/Online Instructors General CORT WAREHOUSE/DRIVER Construction Komatsu Equipment Co Mechanic Education Assessment Technology, Inc Social Studies Content Writer SportsPima hall opens doors for Roemer, 11 othersArizona daily star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.07.2008
Bill Roemer is that voice inside your head.
It is the voice that called Arizona's first-ever Pac-10 basketball championship. It is the voice of the drama-filled 1986 national championship Wildcat baseball team. And it is the voice that has smoothly boomed from the public address system for more than two decades of Tucson minor-league baseball.
Roemer, best known for his time behind the microphone as a play-by-play broadcaster and stadium announcer, was among 12 of Southern Arizona's most influential sports figures announced Wednesday for induction into this year's class of the Pima County Sports Hall of Fame (PCSHF).
"I was cooking some linguine and turkey meatballs, and then I got the call. And the spatula almost went flying," said Roemer, referring to the May phone call that relayed the message that he would soon be in the PCSHF. "My son was sitting there trying to figure out why I was going nuts. Just hearing the words Hall of Famer, it gave me goose bumps."
Wednesday's news conference at the Holiday Inn-Tucson Airport was emceed by former major-league pitcher and 1995 PCSHF inductee Pat Darcy, a Rincon/University High School graduate.
Asked after the news conference to recall the time in his career that stands out above everything else, Roemer pointed straight to Jerry Kindall's baseball squad, which survived a multitude of scares to take home the 1986 NCAA crown.
"There were so many human interest stories with that team, with Coach Kindall's wife dying of a terminal illness, that it made it really unique," said Roemer. "That team went two-and-out the year before, and then, in the first game of the 1986 World Series, they were down 5-0 to Maine in the seventh inning, and came back to win. And it seemed like every game in that entire Series was a nail-biter until the championship. By that game, they were playing with so much confidence, they just blew out Florida State to win it all."
Longtime Sunnyside baseball coach Ernie Palomarez, another of the newest Hall of Fame members, could not pinpoint the pinnacle of a 29-year term coaching Southern Arizona's youth.
Instead, he said it was watching the kids he groomed make something of themselves, upon leaving Palomarez's guidance, that resonates.
"The thrill for me isn't from any one game, any one moment," said Palomarez, whose Blue Devils have reached the state semifinals 15 times, but have yet to pull off a title. "When I think back, I remember how the kids came to me, and then how they were when they moved on from Sunnyside. That's what's special."
This year's class will join 244 PCSHF members after the induction banquet on Oct. 12.
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