Quantcast The State Hornet
College Media Network

Get macromedia Flash Player

Hornet alumni skate up to the mic

Talent put to good use

Jeondra Arrington

Issue date: 10/28/09 Section: Sports
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
Two former Sacramento State students, Mike Lange and Marc Moser, are currently radio announcers for National Hockey League teams.

Lange, the voice of the defending Stanley Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins, attended Sac State from 1968-70. He graduated with a degree in broadcasting.

He said he worked at The Sacramento Bee to help pay his way through college. Lange said he started working there at the age of 12.

Lange also announced basketball, baseball and football games for the Hornets on KERS, the university radio station at the time he attended Sac State.

"(Sac State) was the best thing that ever happened to me in my life, because it gave me the opportunity to broadcast games on KERS," Lange said. "Which in turn made me prepared to actually step out into the real world and broadcast."

He did not follow hockey until a fellow broadcasting major who called games for a former National Hockey League team, the California Golden Seals, introduced him to the game of hockey.

"He asked me to go to the Sacramento Ice Hockey Association rink, where they had amateur games, and I said 'well, I really don't know much about hockey,'" Lange said. "He said 'you should learn because someday, you never know, you might need it.'"

After persuading his college adviser to broadcast Golden Seals playoff games on radio, Lange used tapes of his play-by-play to get employment with other sports teams.

His first job after college was working in the broadcast booth for the Western Hockey League's Phoenix Roadrunners.

Lange then announced for the WHL's San Diego Gulls. In 1974, the Gulls folded because the New Jersey Knights were relocated to San Diego. The Gulls' management decided the team could not financially compete with another hockey team in San Diego.

This bump in the road did not prevent Lange from pursuing his passion.

"I wanted to be a play-by-play man, and I pursued that and kept it up. I still have done that most of my life," he said.

Lange's big break in the NHL came in 1974 when he was hired as the Pittsburgh Penguins announcer on KDKA 1020 AM, Pittsburgh's local news talk radio station.

"For a young guy who came from California and didn't know a lot about hockey but learned the game, I was very fortunate to be inducted into the National Hockey League Hall of Fame in 2001 in the broadcast category," he said.

Moser, announcer for the Colorado Avalanche, had similar experiences with broadcasting while attending Sac State.

He attended Sac State in the late 1980s and early 90s. He broadcasted basketball and football games for the Hornets on a radio station that aired only in the dorms.

He then got an internship with KFBK 1530 AM, Sacramento's local news talk radio station.

With KFBK, Moser got his first opportunity to do play-by-play, announcing Sac State basketball and football when the Hornets joined the Big Sky Conference. He also covered Sac State baseball and did live updates as well as sportscasts for the school on Saturdays.

While still attending school, Moser got a chance to cover the Sacramento Kings, the San Jose Sharks and the San Francisco 49ers' training camp in Rockland. Eventually, with only a few credits left until graduation, he got a full-time job with KFBK working as a sports director.

Moser said that his internship with KFBK was the thing that really sparked his interest in broadcasting.

"I always had an interest in sports and was always interested in broadcasting, but I never really thought of making a career of it until I got into KFBK," he said. "What I learned there was absolutely invaluable."

He grew up in Sacramento watching the San Francisco Giants and was a 49ers fan, but he never developed an interest in hockey.

He moved to Chicago in 1989 and befriended several Chicago Blackhawks fans.

"Sacramento itself never really had a hockey mentality and all," Moser said. "But once you're exposed to this game, especially live and in person, it is impossible not to fall in love with it."

In 1996, Moser was hired by the broadcast wing of Hockey Enterprises, Altitude Sports and Entertainment, to broadcast play-by-play for the Colorado Avalanche.

"The Avalanche had just moved here (from Quebec) and just won the Stanley cup," he said. "This town was absolutely on fire for hockey and it was just a great experience."


Jeondra Arrington can be reached at jarrington@statehornet.com
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Click here to view the State Hornet's comment guidelines.
Comments do not appear immediately.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Get macromedia Flash Player

Advertisement

Print Edition

Online Features Section

Handling a breakup
Online Dating
Interview with Andrew Sean Greer
Hollywood Buzz No. 5 - The Oscar results
Hollywood Buzz No. 4 - The 81st Oscars
Sac in Stereo No. 19 - What makes a great singer?
Hollywood Buzz No. 4 - Classic Christmas Movies
Sac in Stereo No. 18 - Haven't I heard this song before?
Sexcapades No. 7 - Dating your co-worker or your boss
Hollywood Buzz No. 3 - Romantic Comedies
Sac in Stereo No. 17 - Eclectic additions for any record collection
Sexcapades No. 6 - Why men and women date
Sac in Stereo No. 16 - Dillinger Four CD review, worldwide Thriller dance, Prince's secret message
Sac in Stereo No. 15 - Mixtapes and D.Willz live in the studio
Sac in Stereo No. 14 - Soundtracks for the Obama and McCain campaigns
Hollywood Buzz No. 2 - Indie and DVD gems
Sac in Stereo No. 13 - Don't call it a comeback! Should Metallica, AC/DC, Journey and LL Cool J stay or go?
Hollywood Buzz No. 1 - Summer Blockbusters
Sac in Stereo No. 12 - We (almost) interview Kanye, Justin and Amy Winehouse
Sexcapades No. 5 - Going for home base on the first date; avoiding psychos
Sac in Stereo No. 11 - Turntablism v. mashups; Coachella recap
Sac in Stereo No. 10 - Mariah Carey: bigger than the Beatles?
Sac in Stereo No. 9 - Hip-hop meets rock culture; interview and freestlye with rapper D.Willz
Sac in Stereo No. 8 - The state of the Sacramento scene (with KWOD's Andy Hawk)
Sac in Stereo No. 7 - The most overrated artists
Sexcapades No. 4 - The safe Spring-Break hookup
Sac in Stereo No. 5 - Guilty pleasures from the CD bin
Celebrity Wrap-Up No. 3 - The ugliest, most drugged-up celebrities we love
Sac in Stereo No. 4 - The top artists to watch for in 2008
Sexcapades No. 3 - Sleeping together without staying together
Sac In Stereo No. 3 - The worst albums from our favorite artists
Celebrity Wrap-Up No. 2 - Who was hottest at the Oscars?
Sac in Stereo No. 2 - Is music more accessible in this generation?
Celebrity Wrap-Up No. 1 - Does Britney Spears smell; exploiting celebrities' children
Sac in Stereo No. 1 - Why form a side project? Can local musicians even make money?
Sexcapades No. 2 - Proper anal etiquette; watching porn as a couple
Reel Talk No. 7 - Oscarbation
Reel Talk: No. 6 - The dying drive-in
Sexcapades podcast: Hornet relationships and sex: No. 1
Reel Talk: Episode 5 - That annoying guy in the theater
Sex Ed(itors) - Episode 4: Mistakes women make in bed
Reel Talk: Episode 3 - Who's hot in film?
Sex Ed(itors): Episode 3 - Kinky relationships
Rapping with Kingspade's Johnny Richter
Sex Ed(itors): Episode 2 - Fetishes
Reel Talk: Episode 2 - Cult Classics
Reel Talk: Episode 1 - Summer movies
Sex Ed(itors) : Episode 1 - Oral Sex
Local reggae artists sound off
The Dimes to flip in for nooner
Jello to slide into Union Ballroom on Monday
Mayday Parade interview
Lovedrug interview
Red Jumpsuit Apparatus interview

Advertisement