This is not your father’s Oldsmobile. (If you are old enough to remember the car and their ad campaign!) This is not even your grandfather’s Oldsmobile. “Game Used” is not your typical sports biography or autobiography.
First, this memoir covers the life and times of someone who covered the life and times of athletes on the field. This is the story of someone who was never a professional athlete but one who stood on the sidelines or in the press box his entire professional career, watching professional athletes compete on the diamond, gridiron, ice rink or court.
Secondly, “Game Used” is not organized like a typical sports biography. Each chapter is numbered according to the number of innings in a regulation baseball game. Within each of the nine “innings,” (chapters), there are sub-chapters called “stitches,” a total of 108 stitches in all, (one for each stitch in a baseball.) While “Game Used” focuses predominantly on Dick Bremer’s lengthy tenure as a baseball play-by-play announcer, the reader may be surprised to learn that Bremer also broadcast football, basketball and hockey games during his years behind the microphone.
Spoiler alert. It also may be surprising to the reader to learn that Bremer was adopted into a preacher’s family and for a time, even served himself as a church youth director. In his role as the voice of the Minnesota Twins, Bremer interacted with many veteran baseball all stars of the past, including Ernie Banks, Billy Martin and Ted Williams. Incidentally, on page 167, Bremer recaps a ten-minute, spontaneous interview he had with Williams during the 1992 All-Star game in San Diego in which the former Boston slugger liberally dropped the F-bomb multiple times. Bremer learned “he swore like a sailor.”
Definite highlights for Minnesota Twins fans who will read this sports journal will be Bremer’s memories while covering the team’s 1987 and 1991 world championship seasons. In his forward to “Game Used,” Bremer’s color commentator and broadcast partner for many years, Bert Blyleven wrote, “This book will bring back so many Twins memories and exciting moments in Twins history.” In the words of the late Larry King, this is “a page turner.”
In an October 31, 2023, article for Puckett’s Pond, Josh Hill reported that Dick Bremer was pushed out after 40 years as the Twins announcer. According to Hill at the time, “It sounds like the decision for Dick Bremer to step aside was not a mutual one.” Was Bremer retired or fired? Too bad he could not make his memoir go into extra innings and add a tenth chapter to explain the truth behind his sudden disappearance from the broadcast booth.