Confirmed with Link: Legendary Pens broadcaster Mike Lange dies at age 76

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DesertedPenguin

Registered User
Mar 11, 2007
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Along with Eddie Johnston and Badger Bob, Mike Lange might be one of the most iconic faces of the Pittsburgh Penguins off of the ice.

Sadly, he's passed away at age 76.

"The forever voice of the Pittsburgh Penguins, legendary broadcaster Mike Lange, died in his Pittsburgh home on Wednesday, sources close to Lange confirmed. He was 76."


EDIT: Dave Molinari, who is an old school reporter who doesn't write as much anymore, has confirmed.

 
Just a downright tragedy in Pittsburgh sports, no other way you can put it. I didn't know he wasn't doing well but I guess it's not surprising.

I still regularly listen to old retro Penguins games from the 80s and 90s and hearing his voice was always so pleasing. Super sad to hear about this.
When he wasn't able to make it to Jagr's ceremony, I had a feeling he was struggling. Those two were very close.
 
Guy bummed me smokes and bought a round of drinks for me and my friends when we ran into him at a bar.

I ran into him a couple times afterwards and he remembered that and offered me a cigarette each time.

All my lasting memories of this team include his amazing voice. RIP to the best that ever did it.
I think this is what stands out to me most about Lange. Everyone who met him has a story about what a kind, gentle, soul he was. He was obviously a legendary broadcaster and every Pens fan will remember his calls.

But he was by all accounts a first rate human being too.
 
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This one hurts more because he was an even better person than he was an announcer. He was an amazing play by play guy for the Penguins but I've never heard anyone talk poorly of him. It's tough to come up with words for it, I just hope he and his family are at peace. There's nothing really else I can say about it.

I'm just browsing twitter to find as many of his all-time clips as I can at this point.



 
When he wasn't able to make it to Jagr's ceremony, I had a feeling he was struggling. Those two were very close.

Just saw an article on this too that I wanted to share:

 
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Had a t shirt with a muscle bound Penguin holding a hockey stick on the front and a bunch of his calls/sayings written on the back. Probably bought it in the Strip. Certainly wasn’t licensed/official. I wish I hadn’t worn it out. I think it was put out after the back to back Cups in 91-92.

A voice of my youth. He and Cope. We used his calls when we played street hockey. I musta said Hallelujah Hollywood and Look Out Loretta a million times each.

A decent dude I met a couple times, including at the 2007 draft here in Cbus, where he took a break from his Diet Coke and cig to let a buddy snap a pic of us and have a short but lovely chat about hockey, soda, and the two cities I’ve called home.

Tomorrow, I will buy Sam a drink, and get his dog one, too.

EDIT - found a pic if the back of that t shirt
1740023472558.jpeg
 
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It still makes me seethe that they took him off the broadcast crew.
When he was initially fired in 2006, his performance really had slipped. Fox Sports Pittsburgh could have handled it a lot better, too.

It was a huge relief when the Penguins picked him up internally for the radio broadcast. I think it was a bit of a wake up for Lange, too, and he had a bit of a career renaissance.

Sometimes even the legends need a reset in their careers.
 
The guy was an amazing PBP broadcaster. The gravelly voice was so distinctive and calming. If I turn on highlights, his voice transports me back to the 1990s and early 2000s as a kid watching with my family. It's a shame I didn't hear him much in the Crosby era except through highlights as I only occasionally listened to radio live. I suppose nobody works forever and nobody lives forever but when guys like that go the world is just less vivid.

We really had it made in Pittsburgh in the 90s between him, Hillgrove, Myron, and Frattare.
 

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