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Reading: After 44 seasons, Nick Nickson’s retirement will mark finish of an period for Kings
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Michigan Post > Blog > Sports > After 44 seasons, Nick Nickson’s retirement will mark finish of an period for Kings
Sports

After 44 seasons, Nick Nickson’s retirement will mark finish of an period for Kings

By Editorial Board Published March 31, 2025 11 Min Read
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After 44 seasons, Nick Nickson’s retirement will mark finish of an period for Kings

Don’t consider this as Nick Nickson’s ultimate season behind the microphone for the Kings. Consider it as an encore.

Nickson deliberate to be {golfing} by now. He deliberate to be following his grandkids, Casey and Avery, to their video games and attending the birthday events and anniversaries he needed to miss in additional than 5 a long time as a hockey broadcaster.

The Kings had different plans, summoning Nickson to a gathering in the summertime of 2023 the place he anxious he is likely to be fired earlier than he might inform them he was able to retire. As a substitute the Kings advised Nickson, their longtime radio voice, they needed him to simulcast the radio and TV calls. And so they needed a two-year dedication.

“Had it not been for the change, last year might have been my last,” he mentioned.

Nick Nickson calls a sport between the Kings and New York Rangers at Crypto.com Area on March 25.

The actual fact it wasn’t makes this season positively, completely the final one. (We expect.) At 71, Nickson says he has an excessive amount of he needs to do and never practically sufficient time between video games wherein to do it, so his profession will finish when the Kings’ season does.

“I’m doing this on my own terms, which I’m grateful for,” he mentioned throughout an hourlong lunch that was heavy on remembrances and void of regrets. “Some people around the league said ‘Nick why? You still sound so good.’ And yeah I appreciate that.

“But I want to be able to enjoy doing what I want while I’m still healthy. The timing is right.”

The Kings will honor Nickson once they play host to the Winnipeg Jets on Tuesday, a tribute he believes will probably be heartfelt though it’s April Idiot’s Day.

“I thought of that when they mentioned April 1st, ” Nickson mentioned. “But because so many people are preparing for it, I don’t think it’s going to be a joke. I think it will actually happen.”

Stage manager Donna Moskal points as Kings broadcasters Jim Fox and Nick Nickson prepare for a game broadcast.

Stage supervisor Donna Moskal factors to the digicam as Kings broadcasters Jim Fox, left, and Nick Nickson, proper, rehearse for a sport broadcast.

In his 44 seasons with the Kings, Nickson says he has known as greater than 3,800 video games whereas narrating the rise of hockey in a desert. He watched the Triple Crown line of Charlie Simmer, Marcel Dionne and Dave Taylor; welcomed Wayne Gretzky to L.A.; and noticed Jim Fox, Daryl Evans and Jarret Stoll transfer from the ice into the published sales space.

Two different gamers, Luc Robitaille and Rob Blake, went from Nickson’s broadcasts into the Kings’ entrance workplace as president and normal supervisor, respectively.

“For the culture of a franchise to have people that have been around a long time, it means a lot,” mentioned Robitaille, now Nickson’s boss. “You have your core fans that follow the team and when they’ve been listening to Nick Nickson for all these years they’re part of the family. It’s hard to describe.

“Everybody grew up listening to them and then next thing you know, they get married and they have kids, and they’re still listening. I hear those stories over and over.”

That’s as a result of Nickson described extra than simply hockey. He did the play-by-play of historical past, calling the Kings’ two Stanley Cup championships. His radio name of the ultimate six seconds of the 2012 Stanley Cup Closing is arguably the franchise’s most memorable second.

“The long wait is over! After 45 years, the Kings can wear their crown!”

Nick Nickson prepares a script before a game between the Kings and Rangers on March 25.

Nick Nickson prepares a script earlier than a sport between the Kings and Rangers on March 25.

Nickson’s Corridor of Fame profession — he turned the third Kings broadcaster, after Bob Miller and Jiggs McDonald, to be enshrined when he was voted in by his friends in 2015 — started with the minor league Rochester Individuals a yr after he graduated from Ithaca School, the place he served as sports activities director for the varsity’s radio station. Two years later he started calling video games for the New Haven Nighthawks, the New York Rangers’ AHL affiliate.

That’s the place he bought the break that modified his life. The Rangers, who had a player-development settlement with the Nighthawks, briefly ended the connection in 1981 and the Kings, who have been in search of an AHL associate, moved in. The Kings wanted greater than only a minor league affiliate, nevertheless.

Pete Weber had left his seat subsequent to Miller, creating a gap within the broadcast sales space. Kings coach Parker MacDonald knew Nickson from his time in New Haven, and although MacDonald wouldn’t final the season behind the bench, he was there lengthy sufficient to push Nickson for the job.

“So we hired him,” Miller mentioned.

With the transfer West, Nickson joined maybe probably the most storied and iconic group of sports activities broadcasters ever assembled in a single metropolis. Along with Miller, Vin Scully and Jaime Jarrín have been calling Dodgers video games, Chick Hearn was doing the Lakers, Tom Kelly was on USC soccer and Ralph Lawler quickly moved north from San Diego with the Clippers.

All six are Corridor of Famers. But Nickson, the youngest of the group at 27, slot in instantly.

“He was just great to be around,” Miller mentioned. “Nick was always so well prepared. Great player identification. Kept up with the play, all the fundamentals.”

However the important thing to his success and that of the opposite Corridor of Famers was stability, Nickson mentioned. Scully and Jarrín each spent greater than six a long time with the Dodgers. Hearn and Lawler did 41 seasons with Lakers and Clippers, respectively. Nickson, in the meantime, is retiring after 44 seasons with the Kings, the identical as Miller, who retired in 2017.

Nick Nickson calls a game at Crypto.com Arena between the Kings and Rangers on March 25.

Nick Nickson calls a sport at Crypto.com Area between the Kings and Rangers on March 25. The Kings will honor Nickson earlier than Monday’s sport in opposition to the Jets.

“It’s unusual that a broadcaster stays with one team for a number of years. The era of broadcasters sticking with one team for 40, 50 years is probably gone,” mentioned Nickson, whose time with the Kings was measured in a sequence of short-term contracts that have been at all times renewed. “You have that connection. It’s just a comfort level.”

“What we’ve had to offer and how we’re presented the game, I think it has educated [people] into being a more appreciative hockey fan,” he added. “That only is natural if you’re in that space for that long.”

Because of this, giving up the job — and the sport — after 5 a long time received’t be simple. Simply ask Miller, who was at a Kings sport final weekend shortly after surgical procedure for an aneurysm.

“You know, I still miss doing play-by-play,” he mentioned. “There are certain games I’ll be watching on TV and my wife will say, ‘Do you miss that?’ I don’t miss preparation these days, with players changing teams and so many teams. But there are times I’d watch the game and say, ‘Yeah, I’d like to be doing the play-by-play.’”

As for Nickson, “well, he’s a golfer,” Miller mentioned. “He’s got grandkids. So I don’t think he’ll have any problem getting used to it.”

Nickson has one confession he’d prefer to make earlier than signing off the ultimate time, although. That memorable name on the finish of the 2012 Stanley Cup playoffs? He labored on that forward of time.

The Kings have been so dominant that spring, Nickson was assured they might win earlier than the ultimate sequence with the New Jersey Devils even began.

“That’s when I came up with what I eventually said,” he remembered.

Nick Nickson takes a brief break in the broadcast booth before a game between the Kings and Rangers on March 25.

Nick Nickson takes a quick break within the broadcast sales space earlier than a sport between the Kings and Rangers on March 25.

However the genius wasn’t within the phrases, it was within the timing, with Nickson announcing the phrase “crown” as the ultimate horn sounded.

He’s had practically two seasons now to consider how he’ll finish the ultimate broadcast of his 44-year profession, one that attracts nearer with each passing sport.

“Maybe,” he lastly provided, “I should that say ‘After 44 years the long wait is over.’”

Give that man his crown.

TAGGED:ERAKingsmarkNickNicksonsRetirementseasons
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