Skip to content

'Juuuust a bit outside!' Uecker's acting and broadcasting ability came together in 'Major League'

Two of Bob Uecker's claims to fame — baseball and acting — came together brilliantly in one famous line: “Juuuust a bit outside!” Milwaukee fans could listen to Uecker broadcast Brewers games for over a half-century, but he showed off his play-by-pla
abf5ddbb458d215091517916c76fcfcdf462061c28eae1da1e9bcc40d1c7a7b4
FILE - Bob Uecker throws the ceremonial first pitch before Game 1 of the National League wildcard baseball game between the Milwaukee Brewers and the Arizona Diamondbacks Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2023, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

Two of Bob Uecker's claims to fame — baseball and acting — came together brilliantly in one famous line:

“Juuuust a bit outside!”

Milwaukee fans could listen to Uecker broadcast Brewers games for over a half-century, but he showed off his play-by-play skills — and comedic talent — for more of a national audience when he appeared in the 1989 classic “Major League” as Cleveland announcer Harry Doyle.

“He made Harry Doyle the character it was," David S. Ward, the movie's director, said Thursday night. "In a way, he was kind of a narrator of the movie almost. The attitude he carried sort of infused the whole movie with a kind of comic irreverence.”

The Brewers announced Uecker's death at age 90 on Thursday morning. The Hall of Fame broadcaster's family said he had battled small cell lung cancer since early 2023.

Uecker’s acting career also included his role on the ABC sitcom “Mr. Belvedere.”

“He was just a terrific man. He was funny, he was positive. He just had a certain spring in his walk, just a bundle of good energy,” Ward said. "His comic ability sometimes hid the fact that he was a very disciplined and very intelligent man. You could talk to him about anything. He was well versed in many areas of culture and events. It just wasn't all baseball. But when it came to baseball, obviously he was an icon."

Like many of the characters that made “Major League” a hit, Doyle was a caricature, wearing his hopes and frustrations on his sleeve as the home team bumbled through the start of the season and then stormed into contention. Uecker's deadpanned delivery made his lines particularly humorous — and added some authenticity to the baseball scenes.

“Once I started writing it, I really couldn’t think of anyone else to do it," Ward said. "I don’t know what I would have done if we didn’t get him.”

At one point in the movie, Ricky Vaughn — played by Charlie Sheen — threw a pitch so far outside it smacked off the backstop behind the plate. In an effort to sanitize the erratic right-hander's performance for the local fans, Doyle called the pitch thusly: “Juuuust a bit outside! He tried the corner and missed.”

“He added the ‘tried the corner and missed.’ We’re shooting it and he says the line and then he adds that, and I go, ‘That is the perfect cherry on top of the sundae.’" Ward said. "People remember it because of the way Uecker said it, not because of the way I wrote it. Nobody could have said it the way he said it, and then added the line afterward that just made the landing even better.”

Uecker's wit not only added to the movie, but it made him popular behind the scenes with the rest of the actors.

“He never had scenes with the other actors. He was always in the booth," Ward said. "The other actors would come to set on the days that he was shooting, just because they wanted to be around him and the whole sort of comic and carefree kind of aura that he brought to anything. ... That's rare. Usually actors want to take advantage of those days off.”

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB

Noah Trister, The Associated Press