Francisco José Cróquer[crocker] (May 23, 1920 – December 18, 1955) was a Venezuelansportscaster specialized in baseball and boxing. He was popularly known as Pancho Pepe Cróquer.[1][2]
Early life
Born in Turmero, Aragua, Cróquer was the son of Cirilo and Francisca (née Páez) Cróquer. He studied at José Rafael Revenga elementary school in his native Turmero, and later graduated from high school at Liceo Maracay. At an early age he became interested in road bicycle racing, while also wearing the uniform of a local baseball team, but it was in auto racing where he was known for his passion and courage as a real sportsman.[2]
As a teenager, Cróquer received hands-on experience working at La Voz de Aragua radio station, where he performed as a tango singer, poetic declaimer, comedian and substitute announcer, as well as other programming and station responsibilities.[3] In 1938 he moved to Caracas to work in Estudios Universo, a radio station which was later called Ondas Populares. While there, he hosted a daily sports program and broadcast baseball games and boxing. He then extended his activities to Radio Caracas Televisión in 1953, where he hosted TV shows and anchored the first-ever telecast in Venezuelan baseball history. Furthermore, he served as the chief editor for the magazine Venezuela Deportiva and hosted a poetry radio program.[2]
Besides, Cróquer achieved international renown and became a household name in Latino communities when he joined the Gillette Cavalcade of Sports in the late 1940s.[1] By then, the Cavalcade was aired through NBC Red Network and extended their Spanish programming activities to Latin American countries, where it was known as the Cabalgata Deportiva Gillette. Its schedule included the MLB Game of the Week aired on Saturday afternoons, the MLB All-Star Game in the midseason and the fall World Series.[4] On there, Cróquer shared duties with other Spanish-language broadcasters such as Buck Canel and Felo Ramírez. During the opening presentation, Canel habitually introduced Cróquer as La Voz Deportiva de América.[2]
Baseball's popularity in Venezuela, Croquer's emergence
The first high point for Venezuela in international baseball came in 1941, when its national team captured the 1941 Amateur World Series tournament against host country Cuba, which gripped the attention of the nation. After that, baseball's position as the national sport in Venezuela was consolidated, and it has never been seriously challenged since then. The professional game in Venezuela was established in 1945, when a group of four club owners created the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League and joined organized baseball.[7]
Since the emergence of radio-broadcast baseball in the country, Venezuela's love and fascination with the sport was increased by the play-by-play announcers who described and interpreted the resulting action with their own conversational style and knowledge of the game. From the outset, Cróquer showed the most recognizable voice in Venezuelan baseball, thanks largely to his clear baritone voice and a friendly style combined with a high knowledge of the game, but always with an enviable capability to narrate a story in the form of a novel and showing a great mastery of the Spanish language. As a result, his listeners undoubtedly and proudly dubbed him, simply, Pancho Pepe, and it took a little longer than that for him to build a solid fanbase and reach national legend status.[2][7]
A short time after that, Cróquer was competing in the Carrera de la Cordialidad, held in December 1955 between the cities of Barranquilla and Cartagena in Colombia. He was fatally injured when his Maserati 200S apparently suffered a mechanical failure on a fast curve, which caused the car to somersault a number of times. Cróquer was killed almost instantly due to the force of the crash resulting in massive and lethal internal injuries. He was 35 years old.[9]
A crowd of about 50,000 people attended his mourning ceremony in Caracas and later escorted the funeral cortège to his resting place in the Southern General Cemetery.[9]
^Smith, Curt (2011). A Talk in the Park: Nine Decades of Baseball Tales from the Broadcast Booth. Potomac Books. ISBN978-1-5979-7670-1.
^Winn, J. Emmett Winn; Brinson, Susan Lorene Brinson (2005). Transmitting the Past: Historical and Cultural Perspectives on Broadcasting. University Alabama Press. ISBN978-0-8173-5175-5.