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・ Russ Van Atta
・ Russ Verney
・ Russ Walker
・ Russ Walker (ice hockey)
・ Russ Walker (rugby league)
・ Russ Warren
・ Russ Washington
・ Russ Weeks
・ Russ Westover
・ Russ Wilcox
・ Russ Williams (DJ)
・ Russ Winstanley
・ Russ Hinze
・ Russ Hochstein
・ Russ Hodge
Russ Hodges
・ Russ Hodges (footballer)
・ Russ Hogue
・ Russ Housley
・ Russ Howard
・ Russ Howell
・ Russ Huesman
・ Russ Hunt
・ Russ Hunt (cyclist)
・ Russ Irwin
・ Russ Jackman
・ Russ Jackson
・ Russ Jackson Award
・ Russ Johnson
・ Russ Jones


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Russ Hodges : ウィキペディア英語版
Russ Hodges

Russell Pleasant Hodges (June 18, 1910 – April 19, 1971) was an American broadcaster who did play-by-play for several baseball teams, most notably the New York and San Francisco Giants.
==Early career==
Born in Dayton, Tennessee, Hodges began his broadcasting career in 1934. He was sports editor of WBT, Charlotte, North Carolina until October, 1941, when he moved full-time to WOL in Washington, D.C., where he had already been doing play-by-play for the Washington Redskins. He worked for the Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, and Cincinnati Reds before landing in New York City with the New York Yankees and New York Giants, who during much of the 1940s only broadcast home games and shared the same radio team — lead announcer Mel Allen and No. 2 man Hodges.
From 14 April 1948 to 22 April 1949, Hodges hosted the 15-minute DuMont series ''Scoreboard'', also known as ''Russ Hodges' Scoreboard''. In 1949, Hodges became a No. 1 announcer when the Giants and the Yankees separated their radio networks to each broadcast a full, 154-game schedule. He would be the voice of the Giants for the next 22 seasons on both coasts.

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