Ray Hadley to call record 34th NRL Grand Final
Ray Hadley will call his 34th NRL Grand Final this Sunday, eclipsing the radio record he currently shares with the late rugby league icon Frank Hyde MBE, OAM.
Hyde called 33 NSWRL Grand Finals from the SCG between 1953 and 1983 on Sydney radio station 2SM.
Hadley’s first Grand Final call was on 2UE in 1987, where Manly defeated the Canberra Raiders.
Hadley says “When I started calling rugby league in 1987, John Brennan asked Frank Hyde to listen and critique me on a weekly basis. In the early stages, Frank said ‘You need to get into a rhythm, you sound like a race caller.’ I replied ‘That’s because I am!’”
“He laughed and said ‘You’ll get there.’ At the end of 1987, he called me after the Grand Final and said ‘There’ll be no more phone calls from me – you are where you need to be.’”
“I got an email from one of Frank and Gabby‘s sons, Pat, this week telling me how proud his dad would be for me to break his record by calling my 34th Grand Final.”
“The entire Hyde family has always been very supportive. My lasting memory of Frank will be his generosity and encouragement. He was not threatened by an ambitious young bloke, but rather proud he was part of my journey.”
“Surely Frank must be the next media person to be elevated to the NRL Hall of Fame.”
Nine Radio Head of Content Greg Byrnes says “The records keep coming for Ray Hadley. In recent times we’ve celebrated 21 years of Ray on 2GB Mornings, then 151 consecutive survey wins, and this weekend it’s a record 34th Grand Final call. What a privilege it is for us all to witness one of the greats of radio broadcasting in full flight!”
Hadley and Hyde are both inductees in the Commercial Radio Hall of Fame and their famous catch-cries will forever live in rugby league history: Hyde’s “It’s long enough, it’s high enough … and it’s straight between the posts!” and Hadley’s “Don’t touch the set, don’t touch the dial, don’t you go anywhere!”
There will never ever be another Frank Hyde
” High enough Long enough and Straight between the posts.
HHeadley is a distant 2nd in my books
Especially he ” picks and chooses ” what games ” he calls
In 1984 Frank Hyde moved to 2UE, calling the rugby league with Col Pearce. Hyde and Pearce called the grand final that year, which was his last grand final, not the claimed 1983 that this story and many other outlets are misreporting.
Ray Hadley is one of the great callers who has taught all I Know snout Rugby League. I cannot remember Frank Hyde but from what I heard from Ray Hadley and others must have win as well respected as he was.