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Michigan People: A lifetime behind the mike

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  • Michigan People: A lifetime behind the mike

    Michigan People: A lifetime behind the mike
    By Tom Markowski / The Detroit News

    Detroit News Online
    February 3, 2007

    HIGHLAND PARK -- Television captured the imagination of America in
    the 1950s, and Greg Byndrian was a willing captive.

    He remembers spending weekends in front of the television while
    growing up in Highland Park, watching sporting events, enthralled by
    the play-by-play.

    Long before Byndrian graduated from Henry Ford Elementary to Highland
    Park High, he had found a calling.

    As a high school freshman in 1959, Byndrian began announcing Highland
    Park varsity basketball games on the school's radio station, WHPR-FM.

    In a sense, he has never left.

    Throughout high school, college and then as an employee of the school
    district, Byndrian continued broadcasting Highland Park games until
    the station discontinued athletic broadcasts in 1981.

    At that point, he shifted gears and became the public-address
    announcer for every home game in football, basketball and, for a
    time, wrestling.

    "It is in my blood," said Byndrian, 61, a Detroit resident. "I love
    doing it because I feel like I'm giving back to Highland Park. I was
    given the opportunity to do something so rare."

    This is Byndrian's 48th season as the school's radio/public-address
    announcer, although he said announcing never has been part of his job
    as the school district's public-information officer.

    "It was self-imposed," he said.

    Doing homework

    Byndrian takes tremendous pride in his work. So, he doesn't just show
    up and start talking into a microphone. He arrives early, studies the
    rosters and makes sure to learn the proper pronunciation of every
    player's name.

    Obviously, Byndrian is a fan. He has an encyclopedic memory of
    Highland Park's athletic history, but he knows the competition --
    good and bad -- too.

    He's seen some lean years on the football field, although that's
    changed lately with the resurgence of the program.

    But it's on the basketball court where the Polar Bears have gained
    their greatest popularity. And Byndrian has been there to tell the
    stories, from Bobby Joe Hill (Texas Western) to Terry Duerod
    (University of Detroit) to Renardo Brown (West Virginia) to Glynn
    Blackwell (Illinois) to Lyman DePriest (Connecticut).

    Give him a chance and Byndrian will recite scores, highlights and
    circumstances of games from decades ago.

    He recalls Hill leading the Polar Bears to a Class A quarterfinal in
    1960 and semifinals in '61. There was the Brown-led '82 team that was
    24-0 before being upset by Harper Woods Bishop Gallagher in the
    regional final. And the '84 Blackwell-led team that lost to Flint
    Northwestern in a state semifinal.

    But '75 was Highland Park's year to shine. Highland Park defeated
    Flint Northwestern, 85-76, in the state final at Crisler Arena. But
    the game everyone remembers most is the quarterfinal against
    previously unbeaten Berkley, led by Bruce Flowers (Notre Dame).

    Duerod scored 43, and Highland Park rolled, 84-55.

    "It was an epic," Byndrian recalled. "It was a week in Highland Park
    like no other. The media built it up all week. It was standing room
    only (at Calihan Hall) and there were thousands outside trying to get
    a ticket. Duerod went 20-of-27 from the field and he shot from
    downtown and uptown."

    Byndrian plans to do his job as long as he can.

    "What keeps me going is the enthusiasm," he said. "It's the
    student-athlete. It keeps me in touch, keeps me involved."
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