Tony Lenahan
The Saline Courier
BENTON â Itâs been a long tenure for current public address announcer Steve Landers, but after 30 years, Landers has decided to call it quits. That journey likely ends tonight when the Benton Panthers host the Marion Patriots at Everett Field in the first round of the 6A state playoffs.
With a Benton victory, the Panthers would face the winner of 6A West foe Russellville and 6A East member Sylvan Hills. Should Russellville upset the Bears, the Panthers will host for another week, but considering the Bears are almost four-touchdown favorites over the Cyclones, this looks to be Bentonâs last home game of 2020.
âAs far as Iâm concerned, until I know better, tomorrow is the end,â Landers said Thursday. âIâm ready for some Steve time. Thirty years is plenty.â
Landers, 64, was calling Future Panthers games before he hooked up calling the varsity program. At the time 30 years ago, Steve Landersâ uncle, Robert Landers, worked in the press box and the transition went smoothly.
âMax Wright had announced forever and my uncle was the clock operator,â Landers explained. âHe knew I was doing the Future Panthers games. At church one Sunday, he said, âYou ought to be my announcer.â I said, âSure.â There it began.
âHe (his uncle) has since been deceased and Steve Jordan took over his position. Weâve always kidded that you have to die out of this job. You canât just quit. Iâm going to break the mold. Iâm getting out while Iâm still alive.â
Landers, who enjoys âgoing to the car races,â and works at Everett Chevrolet, said he will miss his âgangâ the most.
âBeing around my press box gang,â Landers said. âSteve Jordan, Jim Futrell, Phil Richardson and Robert Yates. Thatâs my crew. And then Mason Woolbright is going to take over for me.â
Despite his departure, Landers believes he is leaving his legacy in the best of hands with Woolbright.
âAbsolutely, heâs been training since he was in the eighth grade,â Landers said of Woolbright. âHeâs graduating college this year. He started coming to the press box when he was in the eighth grade and we raised him in the press box to be the announcer that heâs becoming. He does a fabulous job. I wanted him to do it because he knows how itâs supposed to be done, instead of somebody getting up there and mouthing.â
Knowing how itâs supposed to be done is simple, according to Landers.
âTell them what they want to know and shut up,â he said. âDonât over describe it. Thatâs what TV people are for, and radio people. You tell them whoâs got the ball, what they just did, who carried the ball and what down it is and what yard line theyâre on. And then shut up.â
Landers recollected some close calls through the years on when shutting up didnât work.
âDonât push the button until youâre ready to talk,â he said. âWhenever we played Bryant one night at C.W. Lewis, I think it was the student council president at the time came up and got a remote mic, one of the wireless. He was walking down the stairs of the press box, turned it on and said, âBryant sucks.â They stormed my little area of the press box. I said, âI didnât do nothing but I heard it.â You might want to check with your student council president. He had a hot mic. So, I got out of that one.â
Landers also remembered avoiding another âoopsâ moment on the microphone in the early days.
âBack when I first started you had this old microphone that looked like a CB type microphone,â he explained. âNot a handheld, but one you set on the counter and push the button, leaned over and talked into it. Somebody had taken a toothpick and jammed it in there and had it where it was open. We were just sitting up there before the game shooting the bull. Fortunately, nothing was said out of line and my cousin hollered, âHey, we can hear you.â I looked and I could see that toothpick then. That was the closest Iâd come to really doing something ignorant.â
Regarding his fondest memories, Landers mentioned his daughter, Farra (manager), and son Cayce lettered for the Panthers since the eighth grade, and Benton never lost to Bryant when his son was playing in the late 1990s.
It was during one of Cayceâs games which Landers remembers the most.
âBenton was playing Sheridan at homecoming and the score was tied with like 6 seconds left on the clock,â Landers said. âTim Merrick blocked a punt and my son returned it for a touchdown with the siren going off to win the game. I liked to fell out of the press box.â
Landers also recollected a game against Springdale during a serious storm.
âMy dad (Bill) had brought a package of peanut butter sandwich cookies up there for us,â he said. âIt was during the storm, because the stadium emptied because it was a bad storm; torrential downpour, lightning to the ground, struck the scoreboard. We were trying to throw the cookies that he had brought out of the press box into a trash can down by the field. We had more fun trying to throw those cookies into that trash can. Everybody in the press box got involved.â
Though Landers will miss the good times in the press box, once the game starts, itâs all business when that mic goes hot.
âThereâs a lot more stories I could tell because it is absolutely comedy central when that micâs not on,â Landers said. âI have to remind them, âwhen yâall see me turn it on, shut up.ââ