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Rays' Enrique Oliu has been Spanish-language broadcaster since inaugural first pitch in 1998

Oliu has been blind since birth

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — From first pitch to last out, Enrique Oliu, the Spanish color commentator of the Tampa Bay Rays, starts talking and doesn’t stop.

“I’ll talk to the wall if you let me,” Oliu said.

He’s been with the Rays since their inaugural first pitch in 1998. But, he has never seen a game.

“I can see light,” Oliu said. “I can see contrast of shadows. That’s about it.”

He’s been blind since birth.

“I’ve played it enough, I’ve touched it enough,” he said. “One thing about going through the blind school in St. Augustine, for P.E., we played every game there was, adaptive for sure.”

Oliu came to the United States from Nicaragua when he was 10 years old for a better education at the Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind, but that love of radio came many years before.

“I love the radio and listening to people dramatize stuff,” Oliu said. “(Los Angeles Dodgers announcer) Vin Scully said when he fell in love with sports he had this old radio that he could listen to in 1930-something. He heard the roar of the crowd. Same thing with me, I heard the roar of the crowd. I thought it was pretty neat.” Baseball has a symphony of sounds. During a pandemic, he can’t rely on the crowd noise to do his job. This season, he’s had to adjust more than anyone.

“It’s kind of hard. The energy level is kind of hard. you don’t have the expectation of the crowd. it’s pretty hard. The home runs, sometimes you get a big drive because you hear it off the bat. A lot of times, the home runs that just go over the wall they trick you,” Oliu said.


“You think they’re going to be caught at the warning track or something. It’s hard to get emotional because you don’t know if the home run is there until it is there.”

Alongside broadcast partner Ricardo Taveras and engineer Marc Miller, Oliu listens for clues.

“Sometimes you get the sounds,” he said. “Our team is in Yankee Stadium, they still do the strikeout whistle of the opposition. You get the fog horn here when the home run happens.”

He knows some players just by the crack of the bat.

“Yandy (Diaz). Yandy is the guy that really explodes.”

“The most amazing thing is he can’t see the game so he is listening to it,” Miller said “He’s not translating what he’s hearing. He’s telling his own story based upon what he’s hearing. Think about hard that is.”

Oliu gets some help in the booth from his very understanding wife Debbie Perry, who he met two decades ago on a blind date. “We went to the Lightning (game) against the Chicago Blackhawks.”

Did you they win?

“No, Tony Almonte stuck it in in overtime.”

Prior to the game, Debbie goes over the lineups for both teams so he can picture the players on the field.

Oliu, an encyclopedia of baseball knowledge, adding color while broadcasting in the dark.

“People would say ‘you can’t do things on the radio,’” Perry said. “He just never gave up and fought his way through. He’s living a dream and anyone can live a dream."



 

About FSDB

The Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind is a tuition-free state public school and outreach center available to eligible Pre-K and K-12 students who are deaf/hard of hearing, blind/visually impaired, or deafblind. At FSDB, students learn how to do more, be more, and achieve more, fulfilling our vision of preparing them for a lifetime of success. FSDB gratefully accepts private donations to support vital programs that directly benefit students and are not paid by state general revenue funds. For a campus tour or to inquire about eligibility for enrollment, contact FSDB Parent Services at 904-827-2212 voice or 904-201-4527 videophone. For more information, visit www.fsdbk12.org

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