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From Coquitlam to Vancouver Canucks: Team’s new voice ready for a new challenge

The new voice of the Vancouver Canucks has been doing hockey play-by-play for 24 years. But Brendan Batchelor is only 28 years-old.
Brendan Batchelor
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO Coquitlam's Brendan Batchelor looks through his notes during the broadcast of a Vancouver Giants' game. On Monday he was named the new voice of Vancouver Canucks' radio broadcasts on Sportsnet 650.

The new voice of the Vancouver Canucks has been doing hockey play-by-play for 24 years. But Brendan Batchelor is only 28 years-old.

Yeah, the Coquitlam native was that kid, providing running commentary when he was playing street hockey in the driveway of his parents’ home on Harbour Drive, or playing table hockey in the basement, or even NHL video games on the TV.

On Monday those playful calls of his childhood paid off for Batchelor. Big time. He was officially named as the lead play-by-play man for Canucks’ radio broadcasts on the team’s new radio home, Sportsnet 650. His colour commentator will be former Canucks’ goalie and Hockey Night in Canada analyst Corey Hirsch.

The new gig is the fulfillment of a lifelong dream that started when he’d emulate the voices he listened to, Jim Robson, John Shorthouse, Jim Hughson.

“I was huge into hockey,” Batchelor said. “That was always my sport. You’d watch the games on TV and then go out and play them.”

It wasn’t until he was preparing to graduate from Dr. Charles Best secondary school that Batchelor realized he might be able to turn his passion into his profession.

He eschewed a formative notion of becoming a lawyer and enrolled in the broadcasting program at BCIT. He also began the long process of paying his dues by volunteering his winter evenings doing the public address announcements for the Burnaby Express and then following the team when it moved to Coquitlam. He also worked as an overnight producer for Team1040 and its various sister stations.

“It was all about getting experience,” Batchelor said. “I was working toward my dream, not resting on my laurels. I just wanted to get in on the ground floor.”

In 2012, Batchelor became the play-by-play announcer for the BCHL’s Surrey Eagles. The next year he climbed into the rafters at the Pacific Coliseum as the voice of the Vancouver Giants.

Stepping up to the Canucks is a huge progression for Batchelor’s career. But with it comes the pressure and expectation of a fiercely impassioned fan base.

In the weeks leading up to his first calls for the Canucks at the team’s Young Stars Classic in Penticton, Sept 8-11, Batchelor is busy learning the minute details about the players, especially the prospects, hitting other broadcasters up for guidance and getting familiar with his new partner, Hirsch.

“There’s definitely a learning curve,” Batchelor said. “But being a Canucks’ fan, you’re always in the know of what’s happening with the team.”

And while Batchelor has achieved his childhood dream, he’s not about to let himself become complacent. He knows the bar has been set pretty high by the voices who preceded him.

“I’ve got to put my head down, treat it the same way I’ve always treated play-by-play,” Batchelor said. “Let’s drop the puck.”