Toronto — Amidst the cold news of statistics, contracts, and the season, a small but heartwarming story emerged within the Toronto Blue Jays community. An elderly fan wrote a handwritten letter to legendary broadcaster Buck Martinez just before his retirement announcement. Not to plead. Not to lament. Just to say thank you — for a voice that accompanied him throughout his youth and gave him strength to overcome illness in his final years.
“Thank you for being a part of my youth,” the letter read. The letters trembled, the ink faded with time, but the emotion was overwhelming.
For many Canadians, Buck Martinez was more than just a broadcaster. He was the sound of summer evenings, the voice emanating from a radio on a windowsill, in a small kitchen, or an old garage. For the fan in this story, Buck has been there since his youth—when life was long, dreams were many, and baseball was the simplest joy.
“Back then, I listened to Buck while working the night shift,” the fan wrote. “I didn’t have a ticket to the game. I didn’t have much money. But I had my radio and his voice.”

Years passed. Work, family, responsibilities followed one another. But Buck Martinez remained there, regularly, patiently, recounting each game as if he were talking to each listener.
In the letter, the fan recounts that he has aged. His health is not what it used to be. Evenings listening to the radio now take place in more silence, with slow breathing and memories flooding back.
“My youth passed with the Blue Jays,” he wrote. “And his voice was the thread that held everything together.”
This is not a romanticization of the past. It’s a simple truth: when life changes, familiar things help people hold on. For that man, Buck Martinez was that familiar thing.
What makes the story special is that the letter wasn’t just a tribute, but also a sharing. The fan admitted he was battling illness. There were days he was exhausted. Days when he felt like giving up.
“At times like that,” he wrote, “I turn on the radio. I listen to him talk about baseball. And I feel I’m still connected to the world.”
According to those close to Buck Martinez, when he received the letter, he read it very slowly. He didn’t say anything immediately. He was silent. And then he said: “This is why I do this job.”

Throughout his career, Buck Martinez called thousands of games. He analyzed, told stories, laughed, sometimes choked up. But perhaps he never imagined that his voice could become a source of emotional support for someone during their most difficult years.
For that older fan, Buck was more than just a baseball storyteller. He was an invisible friend, appearing at the right moment, saying just enough, and transforming a game into a feeling of companionship.
The news of Buck Martinez’s retirement moved the Blue Jays community. But this letter made that emotion feel very human. It reminded them that behind the microphone was a human being, and behind each listener was a life full of ups and downs.
“Now I’m old,” the fan wrote at the end. “But I want you to know that you were there during the best years of my life. And that’s enough to make me smile whenever I remember it.”
Buck Martinez will leave the radio booth. The radio waves will eventually fall silent. But his legacy doesn’t disappear. It lives on in handwritten letters, in the memories of those who grew up with that voice, and in the simple moments baseball brought.

Perhaps no one remembers exactly how many games Buck called for.
But many will remember how many years he was with them.
The handwritten letter concludes with a short, unpretentious line:
“Thank you for being a part of my youth.”
Sometimes, that’s all a legend needs to hear.
And sometimes, that’s all a fan can give—gratitude, written in a lifetime.