Moore to Say

~Thoughts, reactions and comments from the world of sports and beyond ~
Mon Aug 31

His vision is what you see

-By Mike Moore-

DETROIT — Mark Iacofano has the best job in the world, just ask any of his friends.

“They tell me that all the time,” Iacofano says with a smile and a quick shake of the head. “They think I work about four hours a day and see every Tigers’ game of the season. It’s pretty funny.”

And accurate — somewhat.

“I certainly work more than they think,” Iacofano says, standing just outside Comerica Park on a warm and sunny July afternoon. It’s roughly 4:30 p.m., and he “punched in” more than three hours ago to begin a routine he’s very accustom to, one he’s done nearly every day of summer since 1998.

You may have heard him mentioned before, although his face is as unrecognizable as his last name can be difficult to pronounce. But without his work, without him doing the job his friends think so highly of, well, those next-day discussions about last night’s game would be limited to only those lucky enough to have been in attendance.

~~The man behind the curtain~~

Iacofano has been to thousands of Red Wings games during his career, never once, as he explained, “have I sat inside Joe Louis to watch.” Instead, during those winter months he holds down the same seat he is on this July 8 afternoon, in the far side of the FOX Sports Detroit production truck.

His job title is producer, but in reality he’s a maestro, conducting his grand opera in front of hundreds of thousands of viewers on a nightly basis.

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Mark Iafocano

Mark Iacofano has produced Tigers and Red Wings games since
1997 for Fox Sports Detroit.

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“In a way, my vision is what people watching at home see,” said Iacofano, a Lake Orion resident who’s been with FS Detroit since its inception in 1997 and produces Red Wings and Tigers games. “People don’t realize the work that goes into putting a game on the air. From the office personal, to the stage manager to the commentators to the people in the truck, it’s a complete team effort every time.”

But he’s the leader, the man with the “C” on his shirt, if you will.

For a 7:05 p.m. game, Iacofano is usually at Comerica by 1 p.m.

“We’ll fire up the truck, camera’s and anything else we need,” he explained. “Whatever preproduction material we’re going to use, we’ll start working on. We build graphics, gather sound bites from players and coaches, line up highlights and introductions, prepare the audio clips … Essentially everything we are going to possibly use during the broadcast is done beforehand.”

Most of that is completed before the crew of 30-40 takes its lunch break around 4:30 p.m.

After dining, things kick into another gear.

“I’ll talk with Mario (Impemba) and Rod (Allen) about the pregame elements, what they’re going to discuss and the kinds of graphics they’ll need,” Iacofano said. “We’ll rehearse the pregame show, dot our i’s and cross all our t’s.”

~~Still gets that rush~~

Iacofano has been in this position more than a thousand times, a with every passing second, the moment that FS Detroit theme song will be cued draws closer. The adrenaline and nerves are still there, though, even some 11 summers after the first broadcast.

“Once that red light goes on you get that rush,” Iacofano said, smiling. “We want people at home to feel like they have the best seat in the building.”

While he oversees the activities of 20-30 people in the production truck, cues replays, graphics, stat boxes, camera angles, audio and everything in between, Iacofano summed up his job as simply as he could by saying, “I try to make Mario and Rod look as good as possible.”

He’s in constant communication with the tandem throughout the game. He’ll inform them of graphics about to appear on screen, describe when or what type of replay is set to roll, or do his best to accommodate a request from the broadcast booth.

“Anything and everything we do well starts with Mark,” Impemba said. “The toughest part of a broadcast for us is juggling all the different things we have to take care of, on top of talking about a baseball game. He’s the guy that keeps us focused and on track. He keeps this ship steering in the right direction.”

“He gets it,” Allen said of Iacofano. “A great leader. A great communicator, and he understands what it takes to do this. … We’re at a point now where he’ll know exactly what kind of replay to send me without me even asking.”

~~From the field to the truck~~

“I always wanted to be a major league player,” Iacofano explained of his career, which included time on the University of Dayton team. “Then when I was 22 I essentially had a scout tell me I couldn’t run and I couldn’t hit.”

With one door closing, the window of television soon fired open.

He spent the last two years of college taking courses in television production and received Bachelor of Arts degree in Communications. He worked in a number of small markets at first, using internships and less glamorous jobs as away to move ahead.

“You have to cut your teeth and learn the business,” he laughed. “Experience is everything.”

And it’s been the experiences he’s enjoyed over the years that make the long nights and road trips — Iacofano is one of eight staff members to travel with the team — worth every minute.

“I’ll never forget (Justin) Verlander’s no-hitter a couple season’s ago and how crazy it was trying to juggle replays and capture the emotion on the field,” Iacofano said. “In 2006 when they clinched the playoffs in Kansas City, I was talking to Mario and Rod and trying to figure out the locker room scene and who we’d interview next. … Sometimes the more hectic things are the more fun it all is.”

He spoke with a certain pride while describing the job he has. He also did so in a way that gave some credence to his friends and just how they think of him.

“It’s tough to argue their premise,” Iacofano said, before pausing. “I feel like I do have the best job in the world.”



This story was originally published with C&G News Aug. 5. To see that version, please
Click here

Mike Moore can be reached at mjm12@albion.edu


Sun May 17

A great man, A great loss

-By Mike Moore

We all knew him in our own unique way, yet in a way unique to only him, we all knew him exactly the same.

He was the face of the parish, the character behind what Divine Child stood for. He was the old man with the quick step, the raspy voice, the white hair and that unmistakable wry smile.

If you stepped out of line, he was there to put you back in place. If you needed a shoulder to lean on or an ear to talk to, his door was always open. If you had a joke to tell, even if he was the punch line, he’d share a laugh, then follow it with a quick jab to the shoulder.

He came to Divine Child in February of 1961, known then as Reverand Herman Kucyk, quickly appointed to Associate Pastor. In 1976 he became the face, voice and symbol of Dearborn’s most revered parish, named Pastor of Divine Child, designated as the No. 1 Falcon. By 1990 he was called Monsignor, but he was known for so much more.

As pastor he would watch over, mentor and guide Divine Child. It was his home. his calling, his passion. He traveled the grade school as would a proud grandfather, looking over the generations to come with an unyielding gratification. He paced the high school, evaluating his students like a builder would a nearly completed house, so much work, time and effort already dedicated, but the finishing touches still to come.

If you didn’t think he cared about every last detail, just take a walk to the parking lot. An unbearable sun beating down, the cruelest of summer days, and there he was. A straw hat to shade his face, a cane to brace his step, stubbornly making sure every last inch of the refurbished parking lot was done correctly.

If you thought money was tight, take a look at the state-of-the-art gymnasium, the tuition he battled to keep reasonable, the teachers who spent a lifetime working under his lead.

There are a million ways to describe Fr. K, yet none of them does justice to who he was and what he meant to the parish that housed him. Whether he performed a baptism, celebrated a wedding, gave the sacrament of reconciliation or just shook your hand and asked how life was going, he did it with a genuine spirit few could match.

He personified what Divine Child stood for, his faith never yielding, his dedication unwavering. He was, in every sense of the word, a true Catholic, one who loved his job, cherished his calling, and spread his faith.  He inspired those who looked up to him, gained the respect of those who worked for him and probably loved the fear he put in those who didn’t exactly know him. Sure, he could be rough around the edges, intimidating to talk to at times, but deep down, for those who knew him best, he embodied the Christ he loved.

Born in Montreal, Wis. in 1926, before he was Fr. K, he was a member of the United States Navy and an employee of Ford Motor Company before entering Sacred Heart Seminary. Following his June 1, 1957 ordination, he served as an associate pastor at St. Isaac Jogues Parish in St. Clair Shores from 1957 to 1961; came to Divine Child until 1966, was assigned to Our Lady of Good Counsel in Plymouth for a year before heading to St. Michael Parish in Monroe (1966-67); and St. Robert Bellarmine Parish, in Redford Township (1967-71).

His home was, and forever will be Divine Child, though.

Whether it was pacing the sidelines of a football game, eating lunch with students during fifth hour or just checking up on his gardens on the campus grounds, he was the most recognizable and most respected Divine Child man there ever was.

For 83 years he served his faith. For the last 52, he did it from a pulpit where all could hear and all could embrace. At times his homilies may have drifted from course, but they always came straight from the heart. His services may have been quicker than most, but you left feeling inspired, as if that Sunday morning was hand-delivered from the God he loved.

There is no doubt Divine Child has suffered a great loss. While Fr. K was less visible in his time since retiring, his presence was never in doubt. The keys to the parish were handed over, but that stubborn old boss, in one way or another, was still in charge.

Somehow, at 83, he was down to earth enough to relate to those his age, yet hip enough to still be cool to those generations younger, and he had the respect of everyone in between.

It was a certain honor to talk to him, and if he knew who you by name, your smile was impossible to hide.

He loved the Blessed Mother, which, in a way, is fitting that he left this earth on the day his high school celebrated May Crowning.

Over the past few years his health had deteriorated. He was a far cry from the man he once was. Once seemingly immortal, like the trees he so often cared for, you couldn’t help but think he’d be around forever. But as the weeks and months passed, that quick step grew slower, that raspy voice suddenly sounded weaker — immortal he was not.

Yet now, as his life on earth has come to an end, it’s the beginning of something new we celebrate and rally around. His earthly sufferings have passed, his seat in God’s kingdom now occupied.

When he’s laid to rest, his grave will yield January 10, 1926 – May 15, 2009. But what should, and will forever stand out, is not the dates that define when his life began and ended, but that little dash that tells the story of everything he did and everyone he led. 

It’s hard to imagine Divine Chile without thinking of Fr. K, hard to envision the red, black and grey without picturing that smiling old man. But as the parish, school and community he helped shape will forever live on, so to will the spirit he spent a lifetime establishing.

Mike Moore is a 2001 Divine Child graduate, a Sports Writer for C & G Publishing in Warren and a play-by-play commentator for JTV in Jackson. You can reach Mike at mjm12@albion.edu.

 

 

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Please contact Mike Moore at mjm12@albion.edu or (313) 770-6365.