Longtime 670 The Score sports radio host Terry Boers dies at 75
He was not on the list.
Longtime Chicago sports radio talk show host Terry Boers, famous for the Boers & Bernstein show on 670 The Score, has died at the age of 75.
670 The Score confirmed his death Friday evening in a post on X.
"The Score lost one of our own today. Terry Boers passed away today surrounded by loved ones. Terry was one of the founding fathers of The Score and one of the most popular people on the air and in The Score hallways," operations director Mitch Rosen said in a statement. "Terry was original, funny, smart, witty and most importantly a beautiful person. Terry's family's wish is there won't be a funeral, but The Score will celebrate his life on the air next week. So today and forever, RIP Terry Boers."
Boer was one of the original hosts on The Score when it first went on air in January 1992 (originally on AM 820, before moving to AM 1160 in 1997, and then to its current home at AM 670 in 2000). He retired after 25 years on the air in January 2017.
Before joining The Score, Boers spent 20 years in the newspaper industry, including as a sports columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times. He also worked at the Lansing Sun Journal, the Chicago Heights Star, and the Detroit Free Press.
Through his years on the airwaves, he brought insight, comedy and kindness to all, as well as derision toward bad sports thoughts.
Most famously, he was co-host of Boers & Bernstein with
Dan Bernstein from Aug. 16, 1999, until Dec. 22, 2016. The program was best
known for its signature segment, "Who Ya Crappin'?" inspired by that
quote from an interview with then Bears coach Mike Ditka, in which listeners
would criticize sports figures for lies or hypocrisy.
The Terry Boers experience began well before he became a talk-show host.
As a sports writer and columnist at the Sun-Times, Boers displayed humor and wit that turned press rooms into comedy clubs. When the Illinois basketball team played at Indiana in the 1980s, sports-information assistants would make sure they were in the press room when Boers arrived to see the show.
“They said he would just blast through the doors and work the room with the best insult comedy,” said Dan Bernstein, Boers’ longtime co-host at The Score. “And you could just imagine him walking in and laying waste to the room.”
Boers died Friday from liver failure at his home in Florida, surrounded by family. Boers, who was 75, also had been battling cancer since he retired from The Score in 2017.
Though his media career began in newspapers, Boers became a radio star at The Score, where he spent 25 years. He was among its original hosts, teaming with Dan McNeil to form the “Heavy Fuel Crew” when the station launched in 1992. In 1999, management paired Boers with Bernstein on what became the longest-running sports-talk show in Chicago at the time of Boers’ retirement. Boers’ limited radio experience before The Score belied his talent.
“All he had to do was talk into the microphone when the red light went on,” Bernstein said. “He didn’t really have to know radio; he just had to be Terry.”
“The Score is not The Score without people like Terry Boers,” station vice president Mitch Rosen said.
The “Boers and Bernstein” show began in the 8 a.m.-noon slot, but upon arriving in 2005, Rosen moved it to the afternoon, where it became legendary. Segments such as “Friday Fung,” “Second Hand News” and “Who You Crappin’?” became must-listens. Both co-hosts pushed the envelope with callers and each other, often making for great radio but at times causing consternation with listeners.
“Every day was an adventure; every day was something different,” McNeil said. “Always on his toes, always the wittiest guy there.”
Boers often left colleagues in stitches on the air, such as former anchor and reporter George Ofman.
“There were times when he’d start going into his shtick when I was doing the updates,” Ofman said, “I would laugh so hard I couldn’t breathe. I was in tears.”
Boers was a sports columnist for the Sun-Times when he joined The Score. He began at the newspaper in 1980 on the sports copy desk, then took the Bulls beat in 1982. He was clever with his prose there, as well.
“I remember great lines, and he wrote one of the best,” Ofman said. “When the Bulls finally beat the Pistons in the playoffs [in 1991], he wrote, ‘May the Pistons rest in pieces.’ That was one of Terry’s great lines.”
Boers’ last media appearance was on Bernstein’s podcast on Sept. 3. They had an emotional, reflective and wide-ranging conversation, even covering Boers’ ailments.
“In hindsight, it means so much more than when we were doing
it,” Bernstein said. “There were obviously some concerns for him at the time,
but nothing urgent. I think in retrospect, it means a lot more to me to have
that time with him.”

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