Keith Jackson, 89, announcer with 'Whoa, Nelly!' call, dies
He was not on the list.
Keith Jackson laid down the soundtrack to Saturday for a
generation of college football fans with phrases such as his signature “Whoa,
Nelly!” From the World Series to the Olympics, NFL to NBA, he did it all over
five decades as a sportscaster, but most appropriately his final assignment
before retiring 12 years ago was one of the greatest college football games
ever.
Jackson died Friday. He was 89.
A statement by ESPN, which consolidated with ABC Sports,
Jackson’s longtime employer, announced his death Saturday. No cause was given.
He was a longtime resident of Sherman Oaks, California, and died near his home
there.
A native of west Georgia, near the Alabama border, his
smooth baritone voice and use of phrases like “big uglies” for linemen gave his
game calls a familiar feel.
“He was one of our giants,” longtime broadcaster Brent
Musburger told The Associated Press. “He could do anything and loved doing it.”
Jackson might be best known for his “Whoa, Nelly!”
exclamation, but he didn’t overuse it. Borrowed from his great-grandfather, a
farmer, the phrase also part of a commercial Jackson did for Miller Lite in the
mid-’90s. But it was no catchphrase.
“He never made anything up,” Musburger said. “That’s how
Keith talked.”
In a Fox Sports interview in 2013, Jackson said his folksy
language stemmed from his rural upbringing and he became comfortable with the
usage through the years.
“I would go around and pluck things off the bush and see if
I could find a different way to say some things. And the older I got the more
willing I was to go back into the Southern vernacular because some of it’s
funny,” Jackson said.
ESPN “College GameDay” host Rece Davis, who grew up in
Alabama, said listening to Jackson assured him that it was OK for a national
broadcaster to sound Southern.
“Some people become the voice of the sport through their
expertise, which Keith certainly had. But it’s almost as if the good Lord
created that voice, which sounds like what red clay ought to sound like if it
could talk, to be the perfect voice for college football,” Davis told the AP.
Jackson is a member of the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame,
and called more Rose Bowl games, 15, than any other announcer.
“When you heard his voice, you knew it was a big game,” said
Bob Iger, chairman and chief executive of The Walt Disney Co., which owns ESPN.
Jackson’s death comes just three weeks after that of another
sportscasting titan — Dick Enberg, known for his own excited calls of “Oh, my!”
during a 60-year career.
Kirk Herbstreit was among the college football broadcasters
paying tribute to Jackson on social media.
“Can close my eyes and think of so many of his special
calls. Thank you Keith for all the memories and the grace in which you provided
them,” Herbstreit posted on Twitter.
After serving four years in the Marine Corps, Jackson
broadcast his first college football game in 1952 as an undergraduate at
Washington State. He worked in radio and television before joining ABC Sports
in 1966.
Jackson first announced his retirement in 1998 but returned
to work. He retired for good after the 2006 Rose Bowl, when he called Texas’
upset of Southern California for the BCS championship on Vince Young’s
last-minute touchdown scramble.
“Fourth-and-5. The national championship on the line right
here,” Jackson said right before Young took the snap on that memorable play.
“He’s going for the cornerrrr. He’s got it! Vince. Young. Scores.”
The Rose Bowl stadium’s radio and TV booths were renamed in
his honor two years ago. He is in the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame for his
contributions to the New Year’s Day game, which is he credited with nicknaming
“The Granddaddy of Them All.”
Jackson was also the first play-by-play announcer on ABC’s
“Monday Night Football” telecasts before being replaced in the program’s second
season by Frank Gifford.
He called multiple World Series and baseball All-Star games,
and was ABC’s lead NBA play-by-play announcer. He worked college basketball
with Dick Vitale, and covered 10 Olympics, calling swimming, track and field,
basketball, speedskating and ski jumping.
Musburger recalled doing the radio play-by-play for the 1986
National League championship series between the Mets and Astros when Jackson
was on the television call ABC. The series ended in the Astrodome with a
dramatic, 16-inning victory in Game 6 by the Mets.
“Keith was in the television booth right next to me,”
Musburger said. “I’ll never forget when the game was over, Keith’s hand, and I
didn’t know whose hand it was, but it came around the corner extension into the
radio booth and he offered me a vodka after the game to celebrate what we had
been through.”
Desmond Howard, who returned a punt for a touchdown at
Michigan in one of Jackson’s best-known calls, tweeted that he had a hard time
expressing how much Jackson meant to him, his alma mater and college football.
“May his family find some comfort in knowing how much joy he
brought us for so many years and that his legacy endures,” Howard said.
Jackson is survived by his wife of 63 years, Turi Ann.
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