Sunday, August 18, 2019

Jack Whitaker obit

Hall of Fame broadcaster Whitaker dies at 95

 He was not on the list.


NEW YORK -- Jack Whitaker, whose Hall of Fame broadcasting career ranged from the first Super Bowl to Secretariat's Triple Crown to short essays from major sporting events, died Sunday morning, CBS reported.

The network said Whitaker died of natural causes in his sleep in Devon, Pennsylvania. He was 95.

Whitaker, a Philadelphia native who was wounded in France seven weeks after the D-Day invasion, began his broadcast career at WCAU-TV in Philadelphia and spent 22 years for CBS Sports. He worked for ABC from 1982 in the news and sports divisions and was part of the network's Olympics coverage in 1984 and 1988.

"Jack Whitaker was one of broadcasting's most respected, elegant and knowledgeable commentators whose legendary career spanned a half century and so many significant events. His reporting skills and poignant essays graced productions of the Olympics, ABC's Wide World of Sports and ABC News and he helped shape so much of the sports coverage that fans are accustomed to today. Our condolences to his wife, Patricia, and the Whitaker family," ESPN said in a statement.

Whitaker had been the only living play-by-play announcer from the first 21 Super Bowls.

"I grew up watching him deliver contemplative and contextual prose with his famous short essays, bringing class and dignity to his industry,'' Jim Nantz, the lead CBS Sports announcer, said in a statement. "I spoke to him this week after hospice came to his home, and his mind was still brilliantly sharp right to the end.''

CBS Sports chairman Sean McManus said Whitaker's writing, presence on air and humanity were unmatched.

"His unique perspective on sports, ranging from horse racing to golf to NFL football, was extraordinary,'' McManus said.

Whitaker won three Emmy Awards for Outstanding Host or Commentator in 1979, for writing in 1990 and the Lifetime Achievement award in 2012. The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia named Whitaker their Person of the Year in 1981 and inducted him into their Hall of Fame in 2003.


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