Sports Broadcasting- #1
Walter Camp
Father of American Football
1899
NY Harold used Marconi's radio to broadcast America's Cup, a boat race
The Greatest Game Ever Played
~ 1958 NFL Championship Game between the Baltimore Colts (23) and NY Giants (17)
Ice Bowl
~ 1967 NFL Championship Game between Packers (21) and Cowboys (17) ~ Average wind chill for the game was around -36 F ~ Considered one of the greatest games in NFL history
Monday Night Football
~ 1970 ~ ABC began Monday Night Football telecasts ~ Successful announcing team of Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell, and Don Meredith
Texas Rangers
~ 1972 named changed from the Washington Senators to the Texas Rangers ~ Their first manager was Ted Williams
Fox
~ 1993 Fox outbid CBS and won the rights to televise NFC football ~ Fox also took John Madden and Pat Summerall
The Baseball Networks
~ 1993, baseball formed a new partnership with ABC and NBC after failure of CBS deal ~ No rights fees would be paid
ABC's Wide World of Sports
~ American sports anthology that aired on ABC on April 22, 1961 ~ Hosted by Jim McKay
Bill Stern
~ Announced first remote sports broadcast and first telecast of a baseball game ~ Colgate Sports Newsreel ~ Inaugural class of American Sportscasters Association Hall of Fame
Chicago Cubs
~ Became the first team to allow broadcasts of all of their games ~ Bert Wilson (During WWII)- "We don't care who wins as long as it's the Cubs" ~ Harry Caray- Song leader for "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" during seventh inning stretch "Cubs win, Cubs win"
Ray Scott
~ Best known for his broadcasts for the Green Bay Packers ~ Broadcast Super Bowl I and II for CBS, and "Ice Bowl"
1960 Winter and Summer Olympics
~ CBS paid for the rights to broadcast the games in the United States ~ These were the first games to be televised in North America
Jim Brown
~ Cleveland Brown RB ~ In 9 seasons, lead the league in rushing 8 times 3x MVP ~ Only runner to ever average over 100 yards/game and over 5 yards/carry for a career
October 8, 1956
~ Don Larsen's perfect game in the Yankee v. Dodgers World Series
August 26, 1939
~ First MLB game broadcast on NBC ~ Red Barber called game between Cincinnati Reds and Brooklyn Dodgers
1879
~ First big college football game Harvard v. Yale ~ Ended in a tie
June 1, 1939
~ First big tv broadcast ~ First fight ever televised between Lou Nova and Max Baer
1959
~ First blimp shot ~ CBS installed a camera on the Goodyear Blimp, which gave aerial views of the 1960 Orange Bowl football game
May 17, 1939
~ First college baseball game was televised by NBC ~ Columbia v. Princeton
Graham McNamee
~ First sports broadcaster ever ~ Not connected to a specific team but covered more than 10 different sports during career ~ First ever Rose Bowl- 1927 ~ Called WS from 1923-1934: second longest consecutive streak ~ Highlight of his career-Gene Tunney v. Jack Dempsey "(the long count)"
Phyllis George
~ First woman sportscaster ~ NFL Today in 1975, co-hosting live pregame shows before NFL games
490 BC
~ Greece v. Persia ~ Athenian runner named Pheidippides ran from Marathon to Athens (25 miles) to announce the Greek victory and instantly died of exhaustion
1874
~ Harvard accepted rugby football as its own sport ~ First intercollegiate team
1926 Washington State University
Began the first course in radio broadcasting
1922 Princeton v. Chicago Football Game
October 28, 1922 First live game to be broadcast nationwide on WEAF in NY
Yankees and Dodgers
Tended to be covered the most
John Madden
Signed a contract with Fox that would pay him $30 million over four years, making him the highest paid sportscaster of all time
Mitch Albom
"The biggest currency athletes have is celebrity" Talentless athletes (Johnny Manziel, Tim Tebow)
The Called Shot
1932 Babe Ruth supposedly pointed his bat toward the bleacher seats a moment before hitting a home run there
Clem McCarthy
America's most recognized horse race broadcaster
Davis Cup coverage
August 4, 1921 Tennis was the second sport to be carried on radio
1891
Basketball originated in Springfield, Massachusetts
Bryant Gumble
First black nonathletic sportscaster
Robin Roberts
First black woman announcer
1911
First ever broadcast of a football game, Kansas v. Missouri
Grand Prix of LeMans
First live European sports event seen by Americans
Jocko Maxwell
Former high school athlete who may have been the first black sports announcer
1869
Harvard v. Oxford rowing race on Thames River; over an estimate of 1 million people watched
Telegraph
Helped provide early reports of baseball games to subscribers around the nation
June 8, 1966
Merger agreement where NFL absorbed all eight of original AFL teams and split into American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC)
Fort Worth Cats in 40s-50s
Minor League Team for the Brooklyn Dodgers
Phillip Wrigley
One of the first MLB owners to recognize the value of live coverage
St. Louis Browns
Originated in Milwaukee as the Milwaukee Brewers, and then moved to St. Louis as the St. Louis Browns. They are currently known as the Baltimore Orioles
Dizzy Dean
Star of the first sports telecast, The Game of the Week
April 11, 1921
The world's first ever sports broadcast was made on KDKA by Florent Gibson commentating on a boxing match between Johnny Ray and Johnny Dundee
Baseball teams west of St. Louis
There were no baseball teams west of St. Louis in 40s-50s
Bob Robertson
Voice of the Tigers, was the last to voice re-creation on American radio
1895
Volleyball originated in Holyoke, Massachusetts combining characteristics of tennis and handball
July 1, 1987
WFAN is the world's first 24-hour-per-day sports talk station
Harold Arlin
World's first full-time announcer covered KDKA's first Pirates game against the Phillies
Jack Dempsey v. Georges Carpentier
~ July 2, 1921 ~ Andrew "Major" White was ringside at the fight ~ First sports event heard simultaneously on two stations: WJZ and WJY ~ They called in "the largest audience in history" with 300,000 people estimated to have heard one of the first radio broadcasts of a special event.. ~ The fight's promoter had billed the event as the "Battle of the Century" ~ More than 80,000 fans came to see the fight in person ~ First ever broadcast to a mass audience with calls of the fight relayed over a radio-phone
Pat Summerall
~ Known as NY Giants kicker and game winning 49 yard field goal ~ First sideline reporter for the very first Super Bowl ~ 22 season long partnership with John Madden
ESPN
~ Launched on September 7, 1979 ~ 30,000 viewers tuned in to witness launch of ESPN
1963 Army Navy Game
~ Lindsey Nelson was calling the game that day and the director told him they were going to attempt to replay a touchdown. "By golly, it worked." ~ Game was postponed bc JFK's assassination
Q-score
~ Measurement of familiarity and appeal of athlete names in the US ~ Higher the q-score, the more highly regarded the person is among the group of them
January 15, 1967
~ NBC and CBS televised Super Bowl I ~NFL's Green Bay Packers(35) v. AFL's Kansas City Chiefs(10)
October 22,1939
~ NBC became the first network to televise a pro football game ~ Philadelphia Eagles v. Brooklyn Dodgers
1927
~ NBC launched first coast-to-coast broadcast with coverage of the Rose Bowl (Stanford v. Alabama) ~ Babe Ruth's record of sixty home runs ~ Dempsey v. Tunny (The long count)
Joe Namath
~ Nicknamed Broadway Joe ~ Quarterback at University of Alabama and later icon for AFL and NY Jets ~ Finished career with LA Rams
Heidi Game
~ November 17, 1968 ~ AFL regular season game Oakland Raiders v. NY Jets game was running longer than expected, NBC cut away and switched to presentation of "Heidi," NBC received thousands of irate phone calls that night ~ Helped underscore the policy of all networks to carry sports events to their conclusion
Jim McKay and the 1972 Summer Olympics
~ Olympics overshadowed by the Munich massacre ~ Jim McKay had to act as news reporter; sports broadcasters can also report
Ted Husing
~ One of the first to lay ground work for modern tv and radio ~ Promoted Orange Bowl and it ended up being at a high school football field, so made it big over the radio ~ First sportscaster for CBS
CBS
~ One of the leaders in sports television (NFC football, NBA, MLB, NCAA basketball) ~ 1988, signed a five-year contract with MLB for $1.06 billion
Hail Mary
~ Pass made in desperation with only a small chance of success ~ Became widespread after 1975 NFL playoff game between Cowboys and Vikings when Cowboys QB Roger Staubach game-winning TD pass
Tommy Cowan
~ Receives credit as the World Series' first announcer ~ Sandy Hunt described the action by telephone to Cowan and repeated it word-for-word
KDKA
~ Station that broadcast the first sports play-by-play ~ Acknowledged as America's first radio station, having first signed on on November 2, 1920 ~ 1921-Began carrying Pirates games
1941
~ Ted Williams hits over .400 ~ Joe DiMaggio wins MVP for 56-game hitting streak
Al Michaels
~ Voice and face of Monday Night Football for 20 years ~ Currently at Sunday Night Football with NBC ~ Miracle on Ice- 1980 Winter Olympics U.S. v. Soviet Union ~ Loma Prieta- earthquake during game
Jack Brickhouse
~ Voice of Chicago Sports (Cubs and White Sox) ~ First sport broadcaster to have face shown on tv ~ 1981: retired from Cubs baseball and all of broadcast ~ Broadcast booth at Wrigley field named in his honor
Vin Scully
~ With L.A. Dodgers for 67 seasons-longest time any broadcaster has been with a single team in professional sports history ~ Youngest man to broadcast WS game- 25 ~"It's time for Dodgers baseball!" ~ Called highest rated MLB game in history- Game 7 Mets v. Red Sox 1986
Marty Glickman
~ Worked with NY Knicks, Giants, and Jets ~ First well-known athlete to transition from sports to play-by-play ~ With the NY Knicks for 20 years ~"Swish" ~ First NBA tv announcer ever- NY Knickerbockers(Knicks)
Red Barber
~"The Ol' Redhead" ~ One of the first big play-by-play announcers ~ Announced first MLB game ever ~ Worked with Reds, Dodgers, and Yankees ~"The bases are FOB (full of Brooklyns)" ~ Broadcast Jackie Robinson's debut
Marv Albert
~"Voice of Basketball" ~ Announced the first Knicks game at age 22 ~ Voice of the NY Knicks for 37 years ~ Currently lead announcer for NBA games on TNT ~ Covered Michael Jordan's most famous games ~ 1997 sex scandal
Jack Buck
~"Voice of St. Louis Cardinals"- 31 years ~ Worked with Harry Caray ~ Received a Purple Heart from WWII ~ Wrote and read poem "For America" ~"We will see you tomorrow night"
Mel Allen
~"Voice of the NY Yankees" ~ Hosted This Week in Baseball ~ 1960 WS: Bill Mazeroski hit walk-off ~ Plaque commemorating career at Yankee Stadium
Howard Cosell
~ABC's largest broadcaster ~"I tell it like it is" ~ Covered boxing the majority of his career (close relationship with Muhammad Ali) ~"The man they loved to hate" ~ Dec. 8, 1980: Gave report in the middle of game that John Lennon was killed
Jim Nantz
~First commentator in history to complete the broadcasting three-feat (Super Bowl, NCAA Final Four, and Masters in the span of 63 years) ~2014-Present: Lead play-by-play for Thursday Night Football