Sportscaster Chris Schenkel dies at 82

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-- Sportscaster Chris Schenkel, whose easygoing baritone won over fans during a more than six-decade broadcasting career in which he covered everything from bowling to the Olympics, died Sunday following a long battle with emphysema. He was 82.

Schenkel's wife, Fran, said she and the couple's two sons were at her husband's side when he passed away early Sunday at Lutheran Hospital in Fort Wayne, Ind., where he had been hospitalized for two weeks after undergoing surgery for a bleeding ulcer.

``He was a very, very sincere, loving man who loved what he did,'' said Fran Schenkel, noting that they celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in January. Schenkel's radio and television career included virtually every major sports competition and several pioneering broadcasts.

He was the first to cover the Masters Tournament on television, in 1956; the first to call a college football game coast to coast on ABC; and the first to serve as live sports anchor from the Olympics, in Mexico City in 1968.

His career highlights included calling gymnast Nadia Comaneci's perfect 10 at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal, and calling the 1958 NFL championship game between the Baltimore Colts and New York Giants.

He was also the longtime voice of the Professional Bowlers Association, entertaining a generation of viewers with his Saturday afternoon broadcasts.

George Bodenheimer, the president of ESPN, Inc. and ABC Sports, called Schenkel a pioneering sportscaster and a ``true gentlemen.''

``Everyone at ABC and ESPN mourns the loss of a great friend and colleague. Chris was a pioneer in sports television and was the pre-eminent play-by-play announcer to a generation of sports fans,'' Bodenheimer said in a statement. ``More importantly, he was a true gentleman, beloved by all. He treated everyone with respect and friendship.''

Schenkel was born Aug. 21, 1923, on his parents' farm in Bippus, Ind., one of six children. His parents, second generation German immigrants, managed a grain and feed business.

He attended Purdue University and fought in the Philippines during World War II and later in Korea, as an infantry platoon leader. He returned home to find a radio job in Richmond, Ind., before moving into television in Providence, R.I.

In 1947, he assumed TV play-by-play duties for Harvard University football. Five years later, he began a 13-year run as the television voice of the New York Giants.

Schenkel also had a long association with the Indianapolis 500. During the 1971 race, Schenkel, astronaut John Glenn and Tony Hulman, the late owner of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, were passengers in the Dodge Challenger pace car when it skidded into a bleacher full of photographers.

Twenty-two people were injured, including Schenkel.

Schenkel was inducted into 16 halls of fame, including the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters and College and Pro Football halls, and he won an Emmy Award for Lifetime Achievement in 1993.

During the past couple of years, Fran Schenkel said her husband received numerous letters from soldiers serving in Iraq whom she said apparently had seen some of his film appearances. Aside from his work on sports documentaries, Schenkel portrayed himself in several films, including the 1996 comedy ``Kingpin.''

``They must have been showing a lot of his films in Iraq. We got a lot of mail from the soldiers over there. They'd ask for a picture and we'd send them and write back to the boys,'' Fran Schenkel said. ``He felt very good about it.''

In addition to his wife, Schenkel is survived by sons Ted and John, daughter Tina and several grandchildren.
 

Pujo21

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I will always remember Chris Schenkel. As a kid , him doing The NBA on ABC, who could forget The Firestone from Akron. College football with Bud Palmer and the Gillette Scoreboard Halftime and wrap up.
I will miss him. The specialty of growing up wit Chris Schenkel, Jim McKay. The Masters. Wide World of Sports. The Olympics.

All made special by Chris Schenkel. He will be missed.


Man these were sports announcers. Almost incomparable !
 

maverick2112

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I remember him doing the game of the century........1971 OU vs. Nebraska.........#1 vs. #2.........Great game........listening to him and Bud Wilkinson
 

THE HITMAN

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I had the pleasureof meeting him(and Billy Welu) many years ago when he was doing the bowlng broadcasts. Now both have passed. Two of life's great gentlemen. He even wanted to know if I had a good seat for the show, if I didn't, he would find me one. I will never forget that, although, like I said, it was many moons ago when I was a young pup.
 

Sun Tzu

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He did the 1969 Texas-Arkansas game and the 1966 Michigan State-Notre Dame game as well. these clowns today could learn a few things.
 

pt1gard

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Bill Montgomery to Chuck Dicus sun tzu and James Street to Cotton Speyer .... Mildren and Tagge, Mav .... Great great games, guys--dead on, 2 of best I have ever seen hands down! ... My Shenkel story is a simpler one, he put out a CBB mag one year and boy did i cherish it ... I saved some money, it had color pics, info, the whole shebang ... I left it in public unguarded for a moment and someone kiped it, i was crushed. For some reason I thought that was the best thing going during that window of my life. Funny what you remember. But Chris's pic was on it and he had lotsa comments, and it was done up super fancy.

God rest his soul, he seemed like a geniuine nice guy.

take care
gregg


#5
College Football's 100 Greatest Games
Texas vs. Arkansas, 1969

53 Veer Pass

Write up by Pete Fiutak
Texas 15Arkansas 14 December 6, 1969
It was No. 1 Texas, winners of 18-straight vs. No. 2 Arkansas, winners of 15-straight in the showpiece game in college footballs 100-year anniversary. It was a game that received almost unprecedented national hype when it was moved from October 18th to December 6rh to give it more of a national audience. It worked as the move made it the focus of the entire sporting world doing a television rating of a 50 share. In other words, half the TV sets in the country were on this game. The game was given even a loftier status when a helicopter carried in President Richard Nixon, who had said he would name the winner of this game the national champion.

Arkansas took a 14-0 lead, and then Texas quarterback James Street began a great fourth quarter by running for a 42-yard touchdown and converted the two-point conversion. On fourth and three late in the game, Street hit Randy Peschel for a 44-yard play called 53 veer pass. The pass was a shock from the hard-core running team and wouldve caused colossal controversy if it didnt work. Jim Bertelson scored on a two-yard run to tie the game. The conversion from Happy Feller put Texas up 15-14 with just under four minutes to play. Arkansas wasn't finished as the Hogs marched down the field as the it looked like the game would come down to a game-deciding field goal attempt. But the Longhorns won the game, and the national title, when they intercepted a Bill Montgomery pass with 1:22 to play on the UT 21. Texas went on to win the Cotton Bowl over Notre Dame and finished the season No. 1 but after this game, President Nixon handed over a national championship trophy to Texas in their locker room. Arkansas lost to Ole Miss in the Sugar Bowl.

Historical Significance
Many would argue that the 1971 game between Nebraska and Oklahoma was the Game of the Century, but that was helped by the hype generated by this classic game. On the key pass play of the game, it was risky for head coach Darrel Royal to make the call, but it worked out perfectly. These were two evenly matched teams playing up to their full capabilities. They also did it with the whole world watching.



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#3
College Football's 100 Greatest Games
Nebraska vs. Oklahoma, 1971

"Man, woman and child I never thought I would live this long to see this kind of a football game."

Write up by Pete Fiutak
Nebraska 35...Oklahoma 31 November 25, 1971
When enlisting the various opinions regarding what the the best game of the 20th Century was, the overwhelming choice was this one. Some even suggested that it would be nuts if this game wasn't number one

This classic contest fell to the third slot for three reasons. 1) It didn't have the controversy or the heart-stopping finish of the top two games. 2) The top two games on the list may have changed the history of college football and 3) The two choices were simply better games.

It was No. 1 Nebraska traveling to face No. 2 Oklahoma with the defending national champion Huskers coming in on a 29-game winning streak on Thanksgiving day and all the sports world watching. America, 55 million homes, were tuned in. The importance of this game was measured by the hype as the excitement for this game was building for months. Week after week, both teams kept bombing their opponents as the two were headed on a collision course for the Thanksgiving showdown. The closest anyone had come to beating Nebraska was Colorado. The Buffaloes lost 31-7. USC gave Oklahoma its biggest scare. The Trojans lost 33-20. Historical Significance
For months, the hype for this game was more than simply fodder for sports fans. It became a national event, and the game itself more than lived up to the hype. By many opinions, this remains the Game of the Century.


The Husker offense came into this game having scored no less than thirty points in its previous ten games while the defense led the nation. The Sooners had the No. 1 offense in the country with a lightning fast wishbone offense, coached by offensive coordinator Barry Switzer, averaging 45 points a game. These were the two best teams in college football playing at their very best in a heavyweight bout for the ages.

Both teams went three and out to start the game. After the first OU series, the Sooner punt went to the most electrifying player in college football, Johnny Rodgers. Rodgers fielded the punt on his own 28 where he was met by several Sooners. Somehow, he broke free as seven Sooners were by him as he passed the 31. After a brilliant juke and a sensational cutback, followed by a clip that wasn't called, Rodgers tore off past midfield and after another clip, he was gone. Nebraska radio play-by-play man Lyell Bremser had the call for the ages, "Holy moly. Man, woman and child did that put 'em in the aisles." The same could be said for the rest of the game.

The Sooner offense would march as it was able to gain yards on the great Husker defense, but didn't have much to show for it. OU came away with a field goal on one drive while a Greg Pruitt fumble, he of the 9.5 yards per carry average, stalled another. The Huskers would capitalize when Jeff Kinney punched it in from one-yard out for a 14-3 lead.

But the Sooners would come back as quarterback Jack Mildren rolled them down the field capped by his three-yard touchdown run. After a missed Husker field goal, the Sooners rolled back down the field, but a Tim Welsh fumble would cost them the drive. With :29 to play in the first half, Oklahoma had the ball on its own 33-yard line when the offense suddenly turned into the fun n' gun Sooners. Not fearing the pass, Nebraska covered OU's lone wide receiver, Jon Harrison, man-to-man with Bill Kush...and no safety help. Harrison made an over-the-shoulder catch on the Husker 30. Kush's helmet flew off on the tackle. On the following play, Mildren noticed Kush was still having problems putting his helmet back on and went right back at him hitting Harrison for a 24-yard touchdown pass to take a 17-14 lead into halftime. It was the first time the Huskers were behind all year.

In the second half, the fumbles continued to haunt the Sooners as Mildren fumbled the ball away at midfield for their third lost fumble of the game. The wishbone was working on the No. 1 defense, but the fumbles were killing them. Nebraska quarterback Jerry Tagge took advantage as he ran the option for 32 yards to set up Kinney's second touchdown run of the game. When they got the ball back again, the Huskers utilized their superstar as Tagge connected with Rodgers on two passes to get down to the OU one where Kinney punched in his third touchdown run to take a 28-17 lead. Then the Sooners struck.

With the wishbone bogging down, it was third and five on the OU 33. Mildren ran to his left, but he pitched the ball to Harrison who was running the opposite way. Harrison then let it fly to Al Chandler who caught the ball at the Husker 45, broke a tackle, then took it down to the 16 for a 41-yard play. Mildren closed out the third quarter with a touchdown run to get the Sooners to within four.

The wishbone finally got rolling as they were able to march down to the Husker 23. Mildren threw his second touchdown pass of the day to Harrison as he was wide open coming across the goal line to give the Sooners a 31-28 lead.

With 7:05 to play in the game the Huskers were 74-yards away. Slowly but effectively, the Huskers marched. On third-and-eight on the OU 48, Tagge dropped back to pass, eluded one defender scrambling to his right then hit Rodgers on a curl pattern for the first down...and maybe the ball game. Rogers dipped and dove his way on two straight running plays to get down to the 15. It was then up to Kinney who went back to work carrying it four straight times finishing with a touchdown. On the third of those carries, Kinney fumbled the ball but it was correctly ruled that he was down. After the touchdown, Lyell Bremser proclaimed, "Man, woman and child I never thought I would live this long to see this kind of a football game."

The Sooners had one final chance. With the ball on their own 17 and just under two minutes to play, Mildren had Harrison wide open at midfield, but the pass was overthrown. On third and six, Larry Jacobson sacked Mildren to make it fourth and 14. Mildren scrambled but was smothered by Jacobson and Rich Glover to give the Huskers the win.

The Huskers would go on to the Orange Bowl and blowout No. 2 and undefeated Alabama 38-6 to win their second straight national title. Oklahoma beat Auburn 40-22 in the Sugar Bowl


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if you guys want the link to 100 best game's ever, here it is ...

http://www.collegefootballnews.com/Top_100_Games/Top_100_Games_3.htm
 
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Another Steve

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I remember watching him doing Bowling after saturday morning League. We would watch the Tourney and eat, nothing else to do in November in Minot, North Dakota.
 
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