Keith Jackson stepping down

SpursDynasty

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Source: ESPN.com

NEW YORK -- Keith Jackson thinks this is the right time for him to retire.

Jackson, widely regarded as the voice of college football, has decided to stop broadcasting games.

"I'm finished with play-by-play forever," he told The New York Times.

Jackson spent some 40 years calling the action in a folksy, down-to-earth manner that made him one of the most popular play-by-play personalities in the business.

"Keith Jackson is a man of great character and a legendary broadcaster," ESPN and ABC Sports president George Bodenheimer said. "For decades, his unmistakable style defined college football for millions of fans. While we hate to say goodbye, we understand his decision and wish him the very best."

He also announced he would retire after the 1998 season, but ended up continuing with ABC Sports. He said this time is different.

"This is the perfect time," Jackson told the newspaper. "I don't want to get back into the pressure cooker of play-by-play and worry about travel. I don't want to die in a stadium parking lot."

Jackson, 77, began calling college football games with ABC in 1966. He also worked NBA, NFL games and the Olympics, but was always best known for college football.

"We very much wanted Keith to return for what would have been his 40th season," ESPN and ABC Sports executive vice president Norby Williamson said. "When he expressed to us that he was considering retirement, we repeatedly tried to convince him otherwise, but completely respect his decision. As it turns out, it's fitting that Keith's final game call was the 2006 Rose Bowl, an historic event where Keith was right where he belonged -- as the great narrator skillfully articulating the drama for a captivated audience. We are forever grateful." :sadwave:
 

buddy

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Keith Jackson (born October 18, 1928) is an American sportscaster, known for his several decades of work with the ABC television network.

Jackson, known to many as "the voice of college football," was born in Roopville, Georgia and still has a distinct Southern accent. He attended Washington State University and was a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. It was here that his career as a broadcaster began. In 1967, he became part of ABC's coverage of NCAA college football. That season, he broadcast a contest between the University of Southern California, then ranked Number 1 in the country, and their intracity arch-rivals the University of California at Los Angeles, ranked Number 2. USC won the game, beating UCLA 21-20, and took the championship of the league then known as the Pacific Eight Conference, now the Pacific Ten. Jackson would later call this game (one of several to become known as the "Game of the Century") the greatest that he had ever broadcast. USC went on to defeat Indiana University in the Rose Bowl and claim the National Championship.

Monday Night Football

In 1970 Jackson was chosen to be the first play-by-play announcer on Monday Night Football, performing this role only during the program's first season. In 1971 he was supplanted in that role by Frank Gifford, who had been hired away from rival CBS.

College

Afterwards, his association with football was entirely with the collegiate game, except from 1983 to 1985, when he served as ABC's lead voice for the ill-fated United States Football League. Jackson announced numerous other sports for ABC throughout the 1970s and '80s, including Major League Baseball, NBA basketball, boxing, auto racing, and the Olympic Games.

Jackson was involved in the ABC coverage of the 1972 Summer Olympics and continued to contribute even when an attack by Palestinian terrorists turned the coverage away from being primarily sports coverage to that of a news event. Over the years, he has been paired with a wide variety of commentators, including perhaps most notably University of Arkansas athletic director Frank Broyles, a former football coach, and pro football legend Bob Griese. For many years, he was assigned by ABC to the primary national game of the week. He is generally considered by many college football fans to be the "voice of college football"; his expressions such as "Whoa, Nellie!" and "Fum-BLE!" are often the subject of attempts at comedic imitation.

Retirement

Jackson announced his retirement from college football announcing at the end of the 1998 season and his intention to live full-time at his home in California, with his last broadcast to have been the 1999 Fiesta Bowl for the National Championship between Tennessee and Florida State. He rescinded this decision the following fall and began to do a more limited schedule of games, teamed with Dan Fouts, almost exclusively sticking to venues on the West Coast, closer to his current home in British Columbia. Jackson decided to retire for good on April 27th, 2006, with a phone call to the New York Times. "I'm finished with play-by-play forever," he stated.

Other

Jackson has had a minor career as an actor, either playing himself (as on a famous episode of Coach) or a sportscaster like himself, as in The Fortune Cookie (1966). He has also appeared in and/or narrated several sports documentaries. His play-by-play of the 1977 World Series is used in the background of the Spike Lee film, Summer of Sam (1999). Jackson once parodied his broadcast persona for a Bud Light beer commercial. His latest commercial efforts are for Shoney's, a chain of family-style restaurants well-known in the Southeast, especially in his native Georgia, and for recent "the legend of Gatorade" ads. He also participated in blending paid commercial advertisements and bona-fide sports coverage by acknowledging a joking reference to his endorsement of Gatorade during the 2006 Rose Bowl, an apparently-free product placement of Gatorade during live coverage. (Pepsi is the sponsor of another BCS game the Fiesta Bowl.) In 2006, he also was shown in a commercial for Ice Breakers' Ice Cubes with Hilary Duff, Haylie Duff, and Joey Lawrence, contributing his famous line "Whoa, Nellie!"
[edit]

Some notable games he has broadcast

* 1967: USC vs. UCLA
* January 1979: Sugar Bowl - #2 University of Alabama vs. #1 Penn State
* January 1983: Sugar Bowl - #1 Georgia vs. #2 Penn State
* November 1988: #1 Notre Dame vs. #2 USC
* 1994: Colorado at Michigan, the Westbrook Hail Mary game
* January 4, 2002: Rose Bowl - Miami (Fl) vs. Nebraska
* September 2, 2002: Auburn at USC
* November 30, 2002: Notre Dame at USC
* January 1, 2003: Rose Bowl - Wisconsin at UCLA
* January 4, 2003: Fiesta Bowl - Miami vs. Ohio State
* November 2003: Nebraska at Colorado
* September 2004: Colorado State at USC
* November 2005: "The Big Game" (Stanford vs. California)
* December 2005: Holiday Bowl - Oklahoma vs. Oregon
* January 4, 2006: Rose Bowl - Texas vs. USC

[edit]

References

* espn.com
* abcsports.com


Keithjack.jpg
 

The Judge

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hedman said:
sick of the pac 10 bias
Agreed, his call of the 2006 Rose Bowl was shameless and then at the end of the game he was tripping all over his tongue in his attempt to backtrack.

Regardless, he is one of the greats.
 
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