Everything about Keith Jackson totally explained
Keith Jackson (born
October 18,
1928, in
Roopville,
Georgia) is a former
American sportscaster, known for his long career with
ABC Sports television, his coverage of
college football as well as his style of folksy, down-to-earth commentary and deep voice.
Early life
Jackson was born and raised on a farm outside
Carrollton, Georgia, near the Georgia-Alabama state line. The only surviving child in a poor family, he grew up listening to sports on the radio. After a stint in the
Marines, he attended
Washington State University under the
G.I. Bill. Jackson began as a
police science major, but he became interested in broadcasting. He graduated in 1954 with a degree in Speech Communications.
Broadcast career
Though best known for his college football broadcasts, Jackson announced numerous other sports for ABC throughout his career, including
Major League Baseball,
NBA basketball,
boxing,
auto racing, and the
Olympic Games. He briefly worked
college basketball with
Dick Vitale. Jackson also served as the pregame anchor for ABC's coverage of
Super Bowl XXII in
1988.
Jackson began his career as a broadcaster at
Washington State in
1952, when he called a radio game between
Stanford and Washington State. He then worked for
KOMO-TV and Radio, an
ABC affiliate in
Seattle, from 1954 for the next ten years as co-anchor for their first news team (first co-anchor news team on the West Coast), covering Seafair hydroplane races, minor league Seattle Rainiers baseball games, and
University of Washington Huskies football games. In 1958, Jackson became the first American sports announcer to broadcast an event from the
Soviet Union, a
crew race between the Washington Huskies and a Soviet team. Despite heavy suspicion and numerous hurdles by the Soviet authorities, Jackson and his cohorts were able to cover the race: the first ever American sports victory on Russian soil. He joined ABC Sports in
1962, full time in 1964 as a radio news correspondent and later became sports director of ABC Radio West.
Jackson helped
Walter Cronkite cover the
1964 Republican National Convention in
San Francisco, California.
In the early 1960s, Jackson covered
American Football League games. In
1970, he was chosen to be the first play-by-play announcer on
Monday Night Football covering the
NFL, but he remained in that capacity only for the program's first season.
Frank Gifford was ABC's initial target but couldn't get out of his CBS contract until after the 1970 season. In
1971, however, Gifford landed the job.
Jackson was involved in the ABC coverage of the
1972 Summer Olympics and continued to contribute even when
an attack by Palestinian terrorists transformed the coverage from that of a typical sporting event to that of a greater international and historical news event. He covered a total of 10 Summer and
Winter Olympic Games.
Jackson was a regular part of ABC's popular
Wide World of Sports (WWOS), covering both popular sports and obscure events like wrist wrestling. For WWOS he covered
Evel Knievel's successful jump at
Exhibition Stadium, in
Toronto, Canada, on
August 20,
1974; as well as his spectacular
May 31,
1975 crash while attempting to jump over thirteen
double decker Routemaster buses at
London's
Wembley Stadium, prompting Jackson to exclaim, "Oh my God!". He also handled WWOS' first coverage of boxer
Sugar Ray Leonard at the North American Continental Boxing Championships on
July 26,
1975, who Jackson called a young boxer to watch.
In
baseball, Keith Jackson called (alongside
Tim McCarver) the now famous 16-inning long sixth game of the
1986 National League Championship Series between the
New York Mets and
Houston Astros.
College football
Jackson began his ABC career at a time when television play-by-play announcers didn't always have regular analysts. He would only once miss working a college season in his over 50 years, starting in 1952. Jackson was joined in the booth by
Joe Paterno for the
1974 Michigan-Ohio State game in
Columbus, while
Woody Hayes accompanied him for the
1974 Notre Dame-USC game.
In his many years covering college football, Jackson has been paired with a wide variety of color commentators, including former
Arkansas coach and
athletic director Frank Broyles (1978-1986) and pro football legend
Bob Griese (1987-1999). For many years, he was assigned by ABC to the primary national game of the week. His quirky expressions such as
"Whoa, Nellie!",
"Fum-BLE!" and
"Hold the phonnnnne!" (following a penalty flag) are often the subject of comedic imitation. Though he greatly popularized it, Jackson notes that he learned the term
"Whoa, Nellie" from earlier television announcer
Dick Lane. He has often referred to offensive and defensive line players as the
Big Uglies. Jackson is also credited with coining the nickname for
Michigan Stadium,
The Big House. In the season before his first retirement, during what was thought to be his final game at The Big House, the
Michigan Marching Band's halftime show concluded by spelling out "Thanks Keith" across the field, the 111,019 fans turned toward the
press box, stood up and cheered for the commentator, and as a part of the halftime event former Michigan coach
Bo Schembechler presented Jackson with a jersey with "The Big House" across the front and a Michigan football helmet.
In the 1990s, Jackson recorded videos for the centennial of the
Alabama Crimson Tide. In
2006, Jackson became the voice behind the
Nebraska Cornhuskers' "Tunnel Walk" video. This video is played before every home game at Memorial Stadium.
Jackson's connections to the University of Nebraska remain strong. It was Jackson himself that the university contacted when designing its new pressbox facility--Jackson's recommendation was that it needed a restroom, as few if any pressboxes had any suitable restroom facilities. When Jackson did the Nebraska/California game the following season (the debut of the Cornhuskers' new pressbox), he found a restroom with the following sign-"The Keith Jackson Memorial Bippy"; the sign was a joke from Jackson's longtime friend, Nebraska sports information director Don Bryant.
Jackson would call the 1972 USC Trojans the greatest team he ever saw. Jackson, who was in his first year in ABC football broadcasting narrating the taped highlights of the
1967 USC vs. UCLA football game, declared it many years later to be the greatest game he's ever seen.
Jackson's career wasn't free of incidents. During the 1978
Gator Bowl, Jackson missed
Ohio State Head Coach Woody Hayes' infamous punch of
Clemson defensive lineman Charlie Bauman and was unable to get a replay, leading to accusations that he was protecting the coach who was fired for the incident.
Retirement
Jackson announced his first retirement from college football at the end of the
1998 season and his intention to live full time at his home in California. Choosing the
1999 National Championship at the
Fiesta Bowl between
Tennessee and
Florida State as his last broadcast, he concluded the program by stating "Tennessee 23, Florida State 16. And so it's done. I say goodbye to all of you. God bless and good night."
He rescinded this decision the following fall and began to do a more limited schedule of games, teamed with Tim Brant and later
Dan Fouts, almost exclusively sticking to venues on the
West Coast, closer to his home in
British Columbia. One of the notable exceptions was the
2003 Michigan-Ohio State game, the 100th meeting between the two archrivals. He strongly hinted that he was interested in retiring for good after the
2005 season, telling
The New York Times, that he was feeling his age after 53 seasons. ABC tried to lure Jackson to stay, but he made up his mind. Jackson decided to retire for good on
April 27,
2006, at age 77, noting he didn't want to die in a stadium parking lot. His last game call was the
2006 Rose Bowl featuring
Texas vs.
USC.
Awards and Honors
In 1999, the
National Football Foundation awarded Jackson the Gold Medal Award, its highest honor. The same year he was inducted into the
Rose Bowl Hall of Fame. The Edward R. Murrow School of Communication at Washington State University awarded their alumnus with the Murrow Award for top leaders in the communication industry in 1999; Jackson was a charter member of the WSU Foundation, founded in 1979, provided scholarship money to the Murrow School and chaired the fund-raising drive for the school's alumni center. On
April 24,
1995, he was inducted into the
National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame, having won its National Sportscaster of the Year five successive times. The
American Football Coaches Association awarded him its
Amos Alonzo Stagg Award in 1993 as an individual "whose services have been outstanding in the advancement of the best interests of football." He was the first sports announcer to receiver the Stagg award.
Longtime
Penn State Head Coach
Joe Paterno said of Jackson: "I don't think you could say that there's any one person who isn't a coach, athletic director or administrator who has done more for college football than Keith Jackson".
Michigan Head Coach
Lloyd Carr described Jackson as "a symbol of all the good things in college football".
Film and television appearances
Jackson has had a minor career as an
actor, often either playing himself (as on an episode of
Coach) or a sportscaster like himself, as in
The Fortune Cookie (
1966). He has also appeared in and 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). In 2007, he appeared in clips and voice on the
ESPN original series,
The Bronx Is Burning, featuring clips from ABC's
Monday Night Baseball, and ABC Sports coverage of the
1977 World Series.
Jackson has appeared in numerous commercials, especially in the latter stages of his career. He once parodied his broadcast persona for a
Bud Light beer commercial, in which he played the officiating minister at a wedding, finishing with his famous line,
"Whoa, Nellie!" He also appeared in commercials for
Shoney's, a chain of family-style restaurants well-known in the Southeast, especially in his native Georgia. Most recently, Jackson has appeared in "The Legend of
Gatorade" ads, which he humorously alluded to during his live coverage of the
2006 Rose Bowl. In
2006, he also was shown in a commercial for
Ice Breakers' Ice Cubes with
Hilary Duff,
Haylie Duff, and
Joey Lawrence, again contributing his famous
"Whoa, Nellie!"
Jackson was portrayed by actor Shuler Hensley in the 2002 made-for-cable film "
Monday Night Mayhem", which aired on TNT. This film told the story of the initial seasons of Monday Night Football.
Personal
Jackson is a long-time resident of
California. He and his wife Turi Ann, have three grown children and homes in the
Los Angeles, California area and
Pender Harbour, British Columbia,
Canada.
Notable broadcasts
- 1971 Daytona 500 - Richard Petty won his 3rd Daytona 500.
- 1972 NBA Finals - Los Angeles Lakers won the title
- 1972 Summer Olympics- U.S. swimmer Mark Spitz wins seven gold medals
- 1975 Indianapolis 500 - Bobby Unser won the race that was shortned by rain.
- 1976 Summer Olympics - Bruce Jenner wins the decathlon
- 1977 World Series - New York Yankees vs. Los Angeles Dodgers (including Reggie Jackson's 3 homers on 3 pitches)
- October 2, 1978: AL East Playoff - New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox (Bucky Dent HR)
- December 29, 1978: Gator Bowl Ohio State vs. Clemson (Woody Hayes' infamous last game)
- January 1, 1979: Sugar Bowl - #2 University of Alabama vs. #1 Penn State
- 1980 Winter Olympics - U.S. speed skater Eric Heiden wins five gold medals
- January 1, 1983: Sugar Bowl - #1 Georgia vs. #2 Penn State
- 1984 Summer Olympics - the USA basketball team, led by Michael Jordan and Patrick Ewing, wins gold
- October 27, 1984: West Virginia 17-No. 19 Penn State 14
- 1986 National League Championship Series - New York Mets vs. Houston Astros (Inc. 16 inn. Game 6)
- May 1987: NASCAR The Winston all-star race won by Dale Earnhardt
- December 5, 1987: NCAA Basketball, Indiana Hoosiers vs. Kentucky Wildcats, Bank One/Big Four Classic (with Dick Vitale)
- November 26, 1988: #1 Notre Dame vs. #2 USC
- February 19, 1989: NCAA Basketball, Indiana Hoosiers vs. Michigan Wolverines. Jay Edwards' last second shot to beat Michigan (with Dick Vitale.)
- September 16, 1989: #1 Notre Dame vs. #2 Michigan
- November 16, 1991: #2 University of Miami vs. #1 Florida State University (a.k.a. "Wide Right I")
- January 1, 1992: #2 University of Washington vs. #3 University of Michigan (UW Huskies won national championship)
- January 1, 1993: Sugar Bowl - #2 University of Alabama vs. #1 University of Miami
- September 24, 1994: Colorado at Michigan, the Westbrook Hail Mary game
- November 30, 1996: #1 Florida vs. #2 Florida State University
- January 2, 1997 Sugar Bowl for the National Championship: #1 Florida State, #3 Florida
- January 1, 1998 Rose Bowl Michigan 21, Washington State 16
- January 4, 1999: Fiesta Bowl - Tennessee, Florida State (The first year of the Bowl Championship Series)
- January 4, 2002: Rose Bowl - Miami (FL) vs. Nebraska
- September 2, 2002: Auburn at USC
- November 30, 2002: Notre Dame at USC
- January 3, 2003: Fiesta Bowl - Miami (FL) vs. Ohio State
- November 22, 2003: Ohio State at Michigan
- November 28, 2003: Nebraska at Colorado
- September 11, 2004: Colorado State at USC
- October 30, 2004: Oklahoma at Oklahoma State
- October 8, 2005: Oklahoma vs. Texas
- November 19, 2005: "The Big Game" (Stanford vs. California)
- December 29, 2005: Holiday Bowl - Oklahoma vs. Oregon
- January 4, 2006: Rose Bowl - Texas vs. USC
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