Ray Scott (sportscaster): Difference between revisions
Moving from Category:Golf commentators to Category:American golf commentators using Cat-a-lot |
|||
(27 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{short description|American sportscaster}} |
{{short description|American sportscaster (1919–1998)}} |
||
{{About|the sportscaster|other people named Ray Scott|Ray Scott (disambiguation)}} |
{{About|the sportscaster|other people named Ray Scott|Ray Scott (disambiguation)}} |
||
{{infobox person |
{{infobox person |
||
| name = Ray Scott |
| name = Ray Scott |
||
| image = |
| image = Ray Scott (sportscaster).jpeg |
||
| image_size = |
| image_size = |
||
| caption = |
| caption = |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
| birth_place = [[Johnstown, Pennsylvania]], U.S. |
| birth_place = [[Johnstown, Pennsylvania]], U.S. |
||
| death_date = {{death date and age|1998|3|23|1919|6|17}} |
| death_date = {{death date and age|1998|3|23|1919|6|17}} |
||
| death_place = [[Minneapolis |
| death_place = [[Minneapolis, Minnesota]], U.S. |
||
| occupation = [[Sportscaster]] |
| occupation = [[Sportscaster]] |
||
| education = |
| education = |
||
| spouse = Bonnie Scott (2nd)<br>Eda Scott (1st) |
| spouse = Bonnie Scott (2nd)<br />Eda Scott (1st) |
||
| parents = |
| parents = |
||
| children = 5 |
| children = 5 |
||
| relatives = [[Hal Scott]] (brother) |
| relatives = [[Hal Scott]] (brother) |
||
}} |
}} |
||
'''Ray Eugene Scott''' (June 17, 1919 – March 23, 1998) was an |
'''Ray Eugene Scott''' (June 17, 1919 – March 23, 1998) was an American [[sportscaster]], best known for his broadcasts for the [[Green Bay Packers]] of the [[National Football League]] (NFL). His brother [[Hal Scott]] was also a sportscaster. |
||
==Early life and career== |
==Early life and career== |
||
A native of [[Johnstown, Pennsylvania]], Scott began his broadcasting career on local radio in the late 1930s. (Fellow announcer Bill McColgan, in his introduction of |
A native of [[Johnstown, Pennsylvania]], Scott began his broadcasting career on local radio in the late 1930s. (Fellow announcer [[Bill McColgan]], in his introduction of Scott for the radio broadcast of the [[1957 NFL Championship Game]], stated that Scott started broadcasting when he was only 17 years old.) Following a stint in the U.S. Army during [[World War II]], he moved to Pittsburgh, where he did play-by-play for [[Carnegie Mellon Tartans football|Carnegie Tech]] and [[Pittsburgh Panthers football|University of Pittsburgh]] football and [[Duquesne Dukes|Duquesne University]] basketball. |
||
==Green Bay Packers and CBS Sports== |
==Green Bay Packers and CBS Sports== |
||
Scott's first NFL broadcasts came in [[1953 NFL season|1953]] over the [[NFL on DuMont|DuMont]] network; three years later he began doing [[play-by-play]] on Packers broadcasts for [[NFL on CBS|CBS]],<ref name="greatscott!">[https://www.nytimes.com/1998/03/29/sports/ray-scott-78-voice-of-packers-during-glory-seasons-in-the-60-s.html?pagewanted=1 "Ray Scott, 78, Voice of Packers During Glory Seasons in the 60's," ''The New York Times'', Sunday, March 29, 1998.]</ref> |
Scott's first NFL broadcasts came in [[1953 NFL season|1953]] over the [[NFL on DuMont|DuMont]] network; three years later he began doing [[play-by-play]] on Packers broadcasts for [[NFL on CBS|CBS]],<ref name="greatscott!">[https://www.nytimes.com/1998/03/29/sports/ray-scott-78-voice-of-packers-during-glory-seasons-in-the-60-s.html?pagewanted=1 "Ray Scott, 78, Voice of Packers During Glory Seasons in the 60's," ''The New York Times'', Sunday, March 29, 1998.]</ref> |
||
Scott was paired primarily with [[Tony Canadeo]] on Packers telecasts. As the team's play-by-play announcer, Scott broadcast [[Super Bowl I]] and [[Super Bowl II|II]] for CBS, along with the brutally cold "[[1967 NFL Championship Game|Ice Bowl]]" NFL championship game of [[1967 NFL season|1967]]. It was during this period that his terse, minimalist style (e.g. : "[[Bart Starr|Starr]] . . . [[Boyd Dowler|Dowler]] . . . Touchdown, Green Bay!") developed its greatest following. It also earned him a reputation as " |
Scott was paired primarily with [[Tony Canadeo]] on Packers telecasts. As the team's play-by-play announcer, Scott broadcast [[Super Bowl I]] and [[Super Bowl II|II]] for CBS, along with the brutally cold "[[1967 NFL Championship Game|Ice Bowl]]" NFL championship game of [[1967 NFL season|1967]]. It was during this period that his terse, minimalist style (e.g. : "[[Bart Starr|Starr]] . . . [[Boyd Dowler|Dowler]] . . . Touchdown, Green Bay!") developed its greatest following. It also earned him a reputation as the "King of Understatement". Scott was also known for only occasionally using team names while broadcasting, more often identifying them by their city. |
||
In [[1968 NFL season|1968]], CBS ended its practice of assigning dedicated announcing crews to particular teams. Scott became the play-by-play announcer on CBS' lead NFL broadcast team. He was partnered with [[Paul Christman]] in 1968 and 1969 and [[Pat Summerall]] from 1970 to 1973. During his tenure with CBS he called four [[Super Bowl]]s, seven [[NFL Championship Game|NFL]] (later [[NFC Championship Game|NFC]]) championship games, and the [[1961 Orange Bowl]]; he also called major college bowl games for [[ABC Sports|ABC]] and [[NBC Sports|NBC]] during this period. |
In [[1968 NFL season|1968]], CBS ended its practice of assigning dedicated announcing crews to particular teams. Scott became the play-by-play announcer on CBS' lead NFL broadcast team. He was partnered with [[Paul Christman]] in 1968 and 1969 and [[Pat Summerall]] from 1970 to 1973. During his tenure with CBS he called four [[Super Bowl]]s, seven [[NFL Championship Game|NFL]] (later [[NFC Championship Game|NFC]]) championship games, and the [[1961 Orange Bowl]]; he also called major college bowl games for [[ABC Sports|ABC]] and [[NBC Sports|NBC]] during this period. |
||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
CBS dismissed Scott in [[1974 NFL season|1974]],<ref name="greatscott!"/> replacing him with his color commentator, Summerall. He was subsequently employed as a local radio announcer by the [[Kansas City Chiefs]] (1974–75), [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] (1976–77), and [[Minnesota Vikings]] (1978–82). Scott also served as a narrator for the ''[[NFL Films Game of the Week]]'' in the 1970s and called play-by-play of [[Phoenix Suns]] basketball in 1974–75, syndicated broadcasts of [[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State]] football from 1975–81, the [[United States Football League|USFL]]'s [[Arizona Wranglers]] in 1983 and 1984, and the [[Portland Breakers]] in the 1985 season. In [[1988 NFL season|1988]], Scott was one of several veteran announcers to call some September NFL telecasts for [[NFL on NBC|NBC]], while many of the network's regular broadcasters were working at that year's [[1988 Summer Olympics|Summer Olympics]] in [[Seoul]]. |
CBS dismissed Scott in [[1974 NFL season|1974]],<ref name="greatscott!"/> replacing him with his color commentator, Summerall. He was subsequently employed as a local radio announcer by the [[Kansas City Chiefs]] (1974–75), [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] (1976–77), and [[Minnesota Vikings]] (1978–82). Scott also served as a narrator for the ''[[NFL Films Game of the Week]]'' in the 1970s and called play-by-play of [[Phoenix Suns]] basketball in 1974–75, syndicated broadcasts of [[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State]] football from 1975–81, the [[United States Football League|USFL]]'s [[Arizona Wranglers]] in 1983 and 1984, and the [[Portland Breakers]] in the 1985 season. In [[1988 NFL season|1988]], Scott was one of several veteran announcers to call some September NFL telecasts for [[NFL on NBC|NBC]], while many of the network's regular broadcasters were working at that year's [[1988 Summer Olympics|Summer Olympics]] in [[Seoul]]. |
||
Scott also called [[UCLA Bruins football|UCLA]], [[University of Arizona Wildcats football|Arizona]], [[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota]], and [[Nebraska Cornhuskers football|Nebraska]] football in the '80s |
Scott also called [[UCLA Bruins football|UCLA]], [[University of Arizona Wildcats football|Arizona]], [[Arizona State Sun Devils football|Arizona State]], [[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota]], and [[Nebraska Cornhuskers football|Nebraska]] football in the '80s; broadcast [[college basketball]] and [[golf]] at various points in his career; and teamed with [[Patrick Ryan (sportscaster)|Patrick Ryan]] while doing high school and college football in and around [[Billings, Montana]]. From 1986 to 1988, he called the annual [[Peach Bowl]] game for the [[Mizlou Television Network]]; at the same time, he was a sportscaster at [[KTVK]] in Phoenix, having wintered in Arizona since 1968.<ref>{{cite news|work=[[USA Today]]|first=John|last=Egan|title=Vince Lombardi, Bart Starr, Joe Paterno, Red Grange, Sandy Koufax, Harmon Killebrew and Bud Grant - the names trigger dozens of stories.|date=September 25, 1987}}</ref> In the later years of his life he hosted a syndicated talk show on the short-lived SportsAmerica Radio Network. In addition to sportscasting, Scott also read newscasts at [[WCCO-FM]] in [[Minneapolis, Minnesota|Minneapolis]] in the late 1970s and early '80s. He also broadcast Saint John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota in the late 1980s and thru the 1990s. |
||
Scott died in 1998 at age 78 in Minneapolis following a long illness. He was survived by his second wife, Bonnie, and his first wife, Eda and their five children. |
Scott died in 1998 at age 78 in Minneapolis following a long illness. He was survived by his second wife, Bonnie, and his first wife, Eda and their five children, including a son Patrick Scott, who resides in Ramsey County, [[Minnesota]] and broadcasts with Sheriff Bob Fletcher during their "Live On Patrol" podcast that streams on [[Facebook]] and [[YouTube]] each Friday night. |
||
==Awards and honors== |
==Awards and honors== |
||
Scott was twice named National Sportscaster of the Year by the [[National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association]], was given regional awards by that organization 12 times in four different states, and was inducted into its [[NSSA Hall of Fame|Hall of Fame]] in 1982. Posthumous honors include induction into the [[American Sportscasters Association]] Hall of Fame in 1998, receipt of the [[Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award]] from the [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]] in 2000, and induction into the [[Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame]] as a contributor in July 2001. |
Scott was twice named National Sportscaster of the Year by the [[National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association]], was given regional awards by that organization 12 times in four different states, and was inducted into its [[NSSA Hall of Fame|Hall of Fame]] in 1982. Posthumous honors include induction into the [[American Sportscasters Association]] Hall of Fame in 1998, receipt of the [[Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award]] from the [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]] in 2000, and induction into the [[Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame]] as a contributor in July 2001.<ref>{{Cite web | url = https://www.packers.com/history/hof/ray-scott | title = Ray Scott | last = Christl | first = Cliff | author-link = Cliff Christl | website = Packers.com | access-date = September 20, 2023 | archive-date = June 8, 2023 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230608040459/https://www.packers.com/history/hof/ray-scott | url-status = live }}</ref> |
||
Scott was ranked 28th in the American Sportscasters Association's list of the Top 50 Sportscasters of All Time in 2009.<ref>http://www.americansportscastersonline.com/top50sportscasters.html</ref> His bare-bones style has inspired many sportscasters. |
Scott was ranked 28th in the American Sportscasters Association's list of the Top 50 Sportscasters of All Time in 2009.<ref>{{cite web|title=American Sportscasters Association's Top 50 Sportscasters of All Time|url=http://www.americansportscastersonline.com/top50sportscasters.html|website=American Sportscasters Online|access-date=February 10, 2022}}</ref> His bare-bones style has inspired many sportscasters. |
||
==References== |
==References== |
||
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
{{S-start}} |
{{S-start}} |
||
{{Succession box|before=[[Jack Buck]]|title=''[[NFL on CBS]]'' lead play-by-play announcer |years=1969–1973 |after=[[Pat Summerall]]}} |
{{Succession box|before=[[Jack Buck]]|title=''[[NFL on CBS]]'' lead play-by-play announcer |years=1969–1973 |after=[[Pat Summerall]]}} |
||
{{succession box | before=First<br>[[Jack Buck]]| title=[[List of Super Bowl broadcasters|Super Bowl television]] play-by-play announcer ([[National Football Conference|NFC package carrier]]) |years=[[Super Bowl I|1966]] (with [[Jack Whitaker]] for the second half)-[[Super Bowl II|1967]]<br>[[Super Bowl VI|1971]]–[[Super Bowl VIII|1973]] | after=[[Jack Buck]]<br>[[Pat Summerall]]}} |
{{succession box | before=First<br />[[Jack Buck]]| title=[[List of Super Bowl broadcasters|Super Bowl television]] play-by-play announcer ([[National Football Conference|NFC package carrier]]) |years=[[Super Bowl I|1966]] (with [[Jack Whitaker]] for the second half)-[[Super Bowl II|1967]]<br />[[Super Bowl VI|1971]]–[[Super Bowl VIII|1973]] | after=[[Jack Buck]]<br />[[Pat Summerall]]}} |
||
{{succession box|before=[[Harry Caray]] and [[Curt Gowdy]] (Games 1–2, 6–7)<br>[[Phil Rizzuto]] and [[Joe Garagiola]] (Games 3–5) | title=[[World Series]] network television play-by-play announcer (with [[Vin Scully]]) | years=[[1965 World Series|1965]] | after=[[Curt Gowdy]]}} |
{{succession box|before=[[Harry Caray]] and [[Curt Gowdy]] (Games 1–2, 6–7)<br />[[Phil Rizzuto]] and [[Joe Garagiola]] (Games 3–5) | title=[[World Series]] network television play-by-play announcer (with [[Vin Scully]]) | years=[[1965 World Series|1965]] | after=[[Curt Gowdy]]}} |
||
{{S-end}} |
{{S-end}} |
||
{{Green Bay Packers |
{{Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame}} |
||
{{Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award}} |
{{Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award}} |
||
Line 63: | Line 63: | ||
[[Category:1998 deaths]] |
[[Category:1998 deaths]] |
||
[[Category:United States Army personnel of World War II]] |
[[Category:United States Army personnel of World War II]] |
||
[[Category:American Basketball Association |
[[Category:American Basketball Association announcers]] |
||
[[Category:American radio sports announcers]] |
[[Category:American radio sports announcers]] |
||
[[Category:American television sports announcers]] |
[[Category:American television sports announcers]] |
||
[[Category:College basketball announcers in the United States]] |
[[Category:College basketball announcers in the United States]] |
||
[[Category:College football announcers]] |
[[Category:College football announcers]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:American golf commentators]] |
||
[[Category:Green Bay Packers announcers]] |
[[Category:Green Bay Packers announcers]] |
||
[[Category:High school basketball announcers in the United States]] |
[[Category:High school basketball announcers in the United States]] |
||
[[Category:High school football announcers in the United States]] |
[[Category:High school football announcers in the United States]] |
||
[[Category:Kansas City Chiefs |
[[Category:Kansas City Chiefs announcers]] |
||
[[Category:Major League Baseball broadcasters]] |
[[Category:Major League Baseball broadcasters]] |
||
[[Category:Milwaukee Brewers announcers]] |
[[Category:Milwaukee Brewers announcers]] |
||
[[Category:Minnesota Twins announcers]] |
[[Category:Minnesota Twins announcers]] |
||
[[Category:Minnesota Vikings |
[[Category:Minnesota Vikings announcers]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:NBA broadcasters]] |
||
[[Category:National Football League announcers]] |
[[Category:National Football League announcers]] |
||
[[Category:National Hockey League broadcasters]] |
[[Category:National Hockey League broadcasters]] |
||
Line 83: | Line 83: | ||
[[Category:Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award recipients]] |
[[Category:Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award recipients]] |
||
[[Category:Phoenix Suns announcers]] |
[[Category:Phoenix Suns announcers]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Pittsburgh Panthers football announcers]] |
||
[[Category:Tampa Bay Buccaneers announcers]] |
|||
[[Category:United States Football League announcers]] |
[[Category:United States Football League announcers]] |
||
[[Category:Washington Senators (1961–1971) |
[[Category:Washington Senators (1961–1971) announcers]] |
||
[[Category:Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame]] |
Latest revision as of 11:02, 15 November 2024
Ray Scott | |
---|---|
Born | Ray Eugene Scott June 17, 1919 Johnstown, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Died | March 23, 1998 Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. | (aged 78)
Occupation | Sportscaster |
Spouse(s) | Bonnie Scott (2nd) Eda Scott (1st) |
Children | 5 |
Relatives | Hal Scott (brother) |
Ray Eugene Scott (June 17, 1919 – March 23, 1998) was an American sportscaster, best known for his broadcasts for the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League (NFL). His brother Hal Scott was also a sportscaster.
Early life and career
[edit]A native of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Scott began his broadcasting career on local radio in the late 1930s. (Fellow announcer Bill McColgan, in his introduction of Scott for the radio broadcast of the 1957 NFL Championship Game, stated that Scott started broadcasting when he was only 17 years old.) Following a stint in the U.S. Army during World War II, he moved to Pittsburgh, where he did play-by-play for Carnegie Tech and University of Pittsburgh football and Duquesne University basketball.
Green Bay Packers and CBS Sports
[edit]Scott's first NFL broadcasts came in 1953 over the DuMont network; three years later he began doing play-by-play on Packers broadcasts for CBS,[1]
Scott was paired primarily with Tony Canadeo on Packers telecasts. As the team's play-by-play announcer, Scott broadcast Super Bowl I and II for CBS, along with the brutally cold "Ice Bowl" NFL championship game of 1967. It was during this period that his terse, minimalist style (e.g. : "Starr . . . Dowler . . . Touchdown, Green Bay!") developed its greatest following. It also earned him a reputation as the "King of Understatement". Scott was also known for only occasionally using team names while broadcasting, more often identifying them by their city.
In 1968, CBS ended its practice of assigning dedicated announcing crews to particular teams. Scott became the play-by-play announcer on CBS' lead NFL broadcast team. He was partnered with Paul Christman in 1968 and 1969 and Pat Summerall from 1970 to 1973. During his tenure with CBS he called four Super Bowls, seven NFL (later NFC) championship games, and the 1961 Orange Bowl; he also called major college bowl games for ABC and NBC during this period.
Baseball broadcasting
[edit]Scott was the lead television and radio announcer for Major League Baseball's Minnesota Twins from 1961 to 1966, calling the 1965 World Series on NBC television alongside Vin Scully, the voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Scott's famous minimalist style was evident in his call of Lou Johnson's home run that broke a scoreless tie and proved to be the game winner ("Kaat's pitch, uh-oh, it's a long fly down the left field line. Home run"). After Sandy Koufax struck out his tenth hitter for the final out of the series, Scott stated "every pitcher likes to end a game with a strikeout. But this was not just any game. It was the 7th game of the World Series." After leaving Minnesota he called games for the Washington Senators in 1970–71 before returning to the Twins as a part-time announcer in 1973–75. Scott also called Milwaukee Brewers telecasts in 1976–77.
Later life and career
[edit]CBS dismissed Scott in 1974,[1] replacing him with his color commentator, Summerall. He was subsequently employed as a local radio announcer by the Kansas City Chiefs (1974–75), Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1976–77), and Minnesota Vikings (1978–82). Scott also served as a narrator for the NFL Films Game of the Week in the 1970s and called play-by-play of Phoenix Suns basketball in 1974–75, syndicated broadcasts of Penn State football from 1975–81, the USFL's Arizona Wranglers in 1983 and 1984, and the Portland Breakers in the 1985 season. In 1988, Scott was one of several veteran announcers to call some September NFL telecasts for NBC, while many of the network's regular broadcasters were working at that year's Summer Olympics in Seoul.
Scott also called UCLA, Arizona, Arizona State, Minnesota, and Nebraska football in the '80s; broadcast college basketball and golf at various points in his career; and teamed with Patrick Ryan while doing high school and college football in and around Billings, Montana. From 1986 to 1988, he called the annual Peach Bowl game for the Mizlou Television Network; at the same time, he was a sportscaster at KTVK in Phoenix, having wintered in Arizona since 1968.[2] In the later years of his life he hosted a syndicated talk show on the short-lived SportsAmerica Radio Network. In addition to sportscasting, Scott also read newscasts at WCCO-FM in Minneapolis in the late 1970s and early '80s. He also broadcast Saint John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota in the late 1980s and thru the 1990s.
Scott died in 1998 at age 78 in Minneapolis following a long illness. He was survived by his second wife, Bonnie, and his first wife, Eda and their five children, including a son Patrick Scott, who resides in Ramsey County, Minnesota and broadcasts with Sheriff Bob Fletcher during their "Live On Patrol" podcast that streams on Facebook and YouTube each Friday night.
Awards and honors
[edit]Scott was twice named National Sportscaster of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association, was given regional awards by that organization 12 times in four different states, and was inducted into its Hall of Fame in 1982. Posthumous honors include induction into the American Sportscasters Association Hall of Fame in 1998, receipt of the Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award from the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2000, and induction into the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame as a contributor in July 2001.[3]
Scott was ranked 28th in the American Sportscasters Association's list of the Top 50 Sportscasters of All Time in 2009.[4] His bare-bones style has inspired many sportscasters.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Ray Scott, 78, Voice of Packers During Glory Seasons in the 60's," The New York Times, Sunday, March 29, 1998.
- ^ Egan, John (September 25, 1987). "Vince Lombardi, Bart Starr, Joe Paterno, Red Grange, Sandy Koufax, Harmon Killebrew and Bud Grant - the names trigger dozens of stories". USA Today.
- ^ Christl, Cliff. "Ray Scott". Packers.com. Archived from the original on June 8, 2023. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
- ^ "American Sportscasters Association's Top 50 Sportscasters of All Time". American Sportscasters Online. Retrieved February 10, 2022.
- 1919 births
- 1998 deaths
- United States Army personnel of World War II
- American Basketball Association announcers
- American radio sports announcers
- American television sports announcers
- College basketball announcers in the United States
- College football announcers
- American golf commentators
- Green Bay Packers announcers
- High school basketball announcers in the United States
- High school football announcers in the United States
- Kansas City Chiefs announcers
- Major League Baseball broadcasters
- Milwaukee Brewers announcers
- Minnesota Twins announcers
- Minnesota Vikings announcers
- NBA broadcasters
- National Football League announcers
- National Hockey League broadcasters
- People from Johnstown, Pennsylvania
- Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award recipients
- Phoenix Suns announcers
- Pittsburgh Panthers football announcers
- Tampa Bay Buccaneers announcers
- United States Football League announcers
- Washington Senators (1961–1971) announcers
- Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame