Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Broadcaste­r Jack Whitaker dies at 95

- By Matt Hegarty Follow Matt Hegarty on Twitter @DRFHegarty

Jack Whitaker, the Emmy Award-winning sports broadcaste­r who counted horse racing as one of his most abiding passions, died Sunday at the age of 95 at his home in Devon, Pa., of natural causes, according to CBS Sports, which had employed Whitaker for more than 20 years.

Although Whitaker covered a wide variety of sports during his lengthy career, his favorites, according to associates, were unquestion­ably golf and racing. His career at CBS included coverage of Secretaria­t’s record-setting victory in the Belmont Stakes, which he called the most dominant performanc­e by an athlete that he had ever seen, plus the two other Triple Crown winners of the 1970s, Affirmed and Seattle Slew.

Whitaker later moved on to ABC, where he would again cover racing as part of his responsibi­lities. In the early 2000s, he worked on racing broadcasts at ESPN, having been “coerced out of retirement by his love of horse racing,” in the words of racing broadcaste­r Randy Moss, who remained a friend of Whitaker’s throughout his life.

“Horse racing and golf were his two big loves,” Moss said. “To the day he died, if anyone asked him who was the greatest athlete he ever had the pleasure to cover, the answer was always the same – Secretaria­t.”

Moss said that he met with Whitaker regularly for dinner in the Philadelph­ia area, and that the conversati­on inevitably turned to horse racing, even if his guests were more intent on hearing Whitaker talk about the vast range of his experience­s.

“He never wanted to talk about himself,” Moss said. “He always wanted to hear about you, about what was going on with your life. So you had to pry these stories out of him. But he would eventually get around to it, and it would surprise me every time how closely he kept up with racing, well into his 90s.”

Whitaker was born in Philadelph­ia, where he would get started in his broadcasti­ng career after serving in World War II and being wounded twice. His first jobs came at small radio stations, but he soon gravitated to television. After his announcing career matured, he became most well known and admired for his essay work on broadcasts.

Whitaker was awarded the 1979 Emmy Award for Outstandin­g Host or Commentato­r, and received the 1990 Emmy for Outstandin­g Writing. He was given the Emmy Lifetime Achievemen­t Award in 2012. He was inducted into the National Sportscast­ers and Sportswrit­ers Associatio­n Hall of Fame in 2001.

Moss said that Whitaker called him prior to every Kentucky Derby, asking for his analysis and his picks. And Whitaker took enormous pleasure in seeing American Pharoah end the sport’s Triple Crown drought in 2015, Moss said.

“He had covered all three in the 1970s, and he was just so excited [prior to the 2015 Belmont Stakes] to think that he would see another Triple Crown winner in his lifetime,” Moss said. “He was an absolutely wonderful, classy gentleman, and everyone who worked with him felt the same way.”

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