New York Daily News

WHOA, NELLIE!

Keith Jackson dies,

- BY MIKE KUPPER

KEITH JACKSON, the folksy voice of college football who for decades weaved backwoods wit through Saturday afternoon ABC broadcasts, has died. He was 89.

Jackson died Friday night, according to media reports.

In a 52-year broadcasti­ng career, Jackson covered a wide-ranging array of sports for radio and TV, including a rowing competitio­n in the former Soviet Union, but he was best known as ABC’s voice of NCAA football — and for the homespun phrases he used in reporting it.

To Jackson, linemen were not guards and tackles, they were “the big uglies.” Running backs didn’t drop the ball, there was a “fuumm-bull!” Of an undersized player, he might say, “He’s a little-bitty thing, a bantam rooster. But he’s young. If he keeps eatin’ his cornbread, he’ll be man-sized some day.”

And, of course, there was “Whoa, Nellie!,” his signature phrase. Or was it? Strangers in restaurant­s, airports, stadium parking lots and downtown streets would sidle up to Jackson and bellow, “Whoa, Nellie!” Jackson, however, always maintained that he might have — might have, mind you — used the phrase a time or two early in his career but that mostly it was the work of impersonat­ors, primarily Roy Firestone, who were responsibl­e for the spread of the phrase.

“This ‘Whoa, Nellie!’ thing is overrated,” he said frequently. “There were all kinds of stories going around. People said I had a mule in Georgia named Nellie. Well, we had a mule in Georgia, but her name was Pearl.”

Despite his protests, however, Jackson enthusiast­ically proclaimed, “Whoa, Nellie!” in a beer commercial late in his career.

So entrenched in college football was he, though, that ABC wouldn’t let him retire the first time he tried. He announced before the 1998 season that it would be his last, that, at 70, he was tired of getting on airplanes. But he was back in the booth in the fall of ’99, the network having lured him with a promise of keeping him close to his Sherman Oaks home by restrictin­g his assignment­s to the Pacific time zone. He finally called it a career after describing the Texas-USC national championsh­ip game at the Rose Bowl in early 2006.

If Jackson was highly regarded by viewers and listeners, and he was, he was at least equally respected by many coaches.

“He’s my hero,” former Iowa coach Hayden Fry once told the Associated Press. He stands for all the good things associated with college football.” Added Penn State’s Joe Paterno, “Keith Jackson and college football. You can’t say one without the other.”

Jackson was born Oct. 18, 1928, in Carrollton, Ga., about 50 miles west of Atlanta, not far from the Georgia-Alabama border. He practiced broadcasti­ng as a youngster growing up on a farm there — “My grandma once told my mama, ‘The kid’s walking crazy around the cornfield, talking to himself.’ I was calling ballgames.” — but it wasn’t until he was in college at Washington State that he saw it as a possible career. And, at that, he sort of fell into it.

By then, it was the early 1950s. Jackson, after graduating from Georgia’s Roopville High School, where he played on the championsh­ip basketball team, had served a fouryear overseas stint in the Marine Corps and was attending Washington State University in Pullman, Wash., on the GI Bill, studying criminolog­y and political science. The school had its own radio station and as Jackson listened to a student broadcast of a football game, he thought, “I can do better than that.”

He said as much to the professor in charge of the broadcasti­ng program, was handed a tape recorder and told to go cover something. He chose a basketball game at Pullman High as his first assignment. “They turned the lights out at halftime,” he recalled for the Seattle Post-Intelligen­cer in 1999. “I didn’t have the foggiest idea what to do, so I just told stories.”

Whatever he did impressed the professor, and the world lost a budding criminolog­ist, gaining a future sports broadcasti­ng legend. By 1952, Jackson was calling Cougars games on the school station and, after graduating in 1954, went to work at KOMO-TV, a new ABC affiliate in Seattle, combining sports and news broadcasti­ng.

His proudest achievemen­t there was accompanyi­ng the University of Washington rowing crew to Moscow, where he did the first live sports broadcast from the thenSoviet Union, despite serious hassles over equipment, censorship and accessibil­ity to the event site. Afterward, local journalist­s told him he’d been lucky, that contempora­ries who’d tried to buck the Soviet system had disappeare­d.

Jackson joined the ABC radio network in 1965, freelancin­g TV assignment­s before settling in permanentl­y at ABC when Roone Arledge needed someone to call a parachute jumping segment for “Wide World of Sports” in 1968.

ABC quickly put him on college football and the fit, as Jackson might have said, was pert-near perfect. After announcing his retirement in 1998, he was honored wherever he went to work games. At Michigan, for instance, former coach Bo Schembechl­er presented Jackson with an autographe­d helmet and a Michigan jersey at halftime while the marching band spelled out, “THANKS KEITH.”

Jackson, of course, had his opinions on developmen­ts in the sport that he loved — he favored a playoff system over the postseason bowl system, for instance — but on the air, he kept them to himself, concentrat­ing on the action. His broadcasti­ng philosophy was a simple one: “Amplify, clarify and punctuate, and let the viewer draw his or her own conclusion.”

“If I’ve helped people enjoy the telecast, that’s fine,” he insisted. “That’s my purpose.”

He was roundly criticized — unfairly, he said — for ignoring an ugly incident late in the 1978 Gator Bowl game, when Ohio State coach Woody Hayes punched Clemson player Charlie Baumann after Baumann had intercepte­d a pass near the Ohio State sideline.

Recalling the scene for the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on in 1999, Jackson said that because the sideline was crowded with players and officials, “the fact of the matter is, I didn’t see (the punch) . ... If people go back and listen, I said, ‘Let’s look at the tape and see what happened.’ But we didn’t see the tape because the network was nickel-and-diming the operation at that time with a bunch of green kids and the tape was in New York, which did not feed to us in the booth. I saw (the punch) for the first time at noon the next day on NBC.”

Jackson rose above that incident, later winning an Emmy and being inducted into two sportscast­ing halls of fame. Besides college football, he worked college and pro basketball games, Major League Baseball, auto racing, Summer and Winter Olympics and, in 1970, was the first play-by-play announcer for NFL’s “Monday Night Football” on ABC.

It was college football, though, that set him apart. As Paterno said, “You always know it’s a big game when Keith is there.”

While at Washington State, Jackson married another student, Turi Ann Johnsen and she survives him, as do their children, Melanie Ann, Lindsey and Christophe­r, and grandchild­ren.

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