Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

It was a big-time college game when ‘Whoa, Nellie!’ rang out

- By Richard Goldstein

Keith Jackson, ABC’s signature voice of college football, remembered for his love of the game’s pageantry and his Georgia-rooted, country boy flourishes on autumn Saturdays through five decades, died Friday. He was 89.

In a statement on Twitter Saturday, Robert A. Iger, chief executive of the Walt Disney Co., which owns ABC, confirmed Jackson’s death.

“For generation­s of fans, Keith was college football,” Iger said.

Jackson worked at 10 Summer and Winter Olympics and on “ABC’s Wide World of Sports.” He was the play-byplay man for the inaugural season of NFL “Monday Night Football” and was at the microphone for baseball, pro and college basketball, and auto racing.

But he was best known for ranging the collegiate football map, from Ann Arbor to Tuscaloosa, from Columbus to Happy Valley, home of PennState.

“You always know it’s a big game when Keith’s there,” Joe Paterno, the Penn State coach, once said.

Jackson had the same reputation among his colleagues in the booth. As former quarterbac­k Bob Griese, Jackson’s color commentato­r for many years, recalled: “At our first game, he said to me, ‘All right, what do you want to do?’ I said: ‘You’re the guy who’s been here. You’re Mr. College Football.’”

Even after decades in the job, Jackson retained an oldfashion­ed, wide-eyed love for the college game.

“The NCAA can make anybody cynical,” Jackson once told Sports Illustrate­d. “But I’m not. It’s still fun to see new generation­s enjoy the game peaceably. I get there an hour and a half before the game and watch the bands rehearse, the people carry on. You let it seep into you.”

The National Sportscast­ers and Sportswrit­ers Associatio­n, now known as the National Sports Media Associatio­n, named Jackson sportscast­er of the year five consecutiv­e times, from 1972-1976.

Jackson once told The New York Times how broadcaste­r Ted Husing inspired his breezy style, advising him: “Never be afraid to turn a phrase. If you can say something in such a way that’s explanator­y, has flavor and people can understand it, try it. If it means quoting Shakespear­e or Goethe, do it.”

He was more partial to the lingo of his native rural South.

Jackson’s “Whoa, Nellie!” punctuatin­g an exciting play was his best-remembered good ol’ boy touch, though he maintained that he didn’t use it all that often.

He said he had a mule named Pearl while growing up on a Georgia farm but attributed the expression to his great-grandfathe­r Jefferson Davis Robison, who evidently plowed many a field holding the reins of a mule.

“He was a farmer and he was a whistler,” Jackson told The Los Angeles Times in 2013. “He loved two phrases: ‘Dad gummit’ and the other was‘ Who a Nellie.’”

Jackson informally christened the University of Michigan’s cavernous stadium at Ann Arbor “The Big House”; he relished broadcasti­ng the Rose Bowl game, “the granddaddy of ‘em all”; and he admired the enormous linemen, who were “the Big Uglies in the trenches.”

Keith Max Jackson was born Oct. 18, 1928, in the western Georgia town of Roopville, and he grew up nearby, just outside Carrollton.

He joined the Marines as a teenager, then attended Washington State University in Pullman, Wash., receiving a degree in broadcast journalism in 1954. Jackson spent 10 years at the ABC affiliate KOMO in Seattle in news, sports and production, became sports director of ABC Radio West, then began broadcasti­ng college football for ABC Sports in 1966.

When ABC’s “Monday Night Football” was introduced by Roone Arledge in 1970, Jackson was named the play-by-play broadcaste­r to work alongside Howard Cosell and Don Meredith, but a year later Arledge replaced him with a glamorous name, former New York Giants star Frank Gifford.

Jackson returned to broadcasti­ng college football and teamed with Bill Russell onNBA games.

Jackson was considered well prepared and accurate, but amid the plaudits he was also remembered for a tumultuous moment’s action that he missed. It happened at the December 1978 Gator Bowl game between Ohio State and Clemson.

With about two minutes remaining and Clemson leading, 17-15, a Tigers player, Charlie Bauman, intercepte­d a pass and went out of bounds in front of the Ohio State bench. Woody Hayes, the Buckeyes coach and one of college football’s biggest names, slugged him. An ABC camera showed the blow, but neither Jackson nor his color commentato­r, Ara Parseghian, were looking at the monitor.

ABC showed a replay, but it was from a different camera angle and did not capture the punch. Jackson signed off at the game’s end, Clemson having run out the clock, without reporting on the punch, which was seen by millions on television. Ohio State fired Hayes the next day.

Jackson, who lived in Southern California, had planned to retire after the 1998 season, but changed his mind when ABC suggested that he concentrat­e on Pacific 10 games so he could remainclos­e to home.

“For generation­s of football fans, Keith was college football.” Robert Iger on Keith Jackson, pictured

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