Miami Herald

College basketball broadcaste­r Billy Packer dies at 82

- BY DES BIELER

Billy Packer, a longtime college basketball analyst who was a broadcast-booth fixture with the NCCA’s “March Madness” for more than 30 years as the championsh­ip tournament became one of the premier events in U.S. sports, died Thursday at a hospital in Charlotte. He was 82.

His son Mark said Packer had been hospitaliz­ed for the past three weeks and died of kidney failure.

Packer became part of the fabric of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament from 1975 to 2008 — first with NBC until 1981 and then with CBS. His instant insights, sharpedged opinions and deep knowledge of basketball created a distinctiv­e brand of commentary alongside broadcast partners Dick Enberg and Jim Nantz.

Packer also could be a divisive figure with a reputation as being too brusque as a color commentato­r and too stingy with praise.

After he stepped down in 2008, many sportswrit­ers noted his contributi­ons to college basketball, helping boost the profile of the NCAA’s national championsh­ip tournament along with other well-known announcers such as Dick Vitale. The tributes, however, were tempered by reality checks about Mr. Packer’s perceived shortcomin­gs in the booth.

Writing in Salon in 2008, sports journalist King Kaufman described Packer as “grumpy, imperious” and often seen as too much of a booster for the Atlantic Coast Conference, which includes Packer’s alma mater, Wake Forest University, where he played point guard in the 1960s.

As George Mason made a stunning run to the Final Four in 2006, Packer received backlash for having said the tournament should not have let in as many mid-major teams.

In 1996, after referring to Georgetown guard Allen

Iverson as “a tough monkey” during a game broadcast, Packer said he “meant no offense” and “was not apologizin­g” because, he claimed, his remark was not related to Iverson being Black. But Packer sent an apology to in 2000 to two female Duke students who accused him of making sexist comments when they were checking credential­s before a game at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Sean McManus, the chairman of CBS Sports, said Mr. Packer was “synonymous with college basketball for more than three decades” and “analyzed the game with his own unique style, perspectiv­e and opinions, yet always kept the focus on the game.”

In response to detractors, Packer once replied that he was “often wrong, but never in doubt.”

Among his signature calls was “Simon says championsh­ip,” as Arizona’s Miles Simon clutched the ball while the seconds ticked off in his Wildcats’ overtime win over Kentucky in the 1997 national

title game.

“When College Hoops meant much more than just March Madness to even casual fans,” Pac-12 Network announcer Brian Webber tweeted, “Billy Packer was synonymous with the sport on network TV.”

Packer was “a huge voice in college basketball as it gained national popularity,” tweeted Sports Illustrate­d’s Pat Forde.

Anthony William Paczkowski was born Feb. 25, 1940, in Wellsville, N.Y., to a family deeply rooted in college sports. His father was a standout athlete in football, basketball and baseball at St. Lawrence University and was head basketball coach at Lehigh University from 1950 to 1966.

Packer, who changed his last name, attended Wake Forest from 1958 to 1962 and was part of two ACC titles and a Final Four appearance in his senior year. (Wake Forest lost to Ohio State 84-68 in the semifinals.)

He worked as an assistant coach at Wake Forest before beginning his broadcasti­ng career in 1972 in Raleigh as a fill-in color analyst for a locally aired ACC game. Packer became a regular on the broadcast team the next season.

He joined NBC in 1974 and called his first Final Four in 1975 — with UCLA beating Kentucky 92-85.

Packer was also part of the broadcast team in 1979 when Magic Johnson’s Michigan State team beat Larry Bird’s Indiana State squad in the title game 75-64. The game remains the highest-rated game in college basketball history with an estimated 35.1 million viewers.

“And then college basketball just sort of took off with Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, and that became, I think, the catalyst for college basketball fans to just go crazy with March Madness,” Mark Packer, a host of college sports-oriented TV and radio shows on the ACC Network, told the Associated Press.

In 1993, Packer received a Sports Emmy for Outstandin­g Sports Personalit­y, Studio and Sports Event Analyst. Other career honors include the Curt Gowdy Award from the National Basketball Hall of Fame and inductions into Halls of Fame relating to his connection­s with Wake Forest, North Carolina sports and the Polish American community.

Packer’s wife, the former Barbara Sucansky, died last year. Besides his son Mark, survivors include son Brandt and daughter Liz Kimberly; and four grandchild­ren.

Following his broadcasti­ng career, Packer worked in real estate, started a vaping business and did tax advising. In a 2019 interview with the Athletic, Packer called broadcasti­ng basketball “always a hobby, not a livelihood” and said he put down the microphone on his own terms.

“There’s a point where you say, ‘OK, I’ve enjoyed my run, and now it’s time to go back and do the other things I enjoy,’” he said. “The last game I’ve seen in person was the last game I broadcast.”

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY AP file, 2006 ?? Billy Packer, left, with CBS announcer Jim Nantz, won an Emmy award and covered 34 Final Fours for NBC and CBS.
MICHAEL CONROY AP file, 2006 Billy Packer, left, with CBS announcer Jim Nantz, won an Emmy award and covered 34 Final Fours for NBC and CBS.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States