Friday, January 29, 2010

My Top 10 Color Analysts Of All-Time

My Top 10 Color Analysts Of All-Time
M.D. Wright
1.29.10


***EDITOR'S NOTE: As part of the continuing series of listing "Favorites" and sticking with the sports theme, I hereby submit my Personal Top 10 for Color Analysts in all sports.


This is a tough list to compose. I've been watching sports since late 1984 and been listening to the announcers pretty much the entire time. My list is personal and may reflect certain biases, but again, this is a dialogue-starter, not a column written in absolutes. It's all in fun and each one of these analysts have brought something different to the table that I have admired over the years.


Here's the list:


1. BILL RAFTERY.
Those of us who live in (ORIGINAL -- not this bloated BS that has Marquette, DePaul and Cincinnati involved somehow) Big East country know him well, as he was the coach at Seton Hall from 1970-1981. He has been the New Jersey Nets color analyst since then (until a couple of years ago) and predominantly does college basketball for ESPN during the regular year (mostly Big East Conference games, aka the best conference in the nation) and for CBS Sports during March Madness, which is when Raftery gets even better, if it were possible.


For me, it all started this night in January 1988 at Fitzgerald Field House. My dad and I were watching this game and I went absolute nuts. Other than Darryl Dawkins on a couple of occasions -- I hadn't seen anyone do what Jerome Lane did here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTn_9k-GBzQ

"SEND IT IN, JEROME!!!"


And I would be remiss if I didn't mention some of Raft's go-to phrases during games:
To begin all college games after the tip-off: 
"And Verne Lundquist... the Huskies go... MANTOMAN!!!"


To begin all Syracuse games where the Orange's opponents win the tip: 
"And Sean McDonough, Jay Bilas... Syracuse goes... with a little 2-3 zone... BUT WITH MANTOMAN PRINCIPLES!!!"


Whenever a big man throws down a great dunk:
"SEND IT IN _____________ !!!"


For a player who shows tremendous moxie and cool under pressure:
"A LITTLE... ONIONS!!!" ("A DOUBLE ORDER!!!" WHEN IT IS EXTRA CLUTCH)


When a player with a sweet shooting stroke gets going from deep:
"Get the puppies set... release... A LITTLE NYLONNNNN!!!"


(A Raftery classic) This refers to when players -- especially the old Big East players who used the window with adept dexterity on layups:
"A LITTLE KISS!" or "A SWEET SMOOCH OFF THE GLASS" (referring to the sound a fresh basketball makes with "English" spun with it as it hits a clean glass backboard).


ONLY RAFTERY.


There are tons more phrases that he uses, including the explanation of the origination of the term "ONIONS!" as explained by Ian Eagle, but I'll leave that to you to research ha.


Listening to Raftery call a game makes it 100 times more entertaining. Anyone who says otherwise should be subjected to listening to the worst possible DeathCore music on decibel level 200 until they lose their hearing.



2. JOHN MADDEN.
I learned most of what I know about offensive line play and X's and O's in football from John Madden. I listened to Madden call games from the time I began watching NFL football until he retired after the 2008 season. He was in his prime and at the top of the profession throughout the 80s and 90s. He was an excellent coach with still one of the greatest winning percentages of all time (something that 80% of Madden game players couldn't tell you).


He introduced to me and the rest of the world -- TURDUCKEN (which is actually quite tasty if you have the time to prepare it or have had the opportunity to feast on it elsewhere). His fond usage of onomatopoeia rekindled images of the Batman series. And while he may have inverted sentences, talked in circles, catered to the average Joe who popped open a few cold ones during a game with his dumbed-down style at times, Madden knows his football. 

And they're right, these clown kids nowadays don't even know Madden coached, and some don't even remember him when he called games in the 80s and early 90s.



Oh and yes, as Madden says in that video, he conceived the Madden Franchise game in 1989 (actually after the '85 Bears won the Super Bowl the original game was developed: as I had it on our old Commodore 64 -- along with Dr. J vs. Larry Bird ha) as a TEACHING TOOL and for those of us who LOVE the X's and O's of football and not like these numbskulls who don't know jack about football, but think they are authorities to speak about football because they're good at the video game *SIGH*.



That's the original game from '87. Madden is the man. Plain and simple.


3. HUBIE BROWN.
I love listening to Hubie. Makes me feel like I'm at 5 Star or ABCD and getting one on one instruction listening to him call games. Back in the late 80s and early 90s, my dad and I used to die when Hubie's voice would crack while on the call, but he knew his stuff. He's forgotten more basketball than some of these guys playing will ever know. I still enjoy listening to him to this day on ESPN broadcasts.


A Hubie Brown staple is speaking in second person, as if he is coaching a player from the broadcast booth -- using street vernacular (a nod to all the kids he's coached in the New York and New Jersey area in his camps over the years).


Example:
"iight, you know that if you are Dallas, you want to make sure that Kobe Bryant does not get the ball here, okay? You also know that your best player, Dirk "No-witski" (always mispronounces it) has 5 fouls, iight? What you want to do is DENYYYYYYY Bryant the ball okay and you have a guy who is "atha-letic" like Josh Howard who can do this for you iight?"


It makes you feel like you're in the huddle and he's drawing on the clipboard ha. And the "Hubie Chortle" as my cousin Tonia calls it, never ceased to crack me up when he would laugh at something that seemingly wasn't funny, but somehow he found it so.


4. PHIL SIMMS.
Yes, I am a Giants fan. And yes, I love Phil Simms no homo, but his transition to the broadcast boot does wonders for the profession. With guys like John Madden retiring and the only other guys coming along are Madden copycats and castoff ex-coaches who are moonlighting until they get another coaching gig, Simms does justice to the booth. He doesn't talk down to viewers, offers SUPERB insight into games and doesn't mind calling guys out. I love it. If you manage to be someplace where you can hear Jim Nantz and Phil Simms on the call during Super Bowl XLIV next Sunday, tune in -- Simms is better now than he ever has been in the booth.








Oh, and I wouldn't let this go without pointing out something my sister brought to my attention a few years back; the Franklin Lakes, NJ resident's penchant for reverting to his backwoods accent at times during games -- pronouncing "eem" as if to say "him". Every time I hear it, I die, because I really hadn't noticed it in the 8 or 9 years that Simms had been in the booth at that point, but in the 6 or 7 years since, I hear it 10-15 times a game ha.


Example: "Well Mark Sanchez saw 'eem... but he couldn't get the ball to 'eem! Thankfully, that one fell to the ground, that's what I used to call a 'getback pass'" (his explanation being that it was one of those passes that he threw that immediately after passing it, he hoped it would land incomplete, so his team could "getback" the proverbial possession.




5. DOUG COLLINS.
Doug knows the game. What always flummoxed me was why it didn't translate to wins as a coach. He was moderately successful in that role, but he is an exceptional color analyst. He actually describes players' moves in great detail, he thinks like a coach, so he makes calls that coaches will make even before they make them and he was one of the first analysts to regularly point out the opportunity for a team to go "two for one if they want it" (meaning getting two shots off in the last 30-40 seconds of a quarter, maximizing possessions and getting easy points that may matter later in the game.






He also became adept at pointing out "point swings" (usually following a poor shot selection by one team, or a "gimme" missed opportunity that leads to points for the other team -- and how that can deflate and demoralize a team. These are the things color analysts are supposed to do. Not banter about nothingness (unless it's funny like Bill Walton -- more on that in a second).


6. JOHN "RED" KERR.
First off, RIP Red Kerr. His enthusiasm for his Chicago Bulls was infectious. Even if you weren't a Jordan/Bulls fan, you couldn't help but to be sucked in (pause) by WGN's telecasts featuring Jim Durham (and later, Wayne Larrivee) and Red Kerr -- unless you were a Pistons or Pacers fan. His primal screams whenever Michael Jordan did something spectacular, (which was almost nightly) are the stuff of legend and laughter at the same time.


You can hear Kerr screaming in the background as Michael Jordan made one of the biggest shots of his then-young career back in 1989. My dad and I were watching this one also:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-5G3OBKR3Y


7. WALT "CLYDE" FRAZIER.
CLYDE. When someone gives you a nickname like that, because you're SMOOTH, you know you better live up to it in everything else you do. Thankfully, he does it in the booth during Knicks' MSG telecasts. Whether the Knicks are "swishin' and dishin'" or "exhibiting great acumen at both ends" or " moving the ball with alacrity!" it is a joy to listen to Clyde do games. First, with Marv Albert for years and now with Mike Breen.


Viewers/listeners can learn a few words if they listen to Clyde long enough. If the near-20 years that I've watched him on MSG, I've learned a few myself.






8. TROY AIKMAN.
I didn't care for Aikman much as a Dallas Cowboy (and he still is one, openly rooting for them with his partner JOE BUCK on FOX nowadays), but he is an excellent color guy. He points out the non-obvious things, jokes when appropriate and is great in situational calls. I was worried about NFC coverage when Madden and Summerall left, and while everyone KNOWS I do not like Notorious Yankee and Giants Hater Joe Buck, Troy Aikman is the best of the NFC color analysts.






Oh, yeah -- my old homie Andre Smoot used to ask me at work "Mike, what day comes after Wednesday and before Friday?" I'd answer "Thursday???" with a pissed off look on my face... he would then go "Nah, 'THURZ-DEE' -- like Troy Aikman says it". I DIED. I hadn't really noticed it, but just like my sister did with Simms, once it was pointed out, I heard Aikman do that every week. WHAT ON EARTH IS MON-DEE, TUES-DEE, WINS-DEE, THURS-DEE, FRI-DEE, SAER-DEE, SUN-DEE HA?


9. BILL WALTON & STEVE "SNAPPER" JONES


These guys, mostly paired with Marv Albert -- but also with Tom Hammond -- were hilarious together. Bill Walton, for all of his hippie lingo and antics, KNOWS his basketball. Steve Jones was a very good player for years in the ABA and NBA. I loved it when Walton would say something and Jones didn't agree -- he'd do this ridiculously long laugh that would last until Marv interrupted them or a big play was taking place on the court. Absolute great television. Steve was the straight man, pointing out situations and mostly serious.






Walton would go off on tangents, waxing nostalgic about his days with the Celtics or at UCLA, you know, since he is a "UCLA LEGENDDDDD-UH" (as he says about WHOEVER went to UCLA) and all. For me, being an oddball of sorts myself, I loved it. I wish ESPN would put him back on games when he gets healthy. I loved how Walton had NO PROBLEM getting on players and calling guys out who loafed around. Some of my favorite Waltonisms include:


Walton: (to Play-By-Play lead Tom Hammond) "Tom, what's Mark Jackson DOINGGGGG-UH?" (as Jackson made an "X" sign with his arms, taunting Knicks' forward Larry Johnson, who was making "LJ" signs with his arms throughout the 1999 NBA Playoffs)


Hammond: (nervously) "Uhhhh I think it's an X!!!"


Walton: (sighing) "Ugh, why not just go out and PLAY BALLLLLL-UH? Quit SALUTING yourself with these ridiculous gestures, COME ON MARK, YOU ARE BETTER THAN THAT".


Me: FALLING OVER.


Walton: (usually while Shaquille O'Neal was slamming home a dunk) "THROW IT DOWN, BIG MAN, THROW IT DOWNNNNNNNN-UH!!!"


Walton: "WHAT. IS. A FOUL???"


Walton: "WHEN IS BRIAN CARDINAL GOING TO BE AN ALL-STAR?"


Walton is known for his extensive use of hyperbole. While, personally it amuses me and causes me to die of  laughter, some people (somehow) find it annoying. Here are some examples of that hyperbole:



"That was the worst execution of the fast break in the history of the Trail Blazer franchise"
-- Bill Walton, after the Blazers failed to convert a 3 on 1 fast break.  4.13.2003

"Stroke it, big man!"
--Bill Walton, referring to Arvydas Sabonis as he nails a jumper.  4.13.2003 

"What balance What on court-awareness!"
--Bill Walton, as Shaq tiptoes the baseline and saves the possession.  4.20.2003

"Maurice Cheeks has seen enough the inability to complete the simplest of plays."
--Bill Walton after Portland calls yet another timeout against Dallas.  4.25.2003

"You might wanna guard him..."
--Bill Walton, as Dirk Nowitzki nails another three point jumper.  4.25.2003

"Flip Saunders throws up his hands in exasperated dismay!"
--Bill Walton, after a phantom foul call against Wally Szczerbiak.  4.27.2003

"How long do these hockey games last?"
-- Bill Walton, because the basketball game is getting pre-empted by a hockey game going into a third overtime.  5.2.2003

"All Don Nelson can do is shake his head and ask what has happened to our once beautiful team?" --Bill Walton, as Portland dismantles Dallas.  5.2.2003

"What a palace this is."
-- Bill Walton, referring to the Rose Garden. 5.2.2003

"This Portland team is nothing more than a band of pranksters."
-- Bill Walton, as the Blazers are defeated in Game 7 of their playoff series.  5.4.2003

"Show some respect to this living legend, this hall of famer...Arvydas Sabonis."
--Bill Walton, as Sabonis makes a nice play.  5.4.2003

"Sabonis is the epitome of competitive greatness."
-- Bill Walton, on Arvydas Sabonis.  5.4.2003

"You're soft."
-- Bill Walton, to Tom Tolbert 5.4.2003

"A huge Chinese population here in... Houston."
-- Bill Walton, making a comment on Yao Ming 1.21.2004

"He had everything, he had... a doll."
-- Bill Walton, on Penny Hardaways fall from prominence 1.21.2004

"He even flew in his hairdresser, Celeste, so not only does Jermaine ONeal look pretty, hes looking to play pretty tonight."
-- Bill Walton, after Jermaine ONeal hits a jumper 1.23.2004

"Goodness gracious sakes alive." 
-- Bill Walton, after an apparent foul goes uncalled.  1.30.2004

"You tower over Allen Iverson yourself, you could post him up."
-- Bill Walton, to Brent Musberger.  2.1.2004

"He's been working out in the off-season, on that incredible computer generated body he has."
-- Bill Walton, on Kevin Garnett.  2.1.2004

"Jack up a three Spree!"
-- Bill Walton, as Latrell Sprewell passes the ball off in the midst of a TWolves run. 2.1.2004

"Look at Horace's shoes, arent they a thing of beauty?"
-- Bill Walton, on Horace Grants multi-colored sneakers.  2.4.2004

"Shaq with the monster throwdown, the basket just reverberating."
-- Bill Walton, after a big Shaq dunk.  2.4.2004

"Never let your legends go."
-- Bill Walton, on Shaquille ONeal, whose Lakers beat the Magic earlier in the day. 2.8.2004

"The only thing he is worth is another teams mistake.  This guy has ruined every situation he has been in.  This is a classic underachiever."
-- Bill Walton, on Rasheed Wallace.  2.8.2004

"You look at Vladimir Radmanovic, this guy is cut from stone.  As if Michelangelo was reading and a lightening bolt flashed before him."
-- Bill Walton, 2.8.2004

"Yeah now that's basketball there, jack up a three in transition!"
-- Bill Walton, as the Blazers and Sonics exchange missed three point shot attempts. 2.8.2004

"It does'nt get any better than that!"
-- Bill Walton, after a confused Trail Blazers team throws up a wild shot to end the first half.  2.8.2004

"Not a critic, just a reporter of facts"
-- Bill Walton, after Brent Musberger teased him about his criticism of Rasheed Wallace. 2.8.2004 

"Its a critical game, the battle for 10th place!"
-- Bill Walton, on the Portland-Seattle game.  2.8.2004

"Jeff Van Gundy cannot believe this!"
-- Bill Walton, then a camera immediately catches a shot of a relaxed Van Gundy. 2.11.2004

"You talk about Shaq as a ballerina, what a pirouette from Yao!"
-- Bill Walton, as Ming twists in the lane.  2.11.2004



10. FRANK GIFFORD.
One of the best to ever do it, especially in the bright lights and national audience during Monday Night Football for over 25 years. His insight and tell-it-like-it is approach will always be appreciated around these parts. Below is a photograph from one of the first MNF booths (Gifford is to the right of Howard Cosell).






HONORABLE MENTION:
-- MERLIN OLSEN
-- DAN DIERDORF
-- MIKE "THE CZAR OF THE TELESTRATOR" FRATELLO
-- MATT GOUKAS
-- DICK VITALE
-- GARY DANIELSON
-- BOB GRIESE
-- PAUL MAGUIRE


UP AND COMING STARS:
-- CLARK KELLOGG
-- DORIS BURKE
-- MARK JACKSON & "JVG" JEFF VAN GUNDY


LET'S SEE YOUR LISTS -- DISCUSS>>>

My Top 5 Play-By-Play Announcers Of All-Time

My Top 5 Play-By-Play Announcers Of All-Time
M.D. Wright
1.29.10


***EDITOR'S NOTE: New series of favorites -- as we move up to the broadcast booth and pick the favorites there.


Mind you, I am not excluding the Tom Brookshires and Don Criquis of the world, but I can only speak on the 25+ years that I have been watching sports. So I will stick with what I know and not who I've only HEARD ABOUT.


Without further adieu, here is my Top 5 Favorite Play-By-Play Announcers of All-Time (that is, 1979-Present ha). Also, this list is about guys I've actually listened to regularly or nearly daily on local stations or during network TV. Guys like Vin Scully, who I've only heard call 30+ games and other legends like that are not being ignored, I am doing this for the purposes of highlighting the guys who I actually hear most -- and not agreeing with everyone who likes to do a Who's Who list of icons and legends in the broadcasting booth.


1. MARV ALBERT.
Marv LITERALLY does it all. Basketball, football, baseball, hockey, boxing, Late Night TV, you name it, Marv has done it. He has the great, nasal, raspy tone that he has world renown for. And of course, his NBA coverage with the Knicks endeared him to three generation of fellow New Yorkers and Knick/Rangers fans as he called games for the Madison Square Garden network.


Who DIDN'T utter the phrase "YESSSSS!!! AND... THE... FOULLLLLLL!!!" imitating Marv growing up?






I could post a litany of Albert's best calls, but I will just link to a few, as they stand out best to me:


1992 NBA Finals: Game 1 -- Michael Jordan Hits 6 Three Pointers (Which was unheard from him at that time with his game not including the deep touch).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ZCugyCT5lo

Marv's call: "Here's Jordan for three... YESSSSSSSSSSS!!! DID YOU SEE THAT LOOK? MICHAEL... INDICATING... HE CAN'T BELIEVE IT!"


1991 NBA Eastern Conference Semifinals
Michael Jordan Dunks On Patrick Ewing
Marv Albert: "OH, WHAT A MOVE BY JORDAN... IT COUNTS... AND THE FOUL!!!"


And Johnny "Hoops" Andariese in with his legendary analysis afterward. Even as a Knick fan I was a huge Jordan fan and this was always a bittersweet thing for me.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sS-N49j5Oos


Marv gets you with the dramatic pauses when he is on the call, for effect "And the Lakers lead 34....................... to 28. And Phil Jackson wants to talk it over"
. It builds the drama to a climax during important playoff games, and the NBA on NBC games are forever etched in my memory.


2. PAT SUMMERALL.
He had a simplistic style of calling games. I loved it, though. He let the crowd roar and tell you what was going on, he didn't talk 100 words a minute about gibberish. I loved his intros when he was with CBS Sports, as the camera would pan across the stadium and they'd show clips from previous games in NFL Films Slo-Mo fashion. He almost sounded like he was building up to force out words in dramatic nature (as he did with the end of the clip below)


"WELCOMMMMMME TO GIANTS STADIUMMMMMM WHERE THE NEW YORK GIANTS TAKE ON... THE DALLAS COWBOYS IN THIS PIVOTAL, NFC EAST MATCHUP!"


Here's an example of some of Pat's best work -- the 1990 NFC Championship. I nearly died this day, before Bahr made that field goal to win it for us ha.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=buGkq9wEU2A




Here is another from the 1992 NFC Championship, which was EPIC:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xxkii-_hsG0


3. BRENT MUSBERGER.
Old Man Musberger. He of the "Alright, folks, the Canes are looking to take the lead here on this important drive, STAY TUNED!" or "Okay partner (usually Bob Griese or Gary Danielson), we're in for a good one today". Also his intros are legendary for games. He is the voice of College Football for this generation -- as Keith Jackson was for the generation previous. His knack for referring to freshmen players in both college football and basketball is hilarious to me and has made its way into my everyday vernacular -- as I refer to many of my friends as "Young" as a nod to Musberger.  He OD'ed with it during the 2010 National Championship -- repeatedly referring to University of Texas QB Garrett Gilbert as "YOUNG GILBERT". I was dying, as I'm sure a few other people who like Musberger were.


Previous to his current stint in college sports, Musberger hosted the pre-game shows in the NBA, MLB and NFL and has done studio work and was always in on an important call since the late 1970s.


And of course his CLASSIC intro:
"YOU ARE LOOKING LIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIVE AT ____________ STADIUM..."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2rBAvruTX0



4. AL MICHAELS.
Forget the 1980 USA win over Russia and that "Do you believe in miracles? YESSS!!!" call. I don't care about that and it pre-dates my memory. But Al Michaels has been the lead voice for Monday Night Football since Howard Cosell retired in 1986 and that's that. 

He is synonymous with this VINTAGE MNF intro
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DZtEci3NUQ4 that still gets my blood pumping and causes goosebumps in many NFL nostalgics. When you heard that tune, Al was coming in with what seemed like (to us NFL junkies) groundbreaking news as we had our Monday Night Football for the evening. 

Al is apparently a degenerate gambler, which is fine with me. I used to be one. I know a couple of them right now ha. But hearing him drop very subtle gambling hints and always talking about over/unders, blackjack tables and horse racing is hilarious to me, knowing gambling lingo. If, you know, gambling were legal, that is.



5. VERNE LUNDQUIST.
OLD MAN LUNDQUIST. He is a personal favorite of mine, because he called some pretty memorable NFL games in the late 80s/early 90s, which were the HALCYON DAYS of the NFL if you ask me and anyone else 30 and over. I also love him on his calls with Bill Raftery during the NCAA tournament. They call Verne "The Golden Throat" and his calls are definitely perfect for NFL football and MARCH MADNESS.



HONORABLE MENTION:
-- Ken "Hawk" Harrelson
-- Ian Eagle
-- Dan Shulman
-- Sean McDonough
-- Jim Nantz
-- Kevin Harlan
-- Kenny Albert

GUYS WHO ARE RELATIVELY YOUNG BUT WILL BE LEGENDS BEFORE IT'S OVER:
-- Gus Johnson
IN A LEAGUE BY HIMSELF. Gus is the MAN in these parts, BTW.

Feel free to disagree, this list is personal. But I'd like to see everyone else's list no homo.

DISCUSS>>>

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