Merton Laverne Lundquist Jr. (born July 17, 1940) is a retired American sportscaster.
Video Verne Lundquist
Biography
Early life and career
Lundquist was born in Duluth, Minnesota. He graduated from Austin High School in Austin, Texas, before attending Texas Lutheran University (formerly Texas Lutheran College), where he was one of the founders of the Omega Tau Fraternity in 1958 before graduating in 1962. He is now a member of the Board of Regents for his alma mater.
Lundquist attended Augustana Seminary in Rock Island, Illinois in 1962. His father was a Lutheran pastor and President of the Nebraska Synod of the Augustana Lutheran Church. Lundquist played basketball and baseball and was a disc jockey at WOC, Davenport, Iowa. His 'Golden Voice' was the highlight of the seminary class on preaching.
He began his broadcasting career as sports anchor for WFAA in Dallas and in Austin for KTBC, as well as being the radio voice of the Dallas Cowboys. Lundquist joined the Cowboys Radio Network in 1967 and remained with the team until the 1984 season. He was paired with future (and now current) play-by-play man Brad Sham starting with the 1977 season, the year the Cowboys went 12-2 and captured their second NFL title in Super Bowl XII. He was sportscaster at WFAA during their 6pm news, while his eventual successor Dale Hansen did the 10pm news.
Nationally, Lundquist worked for ABC Sports from 1974-81, CBS from 1982-95, and TNT cable from 1995-97 before returning to CBS in 1998.
In his return to CBS, Lundquist served as the long-time lead play-by-play announcer for CBS Sports' coverage of college football on the SEC on CBS.
Lundquist retired from broadcasting college football games after calling the Army-Navy Game on December 10, 2016. He continued to contribute to other CBS Sports programs, including its college basketball and golf coverage, for the foreseeable future and has not set a firm date for his complete retirement.
Currently, Lundquist resides in Steamboat Springs, Colorado.
Network assignments
Before becoming a nationwide sports commentator, from 1970-74, Lundquist was commentator for the sports show, Bowling for Dollars, in Dallas, Texas. It aired weekday evenings on the ABC station, WFAA-TV, from 6:30-7:00, in north central Texas. During these four seasons, Lundquist started interviewing Cowboys players and their first head coach, Tom Landry, at their sidelines, during halftimes, practices, pre-season and pre-game warm-ups, in Dallas. He is also among the key voices of NFL Films, and in past years had called regional NFL games for CBS, NBA games for CBS and TNT, and TNT's Sunday Night Football telecasts. He called television play-by-play on Seattle Seahawks preseason games from 2006-08. Lundquist's patented belly laugh and his contagious enthusiasm for the events he covers have made him one of the more prominent and recognizable on-air talents in network TV.
During the 1992, 1994, and 1998 Winter Olympics, whose rights were held by CBS and TNT, Lundquist and Scott Hamilton served as the announcers for figure skating events. Their performances were parodied by Saturday Night Live cast members Phil Hartman and Darrell Hammond (as Lundquist) with Dana Carvey, David Spade, and Will Ferrell (both as Hamilton): in 1992 with Jason Priestley and 1994 with Nancy Kerrigan and Chris Farley they did a spoof of the Olympics figure skating events, as both Hartman and Myers went "Oh!" when Priestly or Farley (in a pre-recorded performance) did an on-ice pratfall. Lundquist, after seeing the original footage in 1992, commented that Hartman "nailed it dead on."
Memorable calls
Lundquist played himself commentating on tournaments in the 1996 motion picture Happy Gilmore. Lundquist was a play-by-play announcer in the NBA Live '98 video game and was also the play-by-play announcer in the College Hoops 2K8 video game. A famous pet phrase Lundquist uses on occasion is "How, do you DO!"; on a huge offensive or defensive play, a phrase he took from USC football broadcaster Pete Arbogast (who in turn took the phrase from venerable broadcaster Vin Scully). Lundquist also often exclaims "Oh My Gosh!" or "Oh My Goodness!" Lundquist filled in for Ernie Johnson Jr. as host of TNT's coverage of the PGA Championship twice, in 2006 as Johnson was battling cancer, and in 2011 when Johnson left after the second round following the death of his father on that Friday night.
- January 21, 1979: While calling the Dallas Cowboys' radio broadcast of Super Bowl XIII against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Lundquist famously described Cowboys tight end Jackie Smith dropping a third quarter touchdown pass, which would have tied the game 21-21:
- April 13, 1986: While calling the final round of the 50th Masters Tournament in 1986, Jack Nicklaus hit a birdie putt on the 17th hole for the outright lead:
- March 28, 1992: While calling play-by-play for the 1992 NCAA Men's Basketball East Region Finals between Kentucky and Duke, Christian Laettner hit a 17-foot turnaround jumper at the buzzer to win the game in overtime. Lundquist called the moment, shown on YouTube:
- February 25, 1994: While calling figure skating at the Winter Olympics, Lundquist called one of the most watched sports events in history. The ladies free skate portion of the 1994 Olympics drew Super Bowl type television ratings because of the hyped Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan debacle. The drama unfolded that evening as Tonya Harding begin her free skate, then quit 45 seconds into her program, and went crying to the judges table of a broken skate lace. She was granted permission to fix her skate and start her free skate later in the evening. During the ordeal, he said:
- September 16, 2000: In his first college football game called on CBS, a game between the #6-ranked Florida Gators and the #11-ranked Tennessee Volunteers, Florida quarterback Jesse Palmer threw a pass to wide receiver Jabar Gaffney that was caught in the end zone on second-and-goal in the final seconds of the fourth quarter, only to have it stripped instantly by Tennessee cornerback Willie Miles. The line judge official signaled a touchdown, and the call was confirmed although replays showed that Gaffney did not gain complete possession of the football. The winning score gave the Gators a 27-23 win in Knoxville, and Lundquist described the play:
- April 10, 2005: While calling the final round of the 2005 Masters Tournament on CBS, Tiger Woods sunk a dramatic chip-in bridie on the 16th hole. Lundquist called, available on YouTube:
- March 26, 2006: While calling play-by-play for the 2006 NCAA Men's Basketball Washington, D.C. Regional Finals, a stunning upset was crafted by George Mason over #1-seed Connecticut in the Elite 8. Lundquist announced, archived on YouTube:
- October 7, 2006: While calling a college football game on CBS between the #5-ranked Florida Gators and the #9-ranked LSU Tigers, Florida quarterback Tim Tebow completed a one-yard touchdown to Tate Casey on the "jump pass" in the final seconds of the first half:
- November 11, 2006: While calling a college football game on CBS between the #6-ranked Florida Gators and the unranked South Carolina Gamecocks, Florida defensive end Jarvis Moss blocked a game-winning 48-yard field goal attempt by South Carolina kicker Ryan Succop to keep the Gators' national championship hopes alive:
- October 24, 2009: While calling a college football game on CBS between the #1-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide and the unranked Tennessee Volunteers, Alabama defensive tackle Terrance Cody blocked a game-winning 44-yard field goal attempt by Tennessee kicker Daniel Lincoln to keep the Tide's national championship hopes alive:
- November 10, 2012: While calling the college football game on CBS between the #1-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide and the #15-ranked Texas A&M Aggies, A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel threw a touchdown pass to receiver Ryan Swope after nearly getting sacked and fumbling the football, all but cementing Manziel's Heisman Trophy that year.
- November 16, 2013: While calling a college football game on CBS between #7-ranked Auburn and #25-ranked Georgia, Auburn quarterback Nick Marshall threw a 73-yard touchdown pass to Ricardo Louis known as "The Prayer at Jordan-Hare," a Hail Mary pass that propelled Auburn past Georgia in the final seconds of the game. Lundquist's call included, as seen on YouTube:
- November 30, 2013: While calling a college football game on CBS between #1-ranked Alabama and #4-ranked Auburn, a fierce in-state rivalry known as "The Iron Bowl," Auburn cornerback Chris Davis returned a missed 57-yard field goal attempt by Alabama placekicker Adam Griffith with 0:01 remaining 100 yards for a game-winning touchdown on the game's final play. Known as the Kick Six, the play gave Auburn a 34-28 victory and a spot in the 2013 SEC Football Championship Game. Lundquist described the play, available on YouTube:
- October 1, 2016: While calling a college football game on CBS between #11-ranked Tennessee and #25-ranked Georgia, Tennessee quarterback Joshua Dobbs completed a Hail Mary pass to wide receiver Jauan Jennings with no time remaining in regulation play to give Tennessee a 34-31 victory, only 10 clock seconds after Georgia had scored to secure the lead and presumably the win:
Honors
At the 2005 Sun Bowl, Lundquist was inducted into the Sun Bowl Hall of Fame along with UCLA Bruins football coach Terry Donahue.
The National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association named Lundquist Texas Sportscaster of the Year for seven straight years (1977-83) during his time in Dallas, and inducted him into its Hall of Fame in 2007.
In broadcasting circles, Lundquist is affectionately known as "The Golden Throat".
In May 2012, Lundquist delivered the commencement address at Hampden-Sydney College, an honor he calls "one of the true achievements of my lifetime."
Lundquist is on the Board of Directors of the summer music festival, Strings Music Festival in Steamboat Springs, Colorado.
On October 22, 2016, Lundquist was a Celebrity Guest Picker on College GameDay on ESPN.
Maps Verne Lundquist
Broadcasting partners
Lundquist has had many broadcasting partners over his long career, including:
References
Source of article : Wikipedia