Chris Schenkel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chris Schenkel
Chris Schenkel

Chris Schenkel (born August 21, 1923 in Bippus, Indiana; died September 11, 2005 in Fort Wayne, Indiana) was an American sportscaster. Over the course of five decades he called play-by-play for numerous sports on television and radio, becoming known for his smooth delivery and baritone voice.

Contents

[edit] Early life and career

Schenkel began his broadcasting career at radio station WBAA while studying for a premedical degree at Purdue University. After military service in World War II, he resumed sportcasting in Providence, Rhode Island; in 1947 he called the first American football game ever broadcast on television (a Harvard-Army contest).

In 1952, Schenkel was hired by the DuMont network, for which he broadcast New York Giants football; in 1956 he went to CBS, where he continued to call Giants games, along with boxing, the Triple Crown horse racing, and The Masters golf tournament, among other events. Along with Chuck Thompson, Schenkel called the 1958 NFL championship game for NBC.

[edit] ABC Sports

ABC hired Schenkel in 1965, and there he broadcast college football, NBA basketball, golf and tennis tournaments, boxing, auto racing, the Summer and Winter Olympic Games, and professional bowling like the Professional Bowlers Association, also known as The Pro Bowlers Tour, a sport he would cover into the 1990s as one of ABC's signature sports for many Saturday afternoons. His broadcast partners on the PBA telecasts included Billy Welu and Nelson "Bo" Burton, Jr.

In 1971, Schenkel, a longtime friend of the late Indianapolis Motor Speedway owner Tony Hulman, was a passenger in the pace car for that year's Indianapolis 500 race. Astronaut John Glenn and Hulman were also in the car when its driver, Indianapolis-area Dodge dealer Eldon Palmer, crashed the 1971 Dodge Challenger convertible into a section of bleachers at the beginning of the race. Someone had moved the flag Palmer had positioned as a braking reference point, leading to the incident that injured twenty-two people, mostly photographers. Schenkel and the car's other occupants were not seriously injured.

Also in 1971, Statesboro, Georgia businessman Charlie Robbins honored Schenkel by developing in his name a scholarship for golf at Georgia Southern University and developed the Chris Schenkel Intercollegiate Golf Tournament, featuring some of the nation's top college golf teams. The tournament ended after the 1989 because of concerns after it was discovered the golf club hosting the tournament was all white, but was revived in 1999 as the E-Z-Go Schenkel Invitational. The tournament is regarded as one of college golf's premier intercollegiate tournament in the East.

[edit] Honors

Schenkel was named National Sportscaster of the Year four times, and in 1992 he received a lifetime achievement Emmy. Also in 1992, the Pro Football Hall of Fame presented Schenkel with its Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award. In 1999, he received the Jim Thorpe Lifetime Achievement Award.

In 1999, the Professional Bowlers Association named the Player of the Year award after Schenkel.

[edit] Death

Schenkel died of emphysema in 2005 at the age of 82.

[edit] Trivia

  • Contrary to current popular belief or revisionist history, Chris Schenkel, not Jim McKay, anchored ABC's prime time coverage of the ill-fated 1972 Summer Olympics. When the terrorist attacks (otherwise known as the Munich Massacre) occurred, Schenkel was asleep after hosting the previous night's coverage live from Munich from 2 a.m. to 5 a.m. local time. McKay, who was on his way to the Stadium for track and field coverage, was told to return to the ABC studio to report on the situation unfolding at the Olympic Village. Schenkel returned to anchor Olympic coverage after the Games resumed.
  • Schenkel's straightforward, low-key approach contrasted with the distinctive flair of fellow ABC broadcasters such as McKay, Keith Jackson and Howard Cosell. This, combined with his high visibility (as with his similarly low-key and highly visible NBC counterpart Curt Gowdy), inevitably led to unfavorable comparisons, and sometimes borderline ridicule. An example occurred near the end of the Cheech and Chong parody song, "Basketball Jones", in which the singer, "Tyrone Shoelaces", exhorted the crowd (in a class comic triple), "Bill Russell, sing along with us! Chick Hearn, sing along! Chris Schenkel... don't say nothin'!"
  • During his 36 years on The Professional Bowlers Tour, whenever ABC sent him away covering other assignments, a televised 300 game was bowled (which happened 4 times). He would eventually witness a 300 game on January 31, 1987 when Houstonian Pete McCordic bowled one on the first match of the Greater Los Angeles Open. Chris told McCordic it was a moment for him since he was away all the other times. Chris would witness 5 more 300 games.
Preceded by
Charlie Brockman
Television voice of the
Indianapolis 500

1966
Succeeded by
Jim McKay
Preceded by
Bob Wolff
Play-by-Play announcer, NBA Finals
1966-1971 (with Bob Wolff in 1966 and 1969)
Succeeded by
Keith Jackson
In other languages