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Play by Play

Calling the Wildest Games in Sports—From SEC Football to College Basketball, The Masters, and More

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The SEC. The Masters. The Olympics. March Madness. The Dallas Cowboys. Yes sir, Uncle Verne has seen it all.

Over the last fifty years, few voices have epitomized the sound of sports television quite like that of Verne Lundquist’s. A fixture on air since the 1960s—first broadcasting University of Texas baseball and Dallas Cowboys football games on radio before eventually joining the legendary CBS Sports team—Verne has covered just about every sport there is, and in the process he’s made some of the most enduring calls in the history of golf, football, figure skating—and everything in between.

In Play by Play, Verne goes inside those calls and his remarkable career, telling the behind-the-scenes story of how he ended up with the best seats in the house, giving voice to history time and time again. From Christian Laettner’s buzzer-beater in the 1992 NCAA tournament, to the saga of Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding at the 1994 Olympics, to the shocking finish of the Iron Bowl in 2013, to Jack Nicklaus’s and Tiger Woods’s unforgettable victories at the Masters, Verne’s five decades as a sportscaster routinely put him in the midst of greatness. With his trademark humility and his goal to make the athlete the legend, instead of the call itself, Verne details his view of the plays that have captured our collective imagination for two generations, featuring an incredible cast of characters that includes names like Terry Bradshaw, Pat Summerall, John Madden, Scott Hamilton, and Tom Landry.

What emerges is an invigorating portrait of the games that matter most, in life and on the field. A moving recollection of the moments that make sports worth watching, Play by Play reminds us all that sports are about more than games played—they’re about the history that we share together and the voices that we remember long after the final whistle has blown.

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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2018
      If there's a sport to be played, as this amiable memoir recounts, then Lundquist will be there to call it.Recently retired after a long career, the author is known for his contributions to many areas of sportscasting, and so he has been for decades--or, as he puts it with characteristic enthusiasm, "for more than fifty years I've had a front-row seat to some of the greatest sporting events America has witnessed." True, and if he's done commentary on some of the dogs, too, he's done it with good humor, a colorful way with words, and a gelatinously shimmering belly laugh. But yet there are the big games, too, such as the 1979 match between the Dallas Cowboys and their archenemies, the Washington Redskins. Begins Lundquist, setting the scene for his pageslong analysis, "a great comeback is a beauty to behold, but it doesn't climb to the top of my charts if the results aren't of any real consequence." With matching records at season's end and an undying enmity, the two teams put on quite a show--and, writes the author, played their hearts out. Writing with the benefit of hindsight, Lundquist takes a moment to worry that Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach may have been an early sufferer of chronic traumatic encephalopathy in a time when "tape an aspirin to your forehead was the league's concussion protocol." Every sport known to humankind, it seems, comes into consideration, for Lundquist is nothing if not versatile; it will surprise many of his viewers to know that he counts among the highest points of his professional career "my unlikely love affair with figure skating." That love affair began once his network lost a pro football contract, but even so, he writes, give him the choice between calling a Super Bowl and announcing the Winter Olympics with Scott Hamilton, and it'll be the latter every time out.A textbook for would-be sports commentators and a pleasure for fans.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2018

      Lundquist's recounting of his 50-year career as a sports broadcaster displays a sweeping scope. Here, he recounts the Green Bay Packers-Dallas Cowboys in the "Ice Bowl" for the 1967 NFL championship as well as Jack Nicklaus, at age 46, on the 17th green in the last round of the 1986 Masters, putting for the lead. Other notable sporting events include Christian Laetner's buzzer-beater giving Duke a 104-103 win over Kentucky in the regional finals of the 1992 NCAA basketball tournament, figure skaters Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding at the 1994 Winter Olympics, and Tiger Woods chipping in from long range onto an impossibly breaking green on the 16th hole in the final round of the 2005 Masters en route to a playoff victory. Included are many more "greatest moments in sports." VERDICT Lundquist's comprehensive look at the world of sports from the 1960s through the current decade will be an exciting trip down memory lane for many a fan.--Jim Burns, formerly with Jacksonville P.L., FL

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from October 15, 2018
      Verne Lundquist has been a broadcast presence on the American sports scene for more than 50 years. Since joining CBS sports in 1982, he's covered more than 20 sports, including golf, pro football, the Olympics, and college basketball. He is one of the most recognizable broadcast voices in college-football history, and his work at the Masters golf tournament has become the gold standard. As this thoroughly entertaining memoir makes clear, he can also write. His memories of his youth are riveting. The son of a pastor, he recalls going with his dad to a local radio station where his father would deliver a short sermon over the air. Young Verne was mesmerized by the studio's blinking lights, wires, and headphones. His first exposure to TV, in the window of local appliance store, proved equally revelatory. Lundquist peppers his memoir with anecdotes about such sports greats as Terry Bradshaw and John Madden, both of whom became close friends, and others for whom friendship wasn't an accurate descriptor. As an announcer, Lundquist always tried to disappear; it was about the event. He strove to share the event with viewers?no discernible ego, no personal agenda. He takes the same approach here, sharing his professional life with gentle humor and insight. Expect plenty of attention from fans across generations.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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