Everything about Howard Cosell totally explained
Howard William Cosell (born
Howard William Cohen;
March 25,
1918 –
April 23,
1995) was an
American sports journalist.
Biography
Early life
Cosell was born in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina of
Jewish heritage, the son of Nellie and Isidore Cohen, who was an accountant. He was raised in
Brooklyn,
New York. His parents had wanted him to become a lawyer. He graduated with a
bachelor's degree in English from
New York University, where he was a member of
Pi Lambda Phi. He then went to the
New York University School of Law where he earned his
JD, and was a member of the NYU Law Review.
Army
Cosell was admitted to the New York state bar in
1941, but when the U.S. entered
World War II, Cosell entered the
United States Army Transportation Corps, where he was quickly promoted to the rank of major, becoming one of the youngest majors to serve at that time. During his time in the service, he married Mary Abrams in
1944, at Prospect Presbyterian Church in
Maplewood, New Jersey.
Career
After the war, Cosell began practicing law in
Manhattan, primarily in union law. Some of his clients were actors, and some were athletes, including
Willie Mays. Cosell's own hero in athletics was
Jackie Robinson, who served as a personal and professional inspiration to him in his career. Cosell also represented the
Little League of New York, when in
1953 an
ABC Radio manager asked him to host a show on New York flagship
WABC featuring Little League participants. Cosell hosted the show for three years without pay, and then decided to leave the law field to become a full-time broadcaster. The show marked the beginning of a relationship with WABC and ABC Radio that would last Cosell his entire broadcasting career.
Cosell took his "tell-it-like-it-is" approach when he teamed with the ex-
Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher "Big
Numba Thirteen"
Ralph Branca on
WABC-77's pre- and post-game radio shows of the
New York Mets in their nascent years beginning in 1962. He pulled no punches in taking members of the hapless expansion team to task.
Otherwise on radio, Cosell did his show,
Speaking of Sports, as well as sports reports and updates for affiliated radio stations around the country; he continued his radio duties even after he became prominent on television. Cosell then became a sports anchor at
WABC-TV in New York, where he served in that role from
1961 to
1974. He expanded his commentary beyond sports to a radio show entitled "Speaking of Everything".
Cosell rose to prominence covering boxer
Muhammad Ali, starting when he still fought under his birth name, Cassius Clay. The two seemed to be friends despite their very different personalities, and complimented each other in broadcasts. In a time when many sports broadcasters avoided touching social, racial, or other controversial issues, and kept a certain level of collegiality towards the sports figures they commented on, Cosell did not, and indeed built a reputation around his
catchphrase:
Cosell's style of reporting very much transformed sports broadcasting. Whereas previous sportscasters had mostly been known for
color commentary and lively
play-by-play, Cosell had an intellectual approach. His use of analysis and context arguably brought television sports reporting very close to the kind of in-depth reporting one expected from "hard" news reporters. At the same time, however, his distinctive staccato voice, accent,
syntax, and cadence were a form of color commentary all their own.
Cosell earned his greatest enmity from the public when he backed Ali after the boxer's championship title was stripped from him for refusing military service during the
Vietnam War. Cosell found vindication several years later when he was the one able to inform Ali that the
United States Supreme Court had unanimously ruled in favor of Ali.
In
February 1970, he was calling a world heavyweight title bout involving
Joe Frazier and
Jimmy Ellis for
ABC's Wide World of Sports when he made a call that would sound familiar to another boxer just three years later.
Perhaps his most famous call took place in the fight between
Joe Frazier and
George Foreman for the World Heavyweight Championship in
Kingston, Jamaica in
1973. When Foreman knocked Frazier to the mat the first of six times, roughly two minutes into the first round, Cosell yelled out This became one of the most famous lines in American sports broadcasting history.
When Liston sat on his stool refusing to answer the bell at the start of the seventh round, Cosell started screaming, "Wait a minute! Wait a minute! Sonny Liston's not coming out! Sonny Liston's not coming out! He's out! The winner and new heavyweight champion of the world is Cassius Clay!"
During Cosell's tenure as a sportscaster, he maintained a feuding stance with legendary New York sports writer and columnist Dick Young, who rarely missed an opportunity to denigrate the broadcaster in print.
Monday Night Football / Later career
In
1970,
ABC executive producer for sports
Roone Arledge hired Cosell to be a
commentator for
Monday Night Football, the first time that
American football was broadcast weekly in
prime time. Cosell was accompanied most of the time by ex-football players
Frank Gifford and "Dandy"
Don Meredith.
Cosell was openly contemptuous of ex-athletes appointed to prominent sportscasting roles solely on account of their playing fame. He regularly clashed on-air with Meredith, whose laid-back style was in sharp contrast to Cosell's.
The Cosell-Meredith-Gifford dynamic helped make
Monday Night Football a success; it frequently was the number one rated program in the
Nielsen ratings. Cosell's inimitable style distinguished
Monday Night Football from previous sports programming, and ushered in an era of more colorful broadcasters and 24/7 TV sports coverage.
Olympics
Along with
Monday Night Football, Cosell worked the Olympics for ABC. He played a key role on ABC's coverage of the Palestinian terror group
Black September's mass murder of Israeli athletes in
Munich at
1972; providing reportage directly from the Olympic Village (his image can be seen and voice heard in Steven Spielberg's
film about the terror attack). In
1976 Summer Games in Montreal, Cosell was the main voice for
boxing. He performed the sportscasting duties for
Sugar Ray Leonard's victorious gold medal winning bout.
"The Bronx is Burning"
Game 2 of the
1977 World Series took place in blustery
Yankee Stadium on
October 12,
1977. An hour or so before game time, a fire started in Public School Number 3, an abandoned elementary school a few blocks from the ball park. By the time the game began at 8 p.m., the building was fully involved and the fire had gone to five alarms. A helicopter-mounted camera lingered on the scene for a few seconds and Cosell, who was calling the series for ABC, intoned in a weary voice,
"There it is, ladies and gentlemen, The Bronx is burning."
Cosell misidentified the building as a tenement, many of which had indeed burned down in recent years as landlords fled the borough and burned their buildings for the insurance money. Cosell's comment seemed to capture the widespread sensibility that New York was on the skids and in a permanent state of decline. Author
Jonathan Mahler abridged the quote and used it as the title for his
2005 book on New York in 1977,
Ladies and Gentlemen, The Bronx is Burning.
ESPN produced a 2007 mini-series based on the book called
The Bronx is Burning.
Lennon's death
At 9:30 p.m. on
December 8,
1980, during a game between the
Miami Dolphins and the
New England Patriots, Cosell stunned millions by announcing the murder of
John Lennon live while performing his regular commentating duties on
Monday Night Football:
Monday Night Football during the
December 9,
1974 telecast and was interviewed for a short breakaway segment by Cosell.
Non-sports related appearances
Cosell's colorful personality and distinctive nasal voice were featured to fine comedic effect in a sports-themed episode of the
ABC TV series
The Odd Couple, as well as in the
Woody Allen films
Bananas and (in a brief cameo)
Sleeper. Such was his celebrity that while he never appeared on the show, Cosell's name was frequently used as an all-purpose answer on the popular
1970s game show Match Game.
Cosell's national fame was further boosted in the fall of
1975 when
Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell aired late Saturday nights on
ABC. The show was similar in many ways to a show
NBC had launched,
NBC's Saturday Night, which would later become the far more well-known
Saturday Night Live. Despite bringing a young comedian,
Billy Crystal, to national prominence, the show was canceled after three months. Cosell later hosted the 1984-1985 season finale of
Saturday Night Live.
Beginning in
1976, Cosell hosted the series of specials known as
Battle of the Network Stars. The two-hour specials pitted stars from each of the three broadcast networks against each other in various physical and mental competitions. Cosell hosted all but one of the nineteen specials, including the final one airing in
1988.
Controversy
Criticism of boxing
Cosell denounced professional
boxing in a
November 13,
1982 bout between
Larry Holmes and a clearly out-matched
Randall "Tex" Cobb. The fight was held two weeks after the fatal fight between
Ray Mancini and
Duk Koo Kim, and Cosell famously asked the rhetorical question, The bout's referee,
Richard Green, committed
suicide less than a year after Cosell's remark on
July 1,
1983.
Major boxing reforms were implemented, the most important of which allows referees to stop clearly one-sided fights early in order to protect the health of the fighters, while in amateur boxing, one-sided fights automatically stopped when one fighter had a score considerably higher than his opponent. Hitherto, only the "ring" physician had had such authority. Another change was the reduction of championship bouts from 15 rounds (the fatal blows to Kim were in Rounds 13 and 14) to 12 rounds by the
WBC. The
WBA and
WBO did the same quickly, and the
IBF did so in 1988.
The "little monkey" incident
Cosell drew criticism during one
Monday Night Football telecast in
September 1983, for stating
"look at that little monkey go," when he referred to a play by
black receiver
Alvin Garrett of the
Washington Redskins regarding a run after a reception. While some saw "little monkey" as a
racial slur, others who knew Cosell were quick to point out that he used this term routinely in an approving way to describe quicker, smaller players of all ethnicities. Among the evidence adduced to support this claim is video footage of a
1972 preseason game, between the
New York Giants and the
Kansas City Chiefs, during which Cosell refers to
Mike Adamle, a 5-foot-9-inch, 197-pound
white, as a "little monkey."
Cosell left
Monday Night Football shortly before the start of the
1984 NFL season, His duties were then reduced to only
baseball, horse racing, and a sports news program called
Sportsbeat. Howard Cosell never got a chance to commentate a Super Bowl, as by the time ABC finally got into the Super Bowl rotation with
Super Bowl XIX, Cosell was already gone from
Monday Night Football.
I Never Played the Game and reaction
After writing the book
I Never Played the Game, which chronicled his disenchantment with fellow commentators on
Monday Night Football, among other things, he was taken off scheduled announcing duties for the
1985 World Series (
Tim McCarver subsequently took his spot) and was released by ABC television shortly thereafter. In
I Never Played the Game Cosell coined the word "jockocracy" to describe how athletes were given announcing jobs that they hadn't earned.
In his later years, Cosell briefly hosted his own television talk show,
Speaking of Everything, authored his last book
What's Wrong With Sports, and continued to appear on radio and television, becoming more outspoken about his criticisms of sports in general.
Later life
Cosell was the 1995 recipient of the
Arthur Ashe Courage Award. After his wife of 46 years, Mary Edith Abrams Cosell, known as "Emmy", died in the fall of
1990, Cosell appeared in public less and less until his passing away in
1995 from a
heart embolism at
Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City.
Cultural references
- Cosell appeared on the Carpenters' Very First TV Special in 1976 as a sports reporter reporting a car race that Richard Carpenter participated in, and ultimately, won.
- In The Simpsons episode Mother Simpson, Cosell is shown as the play-by-play announcer for Super Bowl III. However, in real life the game was shown on NBC, and Cosell never worked any Super Bowl broadcasts.
- The Muppets and the cartoon featured characters who were based on Cosell.
- The video game Crash Tag Team Racing features two anthropomorphic chicken sports commentators named Chick Gizzard Lips and Stew, who serve as comic relief. Chick Gizzard Lips seems to have the voice and personality of Cosell, while Stew puns George Foreman.
- The song "Boxing" by Ben Folds Five from their eponymous first album is a tribute to Howard Cosell.
- In the 1985 movie Better Off Dead, protagonist Lane Meyer, played by John Cusack, often races against two Asian brothers, one of whom speaks in the style of Cosell, having learned English from watching the sportscaster on television. Meyer remarks,
- Cosell's voice was parodied by legendary impressionist Rich Little. Little would later appear as himself on the episode "Raging Bender" of the animated series Futurama as a wrestling announcer, modeling his speaking style on Cosell's.
- Cosell plays himself in two episodes of the television series The Odd Couple starring Jack Klugman and Tony Randall. Always seen battling with Klugman's character Oscar Madison, he once referred to Felix Unger (Randall's character) as an "inane drone." Translation according to Felix: "a dull bee."
- Cosell was the butt of many jokes on mid-1970s game show hit, Match Game.
- In an episode of the Warner Bros./Fox Kids Network 1991 weekday Beetlejuice cartoon, the pilot weekday episode featured a bodybuilding contest with "Howard Grossnell" as the commentator.
- The feature film Ali features Jon Voight as Howard Cosell to a very close degree, enough to earn him an Academy Award nomination.
- Cosell appears as himself in the 1971 film Bananas with Woody Allen. He played a sportscaster covering the assassination of a foreign leader at the start of the film and the consummation of Allen's character's marriage at the end. (He was said to be uneasy about doing that role, fearing it would be distasteful, but Allen was persuasive).
- Cosell was offered the role of a mad scientist in Allen's 1972 film Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask). He turned it down due to the subject matter and the role was played by John Carradine.
- Cosell had a cameo of sorts in Allen's 1973 film Sleeper. Awakening 200 years in the future, Allen's character is shown a clip of a Cosell commentary, and asked to confirm whether watching clips like these were a form of punishment for wrongdoers. He confirms it.
- The TNT feature film Monday Night Mayhem is about Cosell and the genesis of Monday Night Football on ABC in 1970. Cosell is portrayed by John Turturro.
- Through the use of body doubles and old sound clips Cosell was able to help "call" the three fictitious games produced by NFL Films for their 1999 Matchup of the Millennium series.
Quotations
"Sports is human life in microcosm."
Howard Cosell Quotations
Further Information
Get more info on 'Howard Cosell'.
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