In the full-stop Oh my! moment of his life, Dick Enberg leaves a wealth of memories for colleagues and fans of many sports. He passed on Wednesday, potentially due to a heart attack, at the age of 82.
Legendary sports broadcaster Dick Enberg died Thursday night from a suspected heart attack. He was 82. Enberg was famous for his, “Oh, my!” reaction to spectacular moments. He worked for NBC Sports, ...
Legendary announcer Dick Enberg, whose amazing sportscasting career spanned six decades, died Thursday at the age of 82. He did play-by-play for college basketball, college and professional football ...
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Screenwriter Bobby Herbeck was watching the Golf Channel recently when some highlights from some late 1990s broadcasts came on, including a few punctuated by the trademark catchphrase ...
The reaction is pouring in Friday, one day after news broke about the death of legendary broadcaster Dick Enberg. And the reaction of one person probably rates as a triple version of "Oh my!" -- which ...
To the editor: Dick Enberg’s game calls were among the cleanest and most straightforward of any sports announcer who ever sat behind a microphone or looked into a camera. The Los Angeles Times’ report ...
Dick Enberg visiting Central Michigan University. Dick Enberg, a Hall of Fame broadcaster known as much for his excited calls of "Oh my!" as the big events he covered during a 60-year career, has died ...
This was back in the 1980’s inside a Third Avenue eatery, Charlie Jones, one of NBC Sports’ top NFL voices, was talking about Dick Enberg, who was THE voice of pro football for the Peacock working ...
Dick Enberg with actor Anthony Crivello, the MU grad who played Al McGuire in Enberg's play (Photo: John Baker, 247Sports) Last January 2017, 82-year-old Dick Enberg was in Milwaukee on a publicity ...
No surprise that Dick Enberg, who died Thursday at age 82, left us with so much material — books, essays, plays, speeches, lectures and, of course, play-by-play calls preserved on audio and video.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -- Screenwriter Bobby Herbeck was watching the Golf Channel recently when some highlights from some late 1990s broadcasts came on, including a few punctuated by the trademark ...
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