Saturday, May 26, 2007
Ned Jarrett On ESPN Brings Back Wonderful Memories
At first glance, Ned Jarrett appears to be a bit more fragile than many of us remember him. Saturday, Jarrett made a "guest" appearance alongside son Dale as an analyst for the ESPN Busch Series race from Lowes Motor Speedway.
Once Dr. Jerry Punch had welcomed Ned and asked his first question, something magical happened. We were all quickly reminded that age may be a function of time, but knowledge does not fade. Instantly, it was clear that Ned was running on all eight cylinders and was ready for a race. The fire still burned.
While it was a "guest" appearance, Ned began with his first comment at Lap 3, and then made the most of what he had been given the opportunity to do. Everything was still sharp, observant, and most of all, kind.
The trademark of the early ESPN coverage was good humor and good racing. I was lucky enough to be a part of those days, and back then there was little glamour in being in Darlington, South Carolina at the height of summer working a twelve hour day. By today's standards, the track facilities were crude, and the TV equipment was worse. I vividly remember Ned walking on the tin roof of the grandstand at Darlington in 100 degree heat to get to the "announce booth." It was also tin, and there was no such thing at Darlington as "air conditioning." These men had character.
Ned was a self-made broadcaster, and retired early from driving with that purpose in mind. He had adopted a manner of relating to people in person that he could very easily translate into the cable TV broadcasts of the 1980's. In the early days, Ned became a standard by which all other NASCAR radio and TV broadcasters were measured.
Many fans remember Bob Jenkins, the late Benny Parsons, and Ned Jarrett as the people who introduced them to NASCAR. Ned and Benny used their own versions of "Southern Charm" to help cable viewers nationwide to understand the strange sport of NASCAR racing. A "young man" named Jerry Punch was a reporter on pit road.
As the Charlotte Busch Series race progressed, Ned became involved in all aspects of the telecast, and offered the kind of low-key but simple and informative commentary that is sometimes missing from today's broadcasts. It was clear he had watched all the Busch Series races, and knew the drivers and teams. It was great.
In the old days, there were a lot of rough characters who needed someone to help them relate to this new "animal" at the track called ESPN. Ned was often seen in the garage, helping drivers and team members with TV advice long before everyone had "PR guys" and assistants. He taught "TV 101" on a constant basis with absolutely no tuition charged.
Ned was constant in his admiration for the Dale Carnegie public speaking course that had helped him to work with the media and public relations aspects of the sport. He often suggested to others that Dale Carnegie could help them in their professional career. Son Dale followed his father's advice, and is also a Dale Carnegie graduate.
Today's race was particularly touching because many believe that Dale Jarrett and Andy Petree have developed in a short time many of the same positive aspects that Ned and Benny Parsons had in their day. It seems that they both are well-informed, comfortable with themselves, and positive in their comments about the sport. This is a far cry from other announce teams that rely on "personalities" to get the job done. When Rusty Wallace returns to NASCAR after the Indy 500 coverage, he may find himself working hard to regain his role as the lead analyst.
Originally, I thought Ned was going to "sit in" on the coverage and offer his opinions of the action as a "guest." However, it became clear during this entire telecast that Ned, Jerry Punch, Andy Petree and Dale Jarrett were having a great time even with four voices in the booth. There were no egos clashing, no one speaking over each other, and only good solid racing information being offered to the viewer. When Ned stepped aside late in the event, it was sad to see him go.
As a young man in my twenties, there were many times when a kind word or a concerned comment from Ned Jarrett kept my head on straight and put a smile on my face in the demanding world of sports television. To see him now well over seventy reminds me of a time when the world was a very different place, and NASCAR was a very different sport. It also reminds me to continue the practice of showing concern and paying attention to the now "young people" in my life who could use a kind word, or just a moment or two of attention from an "adult" like me. Thanks Ned.
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Update: Many thanks to Jayski for fixing the broken link from his stories/articles page. I emailed him an incorrect link, and appreciate him taking the time to fix it.
How can ESPN be so good at times?
ReplyDeleteNed was wonderful, Dale has a broadcast future, and with AB in the prerace anchor booth, the tellycast felt right!
I always thought that Ned, Benny & Bob Jenkins were the best broadcast team and I have not seen anyone close since ESPN left some years ago. I do not understand why ESPN wants to bring in people with no knowledge of the sport. Would you have John Madden call The Masters?
ReplyDeleteMan it was great to have Ned in the booth. This is how a race should be called - information and insight. The constant "look at me" attitude of announcers drives race fans away.
ReplyDeleteBoy you are absolutely correct. It was great. I hadn't intended to watch the race, but the people in the booth were so good, I couldn't turn away. What a change from the "egos' in the Fox broadcasts. Amazing and I would love to have more of that -- instead we're going to be saddled with no-nothings for the Cups series -- Suzy Kolber? Who? What do football and NASCAR have in common? Not much.
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful it was to have class return to the Nascar broadcast booth as opposed to the Fox boogety-boogety goofballs.
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