U.S.
sports broadcaster Dick Enberg, 82, dies in San Diego:
media
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[December 22, 2017]
By Brendan O'Brien
(Reuters) - U.S.
broadcaster Dick Enberg, who charmed sports fans with
his "Oh My!" declaration as he called some of the most
memorable sporting events during the last five decades,
died on Thursday, ESPN reported. He was 82.
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Enberg was found dead at his home in San Diego. His wife Barbara
told the San Diego Union-Tribune that her husband failed to
catch a Thursday flight to Boston, where they were supposed to
meet.
"He was dressed with his bags packed at the door," she said. "We
think it was a heart attack."
Enberg worked for NBC, CBS and ESPN, calling some of the world's
biggest sporting events, including 10 Super Bowls, 28 Wimbledons
and eight NCAA men's basketball title games, according to ESPN.
Enberg was born and raised in Michigan and graduated from
Central Michigan University, where he began his broadcasting
career, ESPN reported. He moved to California and covered the
UCLA Bruins basketball team, which won eight NCAA titles during
his tenure.

"Sportscasting is a kid's dream come true, which is one of the
reasons that I keep doing it," he said in his autobiography,
according to the Los Angeles Times. "I can't let my dream go.
I'm still love with what I do."
In 1968, Enberg called what was dubbed the "The Game of the
Century" between UCLA and the Houston Cougars, the first prime
time NCAA regular-season game broadcast nationwide, according to
ESPN. The Bruins' 47-game winning streak came to an end that
night.
"That was the platform from which college basketball's
popularity was sent into the stratosphere," Enberg said about
the game, ESPN reported. "That became a monumental event."

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Enberg was honored with awards from the National Baseball Hall of
Fame, Pro Football Hall of Fame and the Naismith Memorial Basketball
Hall of Fame. He also won 13 Sports Emmy Awards and a Lifetime
Achievement Emmy.
His last job was calling San Diego Padres games, which he retired
from in 2016.
“We are immensely saddened by the sudden and unexpected passing of
legendary broadcaster Dick Enberg,” the Padres said in a statement
released late on Thursday to the San Diego Union-Tribune.
Despite leaving the broadcast booth, he continued to work on his
podcast "Sound of Success," which last aired on Thursday with an
interview of Andy Friendly, a TV producer and executive, ESPN
reported.
"I am talking to broadcast royalty today, and I am thrilled to be
doing it," Friendly said, according to ESPN.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Kevin Liffey
and Sonya Hepinstall)
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