Ed Sabol NFL Films founder RIP …..NFL Films meant so much to me as a kid…..

Recent Forum Topics Forums The Rams Huddle Ed Sabol NFL Films founder RIP …..NFL Films meant so much to me as a kid…..

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  • #18279
    joemad
    Participant

    NFL Films meant so much to me as a kid….. long before cable, ESPN, NFL Network, DVRs and VCRs……..the rotary antenna TV on our rooftop and our old RCA Victor TV that maybe got 10-15 TV stations pending the weather was all we got……….. Thus my brothers and I looked forward to Saturday Afternoons to watch This Week In Pro – Football hosted by Brookshier and Summeral and of course The NFL Game of Week……… it was awesome, and it still is looking at those old shows….

    back in college, I did a presentation in my music appreciation class about the music of Sam Spence and NFL films… some of the music today still moves me emotionally as it did when I was kid….

    The first NFL Films that I remember that got me hooked was Super Bowl V, Colts vs Cowboys with the O’Brien game winning kick. NFL films silenced all the background music and fan noise for the game winning kick…….you just heard the thud of the kick from O’Brien’s foot, then the crowd noise gradually got louder as the ball sailed in slow motion through the uprights……. I then remember the scene when Bob Lilly tossed his helmet in the air with disgust of losing………. the beauty of football drama was beautifully captured…..

    Thank you Ed Sabol….

    RAMS 1979 Season: Naked Link
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vr-9lWJTcVU

    http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/12301982/nfl-films-founder-ed-sabol-dies-age-98

    NEW YORK — Ed Sabol, the NFL Films founder who revolutionized sports broadcasting and reimagined pro football from an up-and-coming league to must-watch theater, has died. He was 98.

    Sabol died Monday at his home in Scottsdale, Arizona, the NFL said.

    Sabol was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2011. During his tenure at NFL Films from 1964 to 1995, the organization won 52 Emmy Awards.

    “Through his determination and innovative spirit, Ed Sabol transformed how America watched football and all sports,” NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. “Ed ignited the fire at NFL Films and was the Keeper of the Flame with a remarkable vision and dedication to telling the stories of the people who played, coached and loved the game.”

    Working with his son, Steve, Sabol introduced a series of innovations taken for granted today: super slow-motion replays, blooper reels, reverse angle shots. They stuck microphones on coaches and players, set highlights to pop music, and recorded pregame locker room speeches.

    And one of their most important decisions was hiring John Facenda to narrate all this. He became known as the “Voice of God,” reading lyrical descriptions in solemn tones.

    Through his determination and innovative spirit, Ed Sabol transformed how America watched football and all sports.
    ”- NFL commissioner Roger Goodell

    “We began making the game personal for the fans, like a Hollywood movie,” Sabol told The Associated Press before his Hall of Fame induction. “Violent tackles, the long slow spiral of the ball, following alongside the players as they sidestepped and sprinted down the field. The movie camera was the perfect medium at the time to present the game the way the fans wanted to see it.”

    A star swimmer at Ohio State who had a brief stage career, Sabol served with the 4th Infantry Division as a rifleman during World War II. He was in the overcoat business with his father-in-law in Philadelphia when the self-described “amateur moviemaker” formed Blair Productions, a film company named after his daughter. His only experience producing sports was recording the action at Steve’s high school football games.

    Then he won the rights to chronicle the 1962 NFL championship for $3,000, changing the course of his film career and — very possibly — the league’s fortunes.

    At his Hall of Fame enshrinement, Sabol, then 94, said from his wheelchair that he “dreamt the impossible dream, and I’m living it right at this minute.”

    When Sabol founded NFL Films, his son was there working beside him as a cinematographer right from the start. The two were honored with the Lifetime Achievement Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 2003.

    Steve Sabol, who succeeded his father as NFL Films’ president in 1985, died in 2012 at age 69 of brain cancer.

    Ed Sabol is survived by his wife of 74 years, Audrey, his daughter, Blair, and grandson, Casey

    #18284
    Zooey
    Participant

    I don’t think one can exaggerate the significance of Sabol (and Facenda) in the popularity of the NFL.

    #18285
    Mackeyser
    Moderator

    I think you’re right, Zooey.

    Those NFL Films reels were both Hollywood and coaching reel at the same time.

    Magic and method… truly a bit of alchemy before our eyes.

    Sports is the crucible of human virtue. The distillate remains are human vice.

    #18287
    Dak
    Participant

    I still enjoy watching those old NFL Films productions. Still get tingles up and down my spine.

    #18292
    wv
    Participant

    NFL Films meant so much to me as a kid….. long before cable, ESPN, NFL Network, DVRs and VCRs……..the rotary antenna TV on our rooftop and our old RCA Victor TV that maybe got 10-15 TV stations pending the weather was all we got……….. Thus my brothers and I looked forward to Saturday Afternoons to watch This Week In Pro – Football hosted by Brookshier and Summeral and of course The NFL Game of Week……… it was awesome, and it still is looking at those old shows….

    Ten to Fifteen channels?!
    Man, you had it made.
    We got 3 channels, with the rooftop antenna.

    Sabol was great. The music was awesome.
    To this day, it still plays in my
    head at random times.

    w
    v

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 3 months ago by wv.
    #18294
    Dak
    Participant

    Ten to Fifteen channels?!
    Man, you had it made.
    We got 3 channels, with the rooftop antenna.

    Wv, I think I had you beat. Most days, we got 5 channels, some days 6, but the 6th channel wasn’t worth watching.

    #18295
    joemad
    Participant

    <P>Ten to Fifteen channels?!<BR>Man, you had it made.<BR>We got 3 channels, with the rooftop antenna.</P>

    <P>Wv, I think I had you beat. Most days, we got 5 channels, some days 6, but the 6th channel wasn’t worth watching.</P>

    this brought a smile to my face….. do your guys remember UHF and VHF channels???/

    growing up in Santa Clara in the early 70’s we got the SF stations, local San Jose stations, and Monterrey/Salinas, ..then my oldest brother who is a big 49er fan convinces my dad to allow him to put up the rotor antenna on the roof to get the 49er games telecast out of Chico, CA because the home games were blacked out locally……. my brother would point the antenna north to try to get the Chico, CA, (I still remember, Chico Ch. 12 used to be a CBS affiliate) If the weather was good, we’d get a decent display of the game, you’d sacrifice picture quality for TV audio, no worries, game was on the radio…. the rotor antenna gave us Stockton/ Sacramento channels too.

    because of all that TV antenna positioning I experienced as a kid, I’m still somewhat obsessed with antenna TV… I have a small flat screen out in the shed and play with antenna positioning to this day although the range is not as good because the digital signal these days does not travel as far as the old analog signals.

    BTW, none of these channels used broadcast 24 hours…

    Test Pattern, with US National Anthem sign-off….

    indian test screen.

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 3 months ago by joemad.
    #18299
    wv
    Participant

    Ten to Fifteen channels?!
    Man, you had it made.
    We got 3 channels, with the rooftop antenna.

    Wv, I think I had you beat. Most days, we got 5 channels, some days 6, but the 6th channel wasn’t worth watching.

    Yeah, well…ya know, itz West, by god, Virginia.

    A lot of the time, i can remember having to turn
    the tv channel selector with pliers.

    You should try listening to wv-radio sometime — its
    all Elvis and Jesus, 24 hours a day. One
    or the other.

    w
    v

    #18302
    Zooey
    Participant

    I grew up in Chico, and I think we got about 7 channels.

    In the good old days, I could pick up 3 different stations that televised football, and they could televise whatever they wanted. The conferences weren’t split up by network. On a really good Sunday, all 3 stations would televise a double-header, and I would have up to 6 games to choose from, or switch between them. I almost always got the Rams.

    Hey, Joemad. Don’t litter.

    It makes the Indian chief cry.

    (I looked for this on youtube, and can’t find it)

    #18303
    zn
    Moderator

    I don’t think one can exaggerate the significance of Sabol (and Facenda) in the popularity of the NFL.

    I think you’re right, Zooey.

    Those NFL Films reels were both Hollywood and coaching reel at the same time.

    Magic and method… truly a bit of alchemy before our eyes.

    I still enjoy watching those old NFL Films productions. Still get tingles up and down my spine.

    Sabol. Facenda. And…don’t forget Sam Spence.

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