Stuart Scott, a prominent ESPN sportscaster who was known for infusing his reports with a blend of pop culture references, slang and exuberant phrases that made him something of a pop culture figure in his own right, died on Sunday in a Hartford-area hospital. He was 49.
The cause was cancer, ESPN said.
“Booyah!” was Scott’s signature expression, and it spread well beyond sports and into mainstream culture. Other times he would enliven his offerings of scores, commentary and highlights with remarks like “Cool as the other side of the pillow,” “Just call him butter ’cause he’s on a roll,” and “Wow! That was as hard-core as the Wu-Tang Clan on steroids!”
Scott, the most prominent black sportscaster at ESPN, told the online magazine XXL in July that hip-hop was an important part of his life — as was Broadway music.
“You’ve got to be true to who you are and what you do,” he said. “I’m more of a hip-hop feel person. Music is how you feel. The younger the mind, that’s how I want to be.”
He appeared in videos with the rappers LL Cool J and Luke, and he was cited in “3 Peat,” a Lil Wayne song: “Yeah, I got game like Stuart Scott, fresh out the ESPN shop.”
Scott recognized that his critics did not always like his affinity for rap, but he insisted that he did not care what they said. He told NPR in 2002 that one black viewer had said to him, “All you’re trying to do is drag our race down” by using improper language and slang. “We’re better than that,” the man told Scott.
Scott said: “All right, man. We’re better than that. That’s not going to make me change what I do and how I do it.”
Scott joined ESPN in 1993 for the beginning of its first spinoff network, ESPN2, but he soon moved to “SportsCenter,” which had already developed stars like Keith Olbermann, Dan Patrick, Chris Berman, Robin Roberts and Bob Ley. Scott became defined as much for his energy, wit and stylish wardrobe as for his arsenal of catchphrases.
“Stuart brought a different, unique sensibility to ‘SportsCenter,’ ” said James Andrew Miller, an author of “Those Guys Have All the Fun,” an oral history of ESPN. “He invented his own style, and in doing so, he grew the audience. He was easily one of the most influential personalities in ESPN history.”
In a statement, President Obama said: “Twenty years ago, Stu helped usher in a new way to talk about our favorite teams and the day’s best plays.”
The president added: “Over the years, he entertained us, and in the end, he inspired us — with courage and love.”
Scott also hosted N.F.L. and N.B.A. shows — in the studio and on the road — and less serious fare like “Dream Job” and “Stump the Schwab.”
He learned of his cancer in 2007 while on assignment in Pittsburgh for “Monday Night Football,” having had an emergency appendectomy. Doctors discovered appendiceal cancer.
The cancer recurred several times, requiring him to miss stretches of time in the studio and assignments. To stay in shape, he endured exhausting mixed-martial-arts and cross-training workouts, sometimes right after chemotherapy treatments.
“For the mind, it’s better than any chemo,” Scott told ABC’s “Good Morning America” early in 2014. “It’s better than any medicine.”
Even while undergoing operations, chemotherapy and experimental treatments, he never asked his doctors for a prognosis, he said.
“Stage 1, 2 or 8, it doesn’t matter,” he told The New York Times last March. “I’m trying to fight it the best I can.”
Scott was born on July 19, 1965, in Chicago to O. Ray and Jacqueline Scott. When he was 7, his family moved to Winston-Salem, N.C., where he grew up loving football and was a captain of his high school team. He played on a club football team at the University of North Carolina.
“Much as I love mixed martial arts, I love football more — more than any activity until I had kids,” he told The Times.
At North Carolina, he majored in speech communication. He graduated in 1987 and worked at local news stations in the South for several years before ESPN hired him.
Scott is survived by his daughters, Taelor and Sydni; his companion, Kristin Spodobalski; his parents; his sisters, Susan Scott and Synthia Kearney; and his brother, Stephen.
In July, Scott received a perseverance award at the ESPYs, ESPN’s televised award ceremony. The honor is named for Jim Valvano, a former North Carolina State basketball coach who died of cancer in 1993 at 47 after working as a commentator for ESPN.
In accepting the award, Scott said that he had had four operations in the previous week and had had kidney failure and kidney complications.
“When you die, that doesn’t mean you lose to cancer,” he said on the stage, eliciting comparisons to the speech that Valvano gave at the ESPYs shortly before his death. “You beat cancer by how you live, why you live and the manner in which you live. So live. Fight like hell, and when you get too tired to fight, lay down and rest and let someone else fight for you.”
As he ended his speech, he called his daughter Sydni to the stage to give him a hug.
“I need one,” he said.
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Stuart Scott dies at age of 49
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Stuart Orlando Scott (July 19, 1965 – January 4, 2015) was an American sportscaster and anchor on ESPN, most notably on the network's SportsCenter. Well known for his hip-hop style and use of catchphrases, Scott was also a regular for the network in its National Basketball Association (NBA) and the National Football League (NFL) coverage.
Scott grew up in North Carolina, and graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He began his career with various local television stations before joining ESPN in 1993. Although there were already accomplished African-American sportscasters, his blending of hip hop with sportscasting was unique for television. By 2008, he was a staple in ESPN's programming,[1] and also began on ABC as lead host for their coverage of the NBA.
In 2007, Scott had an appendectomy and learned that his appendix was cancerous.[2] After going into remission, he was again diagnosed with cancer in 2011 and 2013. Scott was honored at the ESPY Awards in 2014 with the Jimmy V Awardfor his fight against cancer, shortly before his death in 2015 at the age of 49.
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Contents
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Early life and career[edit]
Stuart Orlando Scott[3] was born in Chicago, Illinois to O. Ray and Jacqueline Scott. When he was seven, Scott and his family moved to Winston-Salem, North Carolina.[4][5] Scott had two sisters—Susan and Synthia—and one brother, Stephen.[4] He attended Mount Tabor High School for 9th and 10th grade and then completed his last two years at Richard J. Reynolds High School in Winston-Salem—graduating in 1983.[6] In high school, he was a captain of his football team, ran track, served as vice president of the student government and was the Sergeant at Arms of the school's Key Club.[5][6] Scott will be inducted into the Richard J. Reynolds High School Hall of Fame during a ceremony in February 2015.[6]
He attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[4] He was a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, and was part of the on-air talent at the student-run radio station WXYC.[4] While at UNC, he also played wide receiver and defensive back on the club football team.[4] He graduated from the University of North Carolina in 1987 with a Bachelor of Arts in speech communication.[4] In 2001, he gave the commencement address at UNC where he implored graduates to celebrate diversity and recognize the power of communication.[7]
Following graduation, Scott worked as a news reporter and weekend sports anchor at WPDE-TV in Florence, South Carolina from 1987 until 1988.[8][9] Scott came up with the phrase "cooler than the other side of the pillow" while working his first job at WPDE.[10] After this, Scott worked as a news reporter at WRAL-TV 5 in Raleigh, North Carolina from 1988 until 1990.[11] WRAL Sports anchor Jeff Gravley recalled there was a "natural bond" between Scott and the sports department.[11] Gravley described his style as creative, gregarious and adding so much energy to the newsroom.[11] Even after leaving, Scott still visited his former colleagues at WRAL and treated them like family.[11]
From 1990 until 1993, Scott worked at WESH, an NBC affiliate in Orlando, Florida as a sports reporter and sports anchor. While at WESH, he met ESPN producer Gus Ramsey, who was beginning his own career.[12] Ramsey said of Scott: "You knew the second he walked in the door that it was a pit stop, and that he was gonna be this big star somewhere someday. He went out and did a piece on the rodeo, and he nailed it just like he would nail the NBA Finals for ESPN."[12] He earned first place honors from the Central Florida Press Club for a feature on rodeo.[13]
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ESPN[edit]
Al Jaffe, ESPN's vice president for talent, brought Scott to ESPN2 because they were looking for sportscasters who might appeal to a younger audience.[14][12] Scott became one of the few African-American personalities who was not a former professional athlete.[15] His first ESPN assignments were for SportsSmash, a short sportscast twice an hour on ESPN2's SportsNight program.[12] After Keith Olbermann left SportsNight for ESPN's SportsCenter, Scott took his place in the anchor chair at SportsNight.[12] After this, Scott was a regular on SportsCenter.[12] At SportsCenter, Scott was frequently teamed with fellow anchors Rich Eisen, Steve Levy, Kenny Mayne, Dan Patrick, and others.[16] Scott was a regular in the This is SportsCenter commercials.[17]
In 2002, Scott was named studio host for the NBA on ESPN. He became lead host in 2008, when he also began at ABC in the same capacity for its NBA coverage, which included the NBA Finals. Additionally, Scott anchored SportsCenter’s prime-time coverage from the site of NBA post-season games.[13] From 1997 until 2014, he covered the league's finals.[13] During the 1997 and 1998 NBA Finals, Scott did one-on-one interviews with Michael Jordan.[13] When Monday Night Football moved to ESPN in 2006, Scott hosted on-site coverage, including Monday Night Countdown and post-game SportsCenter coverage. Scott previously appeared on NFL PrimeTime during the 1997 season, Monday Night Countdown from 2002–2005, and Sunday NFL Countdown from 1999–2001.[13] Scott also covered the MLB playoffsand NCAA Final Four in 1995 for ESPN.[13]
Scott appeared in each issue of ESPN the Magazine, with his Holla column. During his work at ESPN, he also interviewed Tiger Woods, Sammy Sosa, President Bill Clinton and President Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign.[13] As a part of the interview with then-President Barack Obama, Scott played in a one-on-one basketball game with the President.[18] In 2004, per the request of U.S. troops, Scott and fellow SportsCenter co-anchors hosted a week of programs originating from Kuwait for ESPN’s SportsCenter: Salute the Troops.[13] He hosted a number of ESPN game and reality shows, including Stump the Schwab, Teammates, andDream Job, and hosted David Blaine's Drowned Alive special. He hosted a special and only broadcast episode of America's Funniest Home Videos called AFV: The Sports Edition.[13]
On June 22, 2014, Scott was selected to co-host the first SportsCenter to originate from DC-2 (Digital Center 2) at 11 p.m.[13]
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Style[edit]
While there were already successful African-American sportscasters,[19] Scott blended hip-hop culture and sports in a way that had never been seen before on television.[20] He talked in the same manner as fans would at home.[15] ESPN director of news Vince Doria told ABC: "But Stuart spoke a much different language… that appealed to a young demographic, particularly a young African-American demographic."[21] Michael Wilbon wrote that Scott allowed his personality to infuse the coverage and his emotion to pour out.[22] Scott also integrated pop culture references into his reports.[23][24] One commentator remembered his style: "he could go from evoking a Baptist preacher riffing during Sunday morning service ('Can I get a witness from the congregation?!'), to quoting Public Enemy frontman Chuck D ('Hear the drummer get WICKED!')[25] In 1999, he was parodied on Saturday Night Live by Tim Meadows.[26] Scott appeared in music videos with the rappers LL Cool J and Luke, and he was cited in 3 Peat, a Lil Wayne song that included the line: “Yeah, I got game like Stuart Scott, fresh out the ESPN shop.”[5] In a 2002 segment of NPR's On the Media, Scott revealed one approach to his anchoring duties: "Writing is better if it's kept simple. Every sentence doesn't need to have perfect noun/verb agreement. I've said 'ain't' on the air. Because I sometimes use 'ain't' when I'm talking."[15]
As a result of his unique style, Scott and ESPN received a lot of hate mail from people who resented his color, his hip-hop style, or his generation.[12] In a 2003 USA Today survey, Scott finished first in the question of which anchor should be voted off SportsCenter, but he also was second to Dan Patrick in the 'definitely keep him' voting.[27] Jason Whitlock criticized Scott's use of Jay-Z’s alternate nickname, "Jigga", at halftime of Monday Night Football as ridiculous and offensive.[28] Scott never changed his style and ESPN stuck with him.[15]
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Catchphrases[edit]
Scott became well known for his use of catch phrases, following in the SportsCenter tradition begun by Dan Patrick and Keith Olbermann.[29] He popularized the phrase booyah, which spread from sports into mainstream culture.[1][23] Some of the catchphrases included:
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Legacy[edit]
ESPN president John Skipper said Scott's flair and style, which he used to talk about the athletes he was covering, "changed everything."[12] Fellow ESPN Anchor,Stan Verrett, said he was a trailblazer: "not only because he was black – obviously black – but because of his style, his demeanor, his presentation. He did not shy away from the fact that he was a black man, and that allowed the rest of us who came along to just be ourselves."[12] He became a role model for African-American sports journalists.[19][33]
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Personal life[edit]
Scott was married to Kimberly Scott from 1993 to 2007.[31][34] They had two daughters together, Taelor and Sydni. Scott lived in Avon, Connecticut.[4] At the time of his death, Scott was in a relationship with Kristin Spodobalski.[35] During his Jimmy V Award speech, he told his teenage daughters: “Taelor and Sydni, I love you guys more than I will ever be able to express. You two are my heartbeat. I am standing on this stage here tonight because of you.”[36]
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Eye injury[edit]
Scott was injured when hit in the face by a football during a New York Jets mini-camp on April 3, 2002, while filming a special for ESPN, a blow which damaged hiscornea.[37] He received surgery but afterwards suffered from ptosis, or drooping of the eyelid.[38]
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Appendectomy and cancer[edit]
After leaving Connecticut on a Sunday morning in 2007 for Monday Night Football in Pittsburgh, Scott had a stomach ache. After the stomach ache got worse, he went to the hospital instead of the game and had his appendix removed.[39][2] After testing the appendix, doctors learned that he had cancer.[2] Two days later, he had surgery in New York that removed part of his colon and some of his lymph nodes, anything near the appendix.[2] After the surgery, they recommended preventive chemotherapy.[40] By December, Scott—while undergoing chemotherapy—hosted Friday night ESPN NBA coverage and led the coverage of ABC's NBA Christmas Day studio show.[41] Scott worked out while undergoing chemotherapy.[2] Scott said of his experience with cancer at the time: "One of the coolest things about having cancer, and I know that sounds like an oxymoron, is meeting other people who've had to fight it. You have a bond. It's like a fraternity or sorority."[2] When Scott returned to work and people knew of his cancer diagnosis, the well-wishers felt overbearing for him as he just wanted to talk about sports, not cancer.[2]
The cancer returned in 2011, but it eventually went back into remission.[42] He was again diagnosed with cancer on January 14, 2013.[43] After chemo, Scott would domixed martial arts and/or a P90X workout regimen.[42][39] By 2014, he had undergone 58 infusions of chemotherapy and switched to chemotherapy pills. [39] Scott also went under radiation and multiple surgeries as a part of his cancer treatment.[36] Scott never wanted to know what stage of cancer he was in.[39]
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Jimmy V Award[edit]
Scott was honored at the ESPY Awards on July 16, 2014, with the Jimmy V Award for his ongoing fight against cancer. He shared that he had four surgeries in seven days in the week prior to his appearance, when he was suffering from liver complications and kidney failure.[4] Scott told the audience: "When you die, it does not mean that you lose to cancer. You beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live.”[44] At the ESPYs, a video was also shown that included scenes of Scott from a clinic room at Johns Hopkins Hospital and other scenes from Scott's life fighting cancer.[45] Scott ended the speech by saying: "Have a great rest of your night, have a great rest of your life."[46]
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Death and tributes[edit]
Scott died the morning of January 4, 2015.[47] ESPN announced: "Stuart Scott, a dedicated family man and one of ESPN’s signature SportsCenter anchors, has died after a courageous and inspiring battle with cancer. He was 49."[48] ESPN released a video obituary of Scott.[12] Sports Illustrated called ESPN's video obituary a beautiful and moving tribute to a man who died "at the too-damn-young age of 49."[49] U.S. President Barack Obama paid tribute to Scott, saying:
A number of National Basketball Association athletes—current and former—paid tribute to Scott, including Stephen Curry, Carmelo Anthony, Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash,Jason Collins, Shaquille O'Neal, Magic Johnson, Dwayne Wade, Lebron James, Michael Jordan, Bruce Bowen, Dennis Rodman, James Worthy and others.[50][51] A number of golfers paid tribute to Scott: Tiger Woods, Gary Player, David Duval, Lee Westwood, Blair O'Neal, Jane Park and others.[52] Other athletes paid tribute including Robert Griffin III, Russell Wilson, Jon Lester, Lance Armstrong, Barry Sanders, J.J. Watt, David Ortiz and Sheryl Swoopes.[51] UNC basketball coach Roy Williams called him a "hero."[46] Bruce Arians said: “We lost a football game but we lost more this morning. I think one of the best members of the media I’ve ever dealt with, Stuart Scott, passed away."[53]
Colleagues Hannah Storm and Rich Eisen gave on-air remembrances of Scott.[54] On Sportscenter, Scott Van Pelt and Steve Levy said farewell to Stuart Scott onSportsCenter and left a chair empty in his honor.[55] Tom Jackson, Cris Carter, Chris Berman, Mike Ditka and Keyshawn Johnson from NFL Countdown shared their memories of Stuart Scott.[56]
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Filmography[edit]
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Stuart Orlando Scott (July 19, 1965 – January 4, 2015) was an American sportscaster and anchor on ESPN, most notably on the network's SportsCenter. Well known for his hip-hop style and use of catchphrases, Scott was also a regular for the network in its National Basketball Association (NBA) and the National Football League (NFL) coverage.
Scott grew up in North Carolina, and graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He began his career with various local television stations before joining ESPN in 1993. Although there were already accomplished African-American sportscasters, his blending of hip hop with sportscasting was unique for television. By 2008, he was a staple in ESPN's programming, and also began on ABC as lead host for their coverage of the NBA.
In 2007, Scott had an appendectomy and learned that his appendix was cancerous. After going into remission, he was again diagnosed with cancer in 2011 and 2013. Scott was honored at the ESPY Awards in 2014 with the Jimmy V Award for his fight against cancer, shortly before his death in 2015 at the age of 49.
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