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Georgia vs. Florida 2022

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LORAN SMITH<br />

Bulldogs<br />

of the 4 th Estate<br />

PHOTO VIA<br />

GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY<br />

ED THILENIUS<br />

PHOTO VIA<br />

EBAY.COM<br />

Bulldawg Illustrated continues its series, featuring long-time UGA personalities of the Fourth Estate. There are many who are published authors along with<br />

network television superstars. Our sixth installment spotlights former Georgia Bulldogs’ play-by-play announcer, Ed Thilenius, who like so many media stars<br />

got his start in a local newsroom (Athens Banner-Herald).<br />

Before Scott Howard, an underappreciated announcer who<br />

underscores the fundamentals of radio play by play, there was<br />

Larry Munson; before Munson there was Ed Thilenius who had,<br />

at one time, a similar cult following as Munson did.<br />

Thilenius’ teams, unfortunately, did not have the good fortune of<br />

winning like those of Munson era. Larry’s broadcasting career was linked<br />

with the accomplished coaching of Vince Dooley.<br />

Like the coach of his era, Wallace Butts, Thilenius did enjoy a late<br />

championship run in the 50s when the Bulldogs won the SEC title in 1959<br />

and subsequently defeated Missouri in the Orange Bowl 14-0.<br />

Latter day Bulldog fans don’t remember Thilenius, although in the UGA<br />

archives are tapes of his play-by-play accounts including the broadcast of<br />

the 1957 Tech game when Georgia broke the drought by defeating Tech on<br />

Grant Field, 7-0, Theron Sapp scoring the only touchdown of the game.<br />

Before his dalliance into radio, which segued into a permanent gig,<br />

Thilenius was a reporter with the Athens Banner-Herald. There was an<br />

incident on campus in the late 40s having to do with a prominent dean<br />

being shot by his estranged wife. Thilenuis covered the story and when<br />

he showed up in the dean’s hospital room, he was greeted with, “Hello<br />

Ed, I see the press is here.”<br />

With a perfect bass voice for radio, Thilenius, who sounded as though<br />

he might have swallowed Walter Conkrite, moved into full time status<br />

with WRFC, covering sports and news for the local station, as he had<br />

done for the Banner-Herald; and calling Bulldog football, basketball, and<br />

baseball games along with the Friday night games of Athens High. A<br />

busy man, indeed.<br />

By the time of the 1965 football season, in which he called the flea<br />

flicker game which upset defending national champion Alabama,<br />

Thilenius had moved to WAGA TV in Atlanta, becoming the city’s first full<br />

time TV sports director. In 1966, the Falcons joined the National Football<br />

League, and Thilenius became the announcer for the NFL franchise.<br />

At the time, CBS arranged for two announcers to call each game. If the<br />

Falcons, for example, were playing Green Bay, stations in the Southeast<br />

got the broadcast of Thilenius, while the Midwest stations heard the<br />

game called by Ray Scott.<br />

The next season, CBS decided that one announcer crew was sufficient<br />

and let half of the announcers and crews go. Thilenius did not make<br />

the cut. He was devastated. Falcon owner, Rankin Smith, did his best to<br />

get CBS for find a spot for Thilenius, but to no avail. Ed then wanted his<br />

old Georgia job back but Joel Eaves, athletic director had already hired<br />

Munson and would not consider a change. Ed drove over to Athens to<br />

meet me and ask how he could present his case, but I had to tell him I<br />

was not in a position to help him.<br />

In 1964, I recall, Bobby Dodd then AD at Tech, made an offer to Thilenius<br />

to become the Yellow Jacket announcer. It ended up with Ed getting<br />

a raise out of the negotiations, which greatly irritated Eaves. was not<br />

sympathetic with Thilenius’ desire to return to the Bulldog booth.<br />

Interestingly, a few years later, Munson and Thilenius became<br />

acquainted. One day, I got a call from Munson saying that it would be<br />

nice to have Thilenius back on the broadcast doing color.<br />

That would have gone over splendidly in some circles, but I had to tell<br />

Munson that I didn’t think it would be a good idea. While I was not sure<br />

what would come of a discussion with the incumbent power brokers at the<br />

moment, namely Coach Eaves, I was fearful that Thilenius in that position<br />

might cause a great controversy. Some fans, with Munson’s popularity in its<br />

infancy, might clamor to have Thilenius back doing play-by-play.<br />

I always thought that it was big of Munson to even consider the<br />

arrangement, but I felt that such a move might end up in debilitating<br />

controversy.<br />

The last survivor of the Thilenius broadcast crew, John Withers worked<br />

not only the Georgia broadcasts but the Falcon broadcasts of 1966,<br />

remembers Thilenius as being “a perfectionist.”<br />

“I enjoyed working with him. He would always try to compliment our<br />

crew for the job we did. He would make sure that he mentioned our<br />

names which gave us great status around campus and the host hotel<br />

when we were on the road. I thought he was a great announcer.”<br />

Ole timers have great recall of Thilenius’ broadcasts. “Imagine your radio<br />

dial as a football field, the lefts and rights are the same.” Then he would<br />

describe the huddle of quarterback Fran Tarkenton. “Tarkenton talks to<br />

his two rows or five.”<br />

His voice was so authoritative. No sports announcer ever sounded<br />

better on radio.<br />

BULLDAWGILLUSTRATED<br />

67 ISSUE TEN • FLORIDA

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