
Larry Munson called Georgia football games for more than 40 years. Nobody loved the Bulldogs more. (AJC photo)
UGA officials have confirmed that legendary UGA broadcaster Larry Munson passed away Sunday night in Athens. He was 89. He died from complications of pneumonia, according to his son, Michael. Funeral arrangements have not been determined. Following is an obituary written mostly by former AJC staffer Tony Barnhart with some small contributions from me. . . .
From AJC Staff
ATHENS – For a few unforgettable days in 1941, it seemed fate had plans for Larry Munson that had nothing to do with the Georgia Bulldogs. After all, once you’ve shared the stage with Frank Sinatra, it’s hard to dream of night games in Starkville, Miss.
As a high school senior in Minneapolis, Munson was, by his own account, a “decent” piano player who loved jazz. He was in class when the phone call came. The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, in town and scheduled to play 28 shows over the next week, had lost its regular piano player to illness.
“I had no idea how they got my name,” Munson once recalled. “I couldn’t believe they were interested in me.”
Soon, he found himself onstage with one of the most heralded groups of the big band era. The lead singer was a skinny kid from Hoboken, N.J.
“The women went crazy over Frank,” said Munson, who played every show with Sinatra for the princely sum of $31 per night. “I had never seen anything like it in my life.”
Munson loved music but, as it turned out, he loved broadcasting more. For that, the University of Georgia and its fans will be eternally grateful.
Today, however, the Bulldog Nation is in mourning. For the gravely voice of Larry Munson, who passionately implored his beloved team to “hunker down” in the face of adversity, has been silenced. Munson, who became the voice of the Bulldogs in 1966 and will be its passion eternally, died Sunday at the age of 89.
“If you ask the average Georgia fan who best represents the spirit of Georgia football, it wouldn’t be a player or a coach,” former Georgia quarterback (1973-76) and head coach (1989-95) Ray Goff said. “It would be Larry Munson. He cared about Georgia and our fans loved him for it. There will never be another one like him.”
In an age when broadcasters attempt to remain emotionally detached from the action on the field, Munson built several generations of adoring Bulldogs fans because one thing was crystal clear when he was on the air: When it came to the Georgia Bulldogs, Munson made no pretense of objectivity. He desperately wanted Georgia to win. Georgia fans watching the games at Sanford Stadium would wear headphones, and those at home would turn down the TV and turn up the radio. Why? Because a Georgia football game was not complete without Munson’s impassioned take on the action.
“Larry’s style made him unique, not only in college but in all of sports,” said Wes Durham, the radio voice at Georgia Tech who was one of Munson’s longtime admirers and friends. “There was only one guy who could do a game like Larry Munson. He was second to none.”
Munson’s journey to Georgia legend began when he was born on Sept. 27, 1922, in Minneapolis. A veteran of World War II, Munson used his discharge pay in 1945 to enroll in broadcasting school. After 10 weeks of training Munson landed in Cheyenne, Wyo., where he worked with another future Hall of Fame broadcaster, Curt Gowdy. When Gowdy left Cheyenne to become a baseball announcer in Class AA Oklahoma City, he recommended Munson for the job of calling University Wyoming football and basketball.
In 1947, Gowdy left Oklahoma City to join the New York Yankees radio crew, then led by the great Mel Allen. Gowdy told Munson that if he were ever going to make any money in the broadcasting business, he would have to get a job calling baseball.
So in 1947 Munson went to Nashville, where he would call minor league baseball in the summer and Vanderbilt football and basketball in the fall and winter. In his spare time he hosted his own televised fishing show.
“I worked all the damn time, but it was a pretty good deal,” Munson recalled in a 2004 interview.
But like his friend Gowdy, Munson wanted to get to the major leagues. He finally got that chance in 1966 when the Milwaukee Braves moved to Atlanta. Munson was hired as part of the first Atlanta Braves radio broadcasting team, which included Milo Hamilton.
Then fate stepped in and put Munson on the path to his legendary career as the voice of the Bulldogs.
Munson was at spring training when he learned that Ed Thilenius, Georgia’s longtime radio voice, was leaving to work for the Atlanta Falcons.
Munson picked up the phone and called Joel Eaves, Georgia’s athletics director, who he knew from his days at Vanderbilt.
“Coach Eaves asked me what I thought of Larry,” said Dan Magill, Georgia’s long-time publicist and historian. “I thought Larry was OK, but I had no idea back then that he would become a legend.”
Vince Dooley was in the third season of his 25-year career as head coach. He knew nothing about Munson when he was hired.
“Coach Eaves and Dan Magill made the hire and they convinced me that Larry would do a good job for us,” Dooley said. “I liked Larry but I never imagined at the time that he would be with us for over 40 years. He had an incredible career.”
Munson, however, did not become a Georgia legend overnight. His Midwestern style was not an immediate hit with the Georgia fans who had grown to love Thilenius. It didn’t help that when Munson first got the job he still lived in Nashville and commuted to Athens for the games. He eventually moved to Atlanta and went to work for the Georgia Radio Network.
“Our fans were used to Ed and they just didn’t know Larry,” said Loran Smith, the longtime sideline reporter and executive director of the Georgia Bulldog Club. “Those kind of things take time.”
Munson’s relationship with the Georgia people began to change in 1973 when the Bulldogs traveled to Knoxville to take on favored Tennessee. When Georgia upset the Volunteers 35-31 at Neyland Stadium, Munson screamed: “My God, Georgia has just beaten Tennessee in Knoxville!!!!”
At that moment Munson showed how much he cared about the Bulldogs. From then on the Georgia fans would care as deeply about him.
“I started hearing some things from folks,” Munson said in a 2004 interview. “I didn’t plan any of that stuff. It just came out. I was just calling what I saw and what I felt.
“The great thing about Larry is that you never had to wonder where he stood or who he was pulling for,” said Rod Bramblett, the current Auburn radio voice who grew up listening to Munson. “The passion Larry has for Georgia, you just can’t fake. It’s real and the Georgia people know it’s real.”
In 1975 the legend of Larry Munson really took off when Georgia upset Florida 10-7 in Jacksonville. Georgia won the game when Richard Appleby, the Bulldogs’ tight end, threw an 80-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Gene Washington. Washington, who was a track star with world-class speed, was hoping for a spot on the U.S. Olympics team. On the radio replay, Munson’s screams could be heard over the cauldron of sound that was Jacksonville’s Gator Bowl:
“APPLEBY! THE END AROUND! JUST STOPPED, PLANTED HIS FEET AND THREW IT! AND WASHINGTON CAUGHT IT. THINKING OF MONTREAL AND THE OLYMPICS, AND RAN OUT OF HIS SHOES DOWN THE MIDDLE – 80 YARDS! GATOR BOWL! ROCKING! STUNNED! THE GIRDERS ARE BENDING NOW!….
LOOK AT THE SCORE!
From then on, Munson said in a 2005 interview, he had no qualms about putting his feelings on the air for everybody to hear. Magill, sensing something special was going on, began taking the highlights from Munson’s broadcasts and turning them into audio tapes that fans could purchase. It became a tradition at Georgia to listen to tapes of Munson’s greatest calls while tailgating at Sanford Stadium.
“No matter where you went on campus on game days you could hear those tapes playing,” Magill said. “Our fans just couldn’t get enough of them.”
Today, the collections of Munson’s historic calls are a cottage industry with no fewer than four DVDs available.
In 1978 Georgia had one of its most surprising seasons as the Bulldogs won nine games, four of them by two points or fewer. The team had so many close finishes that they became known as the “Wonderdawgs.”
Munson breathlessly called them all. The most memorable fantastic finish came at Kentucky when Georgia trailed 16-0 but then drove the length of the field in the closing minutes down by only two, 16-14. When Rex Robinson made a short field goal with only three seconds left, Munson never said the kick was good. He just screamed “Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!”
In 1980 there were a lot of Munson Moments as the Bulldogs, led by freshman sensation Herschel Walker, went 12-0 and won the national championship. Munson will always be remembered for his call on Walker’s first-ever college touchdown on Sept. 6 at Tennessee:
“MY GOD ALMIGHTY, HE RAN RIGHT THROUGH TWO MEN! HERSCHEL RAN RIGHT OVER TWO MEN! THEY HAD HIM DEAD AWAY INSIDE THE 9. HERSHEL WALKER WENT 16 YARDS! HE DROVE RIGHT OVER THOSE ORANGE SHIRTS AND IS JUST DRIVING AND RUNNING WITH THOSE BIG THIGHS! MY GOD, A FRESHMAN!”
But later that season in Jacksonville, Georgia’s dreams of football glory almost slipped away. The Bulldogs were undefeated and ranked No. 2 but trailed Florida 21-20 with just over one minute left. Georgia faced a third down on its own 7-yard line when quarterback Buck Belue rolled to his right and completed a pass over the middle to Lindsay Scott. A Florida defender slipped and when Scott turned he saw a clear path to the goal line. He outraced the Gators for the touchdown and Georgia won 26-21. In the middle of Scott’s run Munson just yelled “Run, Lindsay!” And when Scott scored, Munson never said “touchdown.” He just screamed “Lindsay Scott! Lindsay Scott! Lindsay Scott!”
After several seconds of silence where Munson let the crowd noise tell the story, he quickly put the moment into perspective:
“You know, this game has always been called the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party. Do you know what is going to happen here tonight and up in St. Simons and Jekyll Island and all those places where all those Dawg people have got these condominiums for four days? Man, is there going to be some property destroyed tonight!”
“There are a number of things that made Larry special, but I think the most important thing is his ability to rise to the occasion in a big game,” Smith said. “He has the ability to leave the Georgia people hanging on every word.”
Smith said this was never truer than in a 1982 game at Auburn when Georgia was again undefeated and in the hunt for the national championship. A win would give Georgia its third straight SEC championship and a trip to the Sugar Bowl, where the Bulldogs would play Penn State for the national title.
Georgia led 19-14 but Auburn drove deep into Bulldogs territory in the final two minutes. Before each of the final few plays, Munson would beg the Georgia defense to “Hunker down one more time!”
When Georgia finally stopped the Auburn drive, Munson got caught up in the moment as the final seconds ticked off the clock at Jordan-Hare Stadium. Then came the words that will live forever in the hearts of the Georgia people. Larry had his own unique way of proclaiming that the Bulldogs were headed back to the Sugar Bowl:
“Oh, look at the sugar falling out of the sky! Look at the sugar falling out of the sky!”
Munson kept up his historic call despite the fact that an upset Auburn fan threw a drink on him.
Munson called all six SEC championships won by Dooley, who retired as head coach in 1988 and would be followed by Ray Goff, Jim Donnan and Mark Richt. There were a number of changes in Georgia football during those years, but the one constant was Larry Munson.
Munson was 80 years old in 2001, but that season, Richt’s first, he proved that he could still rise to the occasion when the big moment came. On Oct. 6 in Knoxville, Georgia appeared to be beaten when Tennessee scored with 44 seconds left to take a 24-20 lead. But Georgia, behind freshman quarterback David Greene, put together an unforgettable, heart-pounding drive. Greene threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to fullback Verron Haynes with five seconds left and Munson exploded:
“TOUCHDOWN! MY GOD, A TOUCHDOWN! WE THREW IT TO HAYNES! WE JUST STUFFED THEM WITH FIVE SECONDS LEFT! MY GOD ALMIGHTY, DID YOU SEE WHAT HE DID? DAVID GREENE JUST STRAIGHTENED UP AND WE SNUCK THE FULLBACK OVER! … WE JUST STEPPED ON THEIR FACE WITH A HOBNAILED BOOT AND BROKE THEIR NOSE! WE JUST CRUSHED THEIR FACE!”
“I didn’t know what the hell a hobnailed boot was. It just came out,” Munson would say in the summer of 2005. “But then Furman Bisher [of the AJC] called and told me guys used to use them to climb trees. Who knew? I guess the Lindsay Scott call [in 1980] will always be No. 1, but I like the hobnailed boot. That would be a close second.”
Munson, like anybody else, had his own personality quirks. On game days he was the eternal pessimist, seeing all the flaws on Georgia’s team and none on the opponents’.
“Usually I would feel pretty good about things on Saturday until I would see Larry,” Dooley said. “After listening to Larry for a few minutes I would get all worried. It finally got to the point where I had to stay away from him on game day.”
Munson had a lifetime love of fishing. Back in his early days in Nashville he would tape 52 fishing shows per year. But going fishing with Larry Munson was not like going fishing with anybody else.
“He would talk to the bait and tell it to hunker down,” Dooley said. “I mean, he was COACHING the bait! I don’t know how we ever caught a fish.”
Munson did a number of other broadcasting jobs. He called Georgia men’s basketball from 1987-96 and also had a stint with the Atlanta Falcons. From 1989-92 he would broadcast the Georgia games on Saturday and then call the Falcons on Sunday.
A huge movie buff, Munson had a regular group of students that he would take to the see the latest releases. Munson would often use his early morning reports on WSB Radio to review movies instead of talk about sports.
In 1983 Munson was honored by the Georgia General Assembly for his “great role in the Georgia championship football program.” The General Assembly honored him again in 1997 when Munson reached his 50th year in broadcasting.
In 1994 he was inducted into the Georgia Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame. In 2005 he was named to the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame.
Munson received the Chris Schenkel Award, which recognizes career achievement in broadcasting, from the College Football Hall of Fame in 2003.
In 2006 Munson was honored in Atlanta with a charity celebrity roast featuring Dooley, Donnan, Smith, Durham, Clark Howard, Neal Boortz, Governor Sonny Perdue (a former walk-on at Georgia) and host of former Bulldogs players. Munson, as he was prone to do, skewered everybody when it came his turn to speak.
But in 2007 Munson’s declining health began to take its toll. After meeting with Georgia officials, Munson announced that he would work only home games. He missed his first Georgia-Florida game, an event he dearly loved, after calling it since 1966, a string of 41 straight games.
After Georgia finished 10-2 and earned a trip to the 2008 Sugar Bowl, Munson said he wanted to make the trip to New Orleans. But on Dec. 28 Munson announced that after a suffering a fall at his home in Athens, he was not physically up to making the trip.
On Feb. 11, 2008, Munson was honored by the Atlanta Sports Council with the Furman Bisher Award for media excellence. Munson was again unable to travel to accept the award.
“What can I tell you?” Munson said in a Feb. 10 interview before the dinner in Atlanta. “It’s hell getting old.”
“The thing I will always remember about Larry is the incredible bond he forged with the Georgia people,” Dooley said. “There was a connection there that was hard to explain. I don’t think we’ll see another like him.”
MUNSON’S GREATEST CALL, IN MY OPINION:
HERE’S A NICE COMPILATION VIDEO PUT TOGETHER BY UGA:
465 comments Add your comment
Jdawg34
November 20th, 2011
10:59 pm
Thanks for all of the memories Larry. You were the best! Damn good dawg!!!!
BartBuzz
November 20th, 2011
10:59 pm
Nobody could make me hate the Dawgs like Larry Munson.
Godspeed….and one last “To Hell With Georgia” from a Tech graduate. Your passion will be missed.
John King
November 20th, 2011
10:59 pm
Larry I will always remember you and your voice of the Dawgs! Rest in peace.
Harry
November 20th, 2011
10:59 pm
Started listening to him when he and Ed Thelineus had a local TV show talking college games long, long time ago. All through UGA in the late 60s and into my now middle age r senior years, I listened and he is a legend now with my kids. I will email my daughter in San Francsco. She and her hsuband are also Dogs. They too will be sad but will rejoice in his reward and knowing he is in a better place.
We love you Larry !!
Harry
Dawg stranded in Alabama
November 20th, 2011
10:59 pm
RIP Larry Munson. When I was growing up, it was a tradition in my family to turn down the tv volume and listen to Larry call the game on the radio. There’ll never be another one like him!
Jawjadawg
November 20th, 2011
11:00 pm
So many Saturday afternoons spent listening to Larry call the Dawg’s games. Precious memories. RIP MR MUNSON. You will forever live in our hearts.
jojatek
November 20th, 2011
11:00 pm
A very, very sad day. I went to Tech, but grew up a Bulldog fan and will NEVER forget Munson calling Herschel’s game against UT (I believe he ran over Bill Bates in that one, who would go on to have a great career with Dallas, of course), and the Lindsay Scott call against Florida. Don’t admit this much, but I love to replay Munson’s greatest hits when I am back with old childhood friends in Georgia… still brings chills, and memories of “Dooley’s Junkyard Dawgs” and those famous “silver britches”. Rest in peace, Larry Munson, and thank you for your sharing your life, and your passion, with all of us…
MetalDawg
November 20th, 2011
11:00 pm
R.I.P. Larry Munson, a Damn Good Dawg
Sneakers O'Toole
November 20th, 2011
11:00 pm
Mute the TV big fella, Larry is coming home! RIP DGD
murfdawg
November 20th, 2011
11:01 pm
What a privilege it was to grow up listening to Munson do all the Dawg games. It is funny how you adopt his style and mannerism when you start talking about UGA football. He was the fiber that held together generations of Dawg fans.
We will miss you Larry.
JTH
November 20th, 2011
11:01 pm
So long Larry, you will be missed. Hunker down.
Chris Padgett
November 20th, 2011
11:02 pm
I grew up (I am 59) hearing Larry before there was TV. The way he counted the clock off and painted the picture of the game was special. I still love his work. May the Good Lord give strength to your family and heaven is now a better place. I hope we honor him at the first game next year so I can have a good reason to bawl in section 303. Thank you Larry for all you gave us!!
Carl Pyrdum Jr.
November 20th, 2011
11:02 pm
Rest in peace Larry. In the arms of the father and in the presence of angels. The Bull Dawgs definitely have their own angel forever and ever now. Seated in the big box on the fifty, looking down, making the call and forever and ever there will be sugar falling from the sky over the University of Georgia.
Glory Glory to old Georgia and to the Lord for having blessed us all with the presence of such a wonderful man…
JD
November 20th, 2011
11:02 pm
Date of birth is wrong.
Gman
November 20th, 2011
11:02 pm
Larry was simply the best may he rest in peace. Top dawg!!!
Big Al from Jesup
November 20th, 2011
11:03 pm
R I P Mr Larry Munson. Truly the greatest of all time. He was a Damn Good Dawg!!
Scott
November 20th, 2011
11:03 pm
RIP Larry… I hate it for the current generation of UGA students that will never truly understand how important he was to the Dawg Nation or what it felt like to wear headphones into Sanford or how everyone really did turn down the TV volume at home during games.
dawgsfalconsbravos
November 20th, 2011
11:04 pm
R.I.P. Larry.
DGD for life
Seeer
November 20th, 2011
11:04 pm
Mr. Munson you will be missed sir! Thanks for all the great memories! You made UGA football bigger than life! Always turned down the tv to listen to your call! RIP
Dr. Kenneth Noisewater
November 20th, 2011
11:04 pm
will always be missed…RIP Larry….now GATA Dawgs!!!!!
ROLL TIDE
November 20th, 2011
11:05 pm
RIP to one of the greatest voices of college football.
DawgInaTruck
November 20th, 2011
11:05 pm
Well done thy good and faithful damn good dawg.
Jef Allen
November 20th, 2011
11:05 pm
We will all miss you, Larry. You were an original and the Bulldog Nation was blessed by your passion and energy. You made listening to the Dawgs on the radio one of the greatest experiences a sports fan could have. Paint the picture for us in heaven, Larry.
1 4 GT
November 20th, 2011
11:05 pm
My Condolences to the UGA nation. I know ya’ll are saddened at Mr. Munson’s passing. My thoughts and prayers to his family and God’s peace be on them in their time of mourning. “Precious in the eyes of the Lord is the death of His saints.”
DJ Bulldawg
November 20th, 2011
11:06 pm
Hunker down Larry! Hunker down you glorious Dawg!
ClayHorn
November 20th, 2011
11:06 pm
Rest in peace, Larry. God bless you and your loved ones. I’ve missed you since you left broadcasting, and I’ve dreaded the day this news would come. The Dawgs won’t be the same without you, but hopefully you gathered some joy out of their successes this year. Now we’re going to beat Tech in your honor. Hunker Down One More Time!
GT Fan
November 20th, 2011
11:06 pm
Come on GT!!!!
Let’s send old Larry off with a win over the leg humpers.
To Hell With Georgia!!!!!!
dawgenuff
November 20th, 2011
11:06 pm
A true Southern Gentleman. We should dedicate the win over GA. Tech,this weekend, to Larry Munson! Rest In Peace ,a true friend of UGA! Selah
Mike
November 20th, 2011
11:06 pm
Rest in Peace, my friend. You brought more happiness to more people than you can ever know. It hasn’t been the same without you. You were the best.
KB
November 20th, 2011
11:07 pm
The greatest ever……rest in peace and you will be eternally in our hearts
Fan
November 20th, 2011
11:07 pm
I’m not a dawg fan, but he had no peers and I loved to listen to him. RIP.
LakeDawg
November 20th, 2011
11:07 pm
A part of my youth just died. God bless you, Larry. Rest in peace.
George Deuel
November 20th, 2011
11:07 pm
Before Larry was a famous Dawg, he was the radio announcer for the Nashville Vols, a minor league baseball team which played their home games at the old Sulphur Dell baseball park. A relative of mine was the PA announcer for the team so several times, as a young boy, I got to sit up in the press box. One night a foul ball entered the booth, right in front of me. I stuck out my glove and had the ball for an instant before dropping it and watching it roll down the foul screen, back to the playing field. I guess Larry took pity on a freckled faced young boy and I was invited to sit behind him and his assistant in the radio booth where I was given free potato chips and soft drinks. It was a big thrill which I have never forgotten. So, technically, Larry Munson was a Vol before moving to Georgia to become a Dawg.
Paladawg
November 20th, 2011
11:07 pm
The Dawg Nation mourns the loss of a legend, but he can never leave the hearts of the faithful. He remains the epitome of a damn good dawg. Thanks for all the memories and joy, Larry.
Spider29
November 20th, 2011
11:08 pm
RIP, Munson. You will be forever remembered and missed by all ‘Dogs of a certain age.
Jim Maxey
November 20th, 2011
11:08 pm
R.I.P. Larry Munson you will always be my favorite announcer guy who knows maybe I might be the next Munson someday.
OkieDawg
November 20th, 2011
11:09 pm
RIP Larry….With you and Erk together again, Heaven gets a little better…….See ya……A DGD
Christian White
November 20th, 2011
11:10 pm
I grew up going to UGA games with my Dad (a UGA grad). I have such great memories of Larry Munson calling the games. I eventually went to Clemson. I have been wearing my Georgia hat all day (even before I heard this sad news). Hunker Down, Larry Munson!
Tide/Dawg
November 20th, 2011
11:10 pm
Larry Munson, John Forney, Jim Fyffe, Jack Cristol, John Ward, Ernie Johnson, Skip Caray. Those voices live on from my childhood memories. Rest in Peace Mr. Munson. Prayers for your family.
TrishaDishaWarEagle
November 20th, 2011
11:10 pm
RIP Larry Munson, from WAREAGLE nation.
BiggdawgK
November 20th, 2011
11:10 pm
I’m not ashamed to admit I cried tonight. RIP Larry Munson you are the definition of a Damn Good Dawg.
Tech82
November 20th, 2011
11:10 pm
Larry Munson was a true icon of UGA sports. My condolences to the Bulldog fans. You lost a good one.
Ashley
November 20th, 2011
11:11 pm
Mr. Munson, thank you for all your years of wonderful work for the Georgia football program. I will always remember hearing your voice fill the stadium before every home game, ending with a heartfelt “Go Dawgs!” Rest in peace.
Roger
November 20th, 2011
11:11 pm
Still remember Butler against Clemson when he kicked the 60 yarder to win it, …..all you heard was ‘oh my god oh my god’ just awesome………..RIP Larry you were the best…..
Bob
November 20th, 2011
11:11 pm
I am crushed. RIP Larry. Damn great Dawg.
dawgfan1995
November 20th, 2011
11:11 pm
Larry Munson you were a true dawg fan. You will be missed,I would like thank the Munson family for shareing such a special man with us all. Gods speed my friend.
Alex
November 20th, 2011
11:12 pm
I am a Georgia Tech fan, but I know what Larry Munson meant to UGA. My heart goes out to the Bulldog nation and especially to the friends and family of Larry Munson.
Dbalcer
November 20th, 2011
11:12 pm
Praying for his family.
DawgFan 50
November 20th, 2011
11:12 pm
Rest in peace Mr. Larry Munson there will never be another like you!!
Theresa
November 20th, 2011
11:12 pm
RIP Larry! Prayers to the entire Munson Family & I thank you form the bottom of my heart for sharing Larry with us.