Sports

The Voice of the Bulldogs Is Silenced

University of Georgia football radio legend Larry Munson has died at the age of 89; listen to his most famous call of all.

You just couldn't forget that voice.

One minute, it was as if someone were shaking gravel in a milk carton, the next, it would soar higher and higher with excitement, ending almost in the stratosphere of sound heard only by poodles. Larry Munson, who broadcast the Georgia Bulldogs football games for decades, wasn't a dispassioned observer mechanically telling listeners what was happening on the field, he was the 12th player on the team.

He died Sunday night in Athens of complications from pneumonia, according to his son Michael. Funeral arrangements haven't been announced.

Find out what's happening in East Cobbwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Munson wore his red-and-black heart on his sleeve, which was also red and black. The 1980 season, when the Dawgs marched like Sherman through Georgia to the SEC and National Champtionships, proved an emotional rollercoaster for Munson and his voice. He was so amazed--- as during the 1980 Georgia vs. Florida game--he would fixate on a few simple words, such as "Lindsay Scott! Lindsay Scott! Lindsay Scott!"

“Larry Munson was loved by thousands of alumni and friends, and was completely devoted to this university and all its athletic teams,"  said in a news release. "He will be greatly missed by all of us."

Find out what's happening in East Cobbwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Munson left the Dawgs and Sanford Stadium in the fall of 2008, having been there 42 years.

For someone so beloved by Georgians, Munson wasn't a Georgia native, or even a Southerner. According to UGA, he was born in Minneapolis and was graduated from Moorehead State Teachers College in Moorehead, Minn. After serving in WWII, he enrolled in broadcasters school, then went to work at a radio station in Devil's Lake, N.D.

He eventually landed in Cheyenne, Wyo., where he became friends with Curt Gowdy, who was calling University of Wyoming football and basketball games. Gowdy left Cheyenne for a baseball job in Oklahoma City and suggested Munson as his replacement.

Munson worked in Oklahoma City, Nashville, Tenn., and then Georgia in the mid-1960s, where he landed a job calling Atlanta Braves baseball in their inaugural season. As the Braves’ first spring training began, he read that Georgia football announcer Ed Thilenius was leaving and got in touch with UGA athletics director Joel Eaves. Eaves, who knew Munson from his time at Vanderbilt, offered him the Georgia football job on the spot.

Munson was not only the Bulldogs’ play-by-play man, but also called games for the Georgia basketball program from 1987-96 and for the Atlanta Falcons from 1989-92. He also hosted various sports talk shows on radio and TV.

In 1983, Munson was recognized by the Georgia General Assembly for his role in the Georgia championship football program. Fourteen years later the same legislative body, led by Governor Zell Miller, honored him with a proclamation celebrating his 50 years in broadcasting.

In 1994, Munson was inducted into the Georgia Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame, and in 2005, he won a similar induction into the State of Georgia Sports Hall of Fame. He was inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame on May 2, 2009.

Good-bye, Larry. You will be missed.

What's your favorite Munson moment?


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from East Cobb