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==Early Life==
{{College coach infobox
Vitale takes it up the ass!
| Name = Dick Vitale
| Sport = [[Basketball]]
| Image =
| ImageWidth =
| Caption =
| DateOfBirth = {{birth date and age|mf=yes|1939|6|9}}
| Birthplace = [[Passaic County, New Jersey|Passaic County]], [[New Jersey]]
| DateOfDeath =
| Deathplace =
| College = [[Seton Hall University|Seton Hall]]
| Awards =
| CurrentRecord =
| OverallRecord = NCAA: 78-30<br>NBA: 94-34
| Player =
| Years =
| Team =
| Position =
| Coach = *
| CoachYears = 1963<br />1964-1970<br />1970-1972<br />1972-1978<br />1978-1979
| CoachTeams = [[Garfield High School (New Jersey)|Garfield HS]]<br />[[East Rutherford, New Jersey|East Rutherford HS]]<br />[[Rutgers University|Rutgers]] *<br />[[University of Detroit Mercy|U. of Detroit]]<br />[[Detroit Pistons]]<br />* <small>Denotes assistant</small>
| CollegeHOFID =
| BBallHOF = 2008
}}

'''Richard J. "Dick" Vitale''' (born June 9, 1939) is an American [[basketball]] [[Presenter|broadcaster]] and Basketball Hall of Famer. A former head coach in the college and professional ranks, he is well-known for his spirited style on [[ESPN]] and its family of [[cable television]] channels using phrases such as, "It's awesome, baby!!"

==Coaching==
===High school coaching===
After his graduation from [[Seton Hall University|Seton Hall]], he planned on being a teacher. Vitale took his first job as a coach at an elementary school in [[Garfield, New Jersey]] in 1963. Eventually, he moved up to the high school level to become head coach at [[Garfield High School (New Jersey)|Garfield High School]] for one season, and at [[East Rutherford, New Jersey|East Rutherford]] High School (his [[alma mater]]) for In 1970, Vitale moved to [[Rutgers University]], as an assistant coach under head coach Raymond Jones. After two season he was hired by the [[University of Detroit Mercy|University of Detroit]] to become its head coach in 1972. Vitale took [[Detroit Titans men's basketball|Detroit]] to the 32-team NCAA tournament in [[1977 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1977]]. Vitale had a 78-30 record during his tenure at Detroit, which included a 21-game winning streak during the 1977 season. During that streak, the Titans defeated [[Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball|Marquette]], who would go on to win the 1977 NCAA title, [[U.S. Cellular Arena|on the road]] in [[Milwaukee]], [[Wisconsin]]. Following the 1977 season, his fifth as Detroit head coach, Vitale was named the university's [[athletic director]].

===NBA coaching===
Vitale coached the [[Detroit Pistons]] of the [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] for the 1978-79 season, leading them to a 30-52 (.366) record. On Nov. 8, 1979, Pistons owner [[Bill Davidson]] came to Vitale's house and told him that the Pistons were making a coaching change. It was twelve games into 1979-80 season, after the Pistons struggled to a 4-8 start.

==Broadcasting==
Following his departure as coach of the [[Detroit Pistons]], Scotty Connal gave Vitale his first TV opportunity at the then fledgling [[ESPN]] cable network, originally until another coaching job became available. He called ESPN's first [[college basketball]] game on December 5, 1979. Vitale has called close to a thousand games. Vitale, a [[color commentator]], is often paired with play-by-play announcers [[Brad Nessler]], [[Dan Shulman]], or [[Mike Patrick]] for ESPN college basketball games, primarily those in the [[Atlantic Coast Conference|ACC]].

Vitale is often criticized for being a "homer" for [[Duke University|Duke]], especially for Coach [[Mike Krzyzewski]], as well as most teams in the [[Atlantic Coast Conference|ACC]]. [[Temple University|Temple]] head coach [[John Chaney (basketball coach)|John Chaney]] once said "You can't get Dick Vitale to say 15 words without Duke coming out of his mouth".<ref>[http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/04020/263393.stm Atlantic Ten Notebook: All-time selections difficult after first 2<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> He is also called "Duke Vitale" or "Dookie V", a take-off on his "Dickie V" nickname, by detractors for the same reason.

In November 2006, Vitale signed a contract extension through the 2012-13 [[college basketball]] year. The 2008-09 season will be his 30th with the [[ESPN]] network.

Vitale was recruited to do color in the first 2 rounds of the NCAA tournament by [[CBS]], but [[ESPN]] would not allow it. However, ESPN's in-studio analyst [[Jay Bilas]] was allowed to provide color for CBS's tournament coverage, teaming with play-by-play announcer [[Dick Enberg]].

Vitale votes on the [[Associated Press|AP]] Top 25 men's basketball polls, and the annual [[Naismith College Player of the Year|Naismith Award]] and [[John Wooden Award]].

Vitale was announced as one of the 2008 inductees into the [[Basketball Hall of Fame]] as a contributor to the sport (after falling just short the previous year). His formal enshrinement will come on September 5th, 2008 when the induction ceremony airs live on ESPN Classic and NBA TV...

===Catchphrases===
Vitale is well known for covering the biggest games with his rare form of energy, coining terms like "Diaper Dandy" (an outstanding freshman), a "PTPer" (a prime time performer), "[[Maalox]] Masher" (the end of a close game), "Trifecta" (a three point basket), "slap a lapper", "super scintillating sensational!" (exciting play), and "dipsy-doo dunkeroo slam-jam-bam, baby!" (an exciting [[slam dunk]]). Also, from time to time he would refer to a player making almost all his shots by saying "call the fire chief cause he's on fire!". Perhaps his best known affectation is to end his sentence with "baby!" He frequently says, "It's awesome, baby!" adding "with a capital A!" for emphasis. Another phrase he uses is "Freeze it!" during an instant replay, when he wants to spotlight a certain play. Vitale's signature style is composed of his catchphrases, voice, and his [[accent (linguistics)|accent]].

{{seealso|List of sports clichés}}

==Personal life==
Vitale was born in [[Passaic, New Jersey|Passaic]], [[New Jersey]]. His father John Vitale was a security guard and clothing press operator.<ref>[http://www.filmreference.com/film/71/Dick-Vitale.html Dick Vitale Biography (1959-)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> His mom, Mae, worked in a factory as a seamstress and sewed coats until she suffered a stroke.<ref>http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/dickvitale/news/story?id=3566939&lpos=spotlight&lid=tab7pos1</ref>

He is married to Lorraine and they have two daughters. Vitale also has a master's degree in education from what is now [[William Paterson University]]. He was close friends with [[Jim Valvano]], also known as "Jimmy V". Vitale is a [[Tampa Bay Rays]] season ticket holder and fan and is frequently spotted by fans sitting in the first row behind home plate at [[Tropicana Field]]. He is a native of East Paterson, New Jersey now [[Elmwood Park, New Jersey]]. Vitale is now a resident of [[Lakewood Ranch]], Florida which is located near [[Bradenton, Florida]]. He appears once a week on ''[[Mike and Mike in the Morning]]'', often mentioning The Broken Egg, a breakfast/brunch restaurant in [[Siesta Key]] and [[Lakewood Ranch]].
On December 18, 2007, Vitale was diagnosed with lesions on his vocal cords. He underwent successful surgery and returned to announcing on February 6th, calling the Duke-North Carolina game on ESPN. often using " It's Serendipity, Baby" when things come together.

He will be inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in the class of 2008 as an ambassador to the sport of basketball.

==In popular culture==
Vitale lent his name and voice to the 1994 [[Sega Genesis]] game, ''[[Dick Vitale's "Awesome Baby" College Hoops]]''. Vitale and Nessler also provide the commentator voices for [[EA Sports]]' [[NCAA March Madness series|NCAA March Madness]] [[video game]] series. In 2004, Vitale released a descriptive [[autobiography]] cowritten with Dick Weiss entitled ''Living a Dream''. The book has several thoughts and comments on his days with the Pistons and ESPN, and memories of former NC State basketball Coach [[Jim Valvano]]. Vitale currently stars in commercials for [[DiGiorno]] pizza and [[Hooters]] restaurants. He guest starred on ''[[The Cosby Show]]'' along with friend [[Jim Valvano]] as furniture movers in the eighth season episode ''[[List of The Cosby Show episodes#Season 8: 1991-1992|The Getaway]]''. The character "Rick Vitality" from the [[DOS]] [[IBM PC compatible|PC]] game'' [[Three Point Basketball]]'' was a parody of Vitale. In a 2007 episode of the TV series [[Family Guy]] (As seen on [[TBS]] on weeknights.) Dick Vitale administers an enema to [[Joan Rivers]].

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
*[http://espn.go.com/dickvitale/vfile/ Vitale's "V-File" at ESPN.com]
*[http://www.dickvitaleonline.com/ Dick Vitale Online]
*[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/si_blogs/football/ncaa/2006/07/inaugural-one-eyed-post.html/ Blindness]
*[http://www.heraldtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080516/VIDEO02/805160711/ Video] from Vitale's benefit for pediatric cancer held May 16, 2008 in Sarasota
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{{succession box | title=[[Detroit Pistons|Detroit Pistons Head Coach]] | before=[[Bob Kauffman]]| years=1978&ndash;1979| after= [[Richie Adubato]]
}}

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{{ESPN}}
{{DetroitBasketballCoach}}
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{{Lifetime|1939||Vitale, Dick}}
[[Category:American basketball coaches]]
[[Category:American Roman Catholics]]
[[Category:American sports announcers]]
[[Category:Basketball Hall of Fame inductees]]
[[Category:Detroit Pistons coaches]]
[[Category:Detroit Titans men's basketball coaches]]
[[Category:Italian-American sportspeople]]
[[Category:People from Passaic County, New Jersey]]
[[Category:Rutgers Scarlet Knights men's basketball coaches]]
[[Category:William Paterson University alumni]]

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Revision as of 02:43, 19 November 2008

Early Life

Vitale takes it up the ass!