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Howard Cosell

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Howard Cosell Famous memorial Veteran

Original Name
William Howard Cohen
Birth
Winston-Salem, Forsyth County, North Carolina, USA
Death
23 Apr 1995 (aged 77)
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Westhampton, Suffolk County, New York, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.82631, Longitude: -72.65792
Plot
Row I (just before the cemetery house) approx. 200 feet on the right in the row with a bench.
Memorial ID
View Source
Television sportscaster. He gained wide fame and acclaim during his tenure as a football commentator on ABC's "Monday Night Football". Born Howard William Cohen in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and raised in Brooklyn, New York, he attended New York University, where he received a degree in law and was admitted to the New York State Bar at the age of 23. He served in the Army during World War II. Upon his release, he opened a Manhattan law office that counted several actors and athletes among his clients, including baseball legend Willie Mays. He also represented the Little League of New York, and this led to his hosting a Saturday morning radio show in which Little Leaguers interviewed Major League baseball players. He did the show for three years and finally retired from practicing law to work as a broadcaster full-time. His greatest fame came in the form of ABC's "Monday Night Football" when ABC decided to take a chance by putting a sports event on in prime time. It was wildly popular, and for thirteen years Cosell brought his style of "telling it like it is" to football fans every Monday night. He also appeared in the movie "Bananas", directed by Woody Allen, and appeared twice on the television series "The Odd Couple". These two episodes were the highest rated in the program's entire run. In 1978, he was voted as both the most hated sportscaster of all time and the most loved sportscaster of all time. He was also famous for his friendship with boxing legend Muhammad Ali and defended Ali when he refused to be inducted into the Army during the Vietnam War. Cosell retired from ringside broadcasting at boxing games in 1982, which he had done beginning in the 1960s, and left "Monday Night Football" in 1983. He also authored four best-selling books and hosted a weekly radio program for ABC Radio until 1992. In poor health since being diagnosed with cancer in 1991, he died of a heart embolism at age 77 in 1995 at New York University's Hospital for Joint Diseases.
Television sportscaster. He gained wide fame and acclaim during his tenure as a football commentator on ABC's "Monday Night Football". Born Howard William Cohen in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and raised in Brooklyn, New York, he attended New York University, where he received a degree in law and was admitted to the New York State Bar at the age of 23. He served in the Army during World War II. Upon his release, he opened a Manhattan law office that counted several actors and athletes among his clients, including baseball legend Willie Mays. He also represented the Little League of New York, and this led to his hosting a Saturday morning radio show in which Little Leaguers interviewed Major League baseball players. He did the show for three years and finally retired from practicing law to work as a broadcaster full-time. His greatest fame came in the form of ABC's "Monday Night Football" when ABC decided to take a chance by putting a sports event on in prime time. It was wildly popular, and for thirteen years Cosell brought his style of "telling it like it is" to football fans every Monday night. He also appeared in the movie "Bananas", directed by Woody Allen, and appeared twice on the television series "The Odd Couple". These two episodes were the highest rated in the program's entire run. In 1978, he was voted as both the most hated sportscaster of all time and the most loved sportscaster of all time. He was also famous for his friendship with boxing legend Muhammad Ali and defended Ali when he refused to be inducted into the Army during the Vietnam War. Cosell retired from ringside broadcasting at boxing games in 1982, which he had done beginning in the 1960s, and left "Monday Night Football" in 1983. He also authored four best-selling books and hosted a weekly radio program for ABC Radio until 1992. In poor health since being diagnosed with cancer in 1991, he died of a heart embolism at age 77 in 1995 at New York University's Hospital for Joint Diseases.

Inscription

Raised marker:
COSELL
WE THANK WHATEVER GODS MAY BE
FOR YOUR UNCONQUERABLE SOULS

Ground marker:
IN LOVING MEMORY
HOWARD WILLIAM
COSELL
1918 - 1995



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Dec 25, 1999
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7960/howard-cosell: accessed ), memorial page for Howard Cosell (25 Mar 1918–23 Apr 1995), Find a Grave Memorial ID 7960, citing Westhampton Cemetery, Westhampton, Suffolk County, New York, USA; Cremated; Maintained by Find a Grave.