ESPN’s Stuart Scott, shown in video, accepting the 2014 Jimmy V Award for Perseverance.
Stuart Scott. Courage Personified.
I see and hear so much of my late brother Bobby in his words.
Stuart Scott, longtime anchor at ESPN, died Sunday morning at the age of 49. He was the recipient of the 2014 Jimmy V Award for Perseverance.
Scott saved his best for his last year on the air. At the ESPYS on July 16, shortly before his 49th birthday and following another round of cancer surgery, Stuart accepted the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance with strength, humor, grace and these eloquent words: “When you die, it does not mean that you lose to cancer. You beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live.”
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Among the features of the new ESPN studio in Bristol is a wall of catchphrases made famous by on-air talent over the years. An amazing nine of them belong to one man — from his signature “Boo-Yah!” to “As cool as the other side of the pillow” to “He must be the bus driver cuz he was takin’ him to school.”
Stuart Scott is being remembered on Twitter by superstar athletes, ESPN colleagues past and present and members of the entertainment world.
That man is Stuart Scott, and his contributions to the sports lexicon are writ large. But they are only one aspect of his legacy. When he passed away, he left behind so much more. He inspired his colleagues with his sheer talent, his work ethic and his devotion to his daughters, Taelor, 19, and Sydni, 15. He defied convention and criticism to help bring this network into a new century. He spoke to the very athletes he was talking about with a flair and a style that ESPN president John Skipper says, “changed everything.”
“He didn’t just push the envelope,” says sports radio host and former ESPN anchor Dan Patrick. “He bulldozed the envelope.”
Don’t miss Rich Eisen’s tribute to Stuart, during the highlight reel. Stay with this one, Boo Yah comes late:
Rich Eisen Fills Whole Highlight Package With Stuart Scott Catchphrases
Editor’s note: As of 2015, Rich Eisen’s show (RES)can be heard on 830AM (Angeles Radio) from 9 to noon, Pacific time.
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