Everything about Harry Wismer totally explained
Harry Wismer (
June 30,
1913 –
December 3,
1967) was a
sports broadcaster and charter owner of the
New York Titans franchise in the
American Football League.
Early years
A native of
Port Huron, Michigan, Wismer displayed great interest and prowess in sports at an early age, earning letters in
football,
basketball, and
baseball at St. John's Military Academy in
Delafield, Wisconsin. He later played
college football at both the
University of Florida and
Michigan State University, his playing career ending at the latter school when he damaged a knee severely during a game against the
University of Michigan. He then began broadcasting Michigan State sports on MSU's
radio station
WKARin a position arranged for him by his
coach, Charlie Bachman. In
1934 he was hired as the public-address announcer for the
Detroit Lions, who were then owned by the same man, Dick Richards, who owned
Detroit radio station
WJR. Wismer soon began doing a ten-minute daily radio show covering the Lions in addition to his PA duties, while continuing as a student at Michigan State.
Broadcaster
After the
1936 season, Wismer was encouraged by Richards to abandon his studies and come to work for WJR on a full-time basis as the station's sports director. He stayed until
1941 when he was hired by the
NBC "Blue" network, the predecessor to
ABC. However, a subsequent management change at ABC led to a new regime that was hostile to sports, and Wismer became a free-lancer, selling his service to the highest bidder. Wismer became known for an enormous ego and developed a reputation as a "namedropper", preferring to announce the names of celebrities of his acquaintance who were in the audience to the actual game action, and was alleged at times to include them in the crowd of games which he announced when they were in fact elsewhere.
In the late 1940s he provided the voice talent to numerous 16 mm college football films. Wismer often added the sound commentary long after the games were over, and added a radio style commentary with sound effects such as referee whistles to recreate an authentic sound. He was owner of HarFilms, a short-lived New Orleans based sportsfilm production company.
Wismer achieved the height of his fame as the voice of the
Washington Redskins. His first game for the Redskins was a most inauspicious one, their 73-0 loss to the
Chicago Bears' great "
Monsters of the Midway" team in the
1940 NFL Championship Game. At one point Wismer was a 25% owner of the club as well, with the majority of the stock being retained by founding owner
George Preston Marshall. However, the relationship between the two had greatly degenerated by the mid-
1950s over several issues, not the least of which was Marshall's steadfast refusal to sign any
black players. The relationship dissolved in claims, counterclaims, and litigation, and Marshall then set out to destroy Wismer's future as a broadcaster, with some success. Wismer was also involved for a time in the broadcasting of
Notre Dame football.
In
1953, he was involved in an early attempt to expand football into
prime time network television, when ABC, now with a renewed interest in sports, broadcast an edited replay on Sunday nights of the previous day's Notre Dame games, which were cut down to 75 minutes in length by removing the time between plays, halftime, and even some of the more uneventful plays. (While this format wasn't successful in prime time, a similar presentation of Nore Dame football later became a staple of Sunday mornings for many years on
CBS with
Lindsey Nelson as the announcer.) Also that season was the first attempt at prime time coverage of pro football, with Wismer at the microphone on the old
DuMont Network. Unlike ABC's Notre Dame coverage, DuMont's NFL game was presented live on Saturday nights, but interest wasn't adequate to save the DuMont Network, which had by this point already entered what would be a terminal decline (although it did mount a subsequent
1954 season of NFL telecasts, minus Wismer, which proved to be one of its last regular programs).
AFL owner
Wismer was a charter owner in the AFL, which was announced in
1959 and began actual play in
1960. His New York franchise was
nicknamed the "Titans". Wismer devised a plan in which the proceeds from the broadcast rights to league games (initially with ABC) would be shared equally by all teams, very innovative at the time but setting the standard for all future professional football television broadcasting contracts. As Wismer owned what would seem to have been the most potentially lucrative franchise, especially with regard to broadcasting rights, in the nation's largest
media market, the act seemed at first blush most generous for a self-described "hustler". However, Wismer realized that the fledgling league needed for all of the eight franchises to be successful in order to survive long-term. Unfortunately for Wismer, his own team, despite being located in the nation's largest city, was probably the most problematic in the league in its initial years. For one thing, the team was relegated to playing its home games in the rotting remains of the old
Polo Grounds, which had been abandoned years before by the
New York Giants baseball team for
San Francisco and was never a particularly satisfactory football venue; in contrast, the NFL football
Giants played in prestigious
Yankee Stadium. Additionally, the New York media for the most part was derisive and dismissive of the Titans, when it deigned to mention them at all; for most New York sports reporters of the era professional football in New York City began and ended with the Giants. Wismer's volatile personality was of little help in this area; he resented not only other media figures but also
Dallas Texans owner
Lamar Hunt, whom Wismer saw as a rich boy whose father had bought him a football team as a toy; Wismer also had an ongoing feud with the first AFL commissioner,
Joe Foss, and had at times a far-less-than-warm relationship with the Titan's first
coach, the legendary former Redskins
quarterback Sammy Baugh. (In fact, Baugh had been the losing quarterback in the 73-0 debacle back in 1940 that had marked Wismer's debut with the Redskins as noted above.) Wismer also lacked the truly "deep pockets" of some of the other early AFL owners, particularly Hunt, possessed; for the most part their wealth had come from sources outside the field of sports, which although already quite popular in the U.S. were not the major industry they were shortly to become. Wismer's wealth, such as it was, had come entirely from his sports involvement.
The Titans drew just 114,682 total paid admissions for the league's entire initial season in 1960; by
1962 this number had dwindled to a mere 36,161 and Wismer was broke. Supposedly it was loans from other AFL owners, notably the
Houston Oilers owner
Bud Adams, which kept Wismer and the Titans afloat, which was a necessity for the league to remain viable, as U.S. broadcasters have traditionally had a very limited level of interest in team sports leagues without a viable New York franchise due to the size of that market area. Wismer, who had long tended to live "hard-and-fast", began to drink even more heavily, and eventually ruined his relationships with all of the other AFL owners, even Adams. They arranged the
1963 sale of the team to more financially-stable
Sonny Werblin, who proceeded to change the name of the team to the "Jets" and move it the next year into the now-completed
Shea Stadium, where it was to play for almost two decades. When Werblin signed
University of Alabama star quarterback
Joe Namath after the
1964 season for a then-unheard of annual salary of $430,000, the Jets, and the AFL, were made; the Namath signing, and his subsequent stardom, along with a new, more lucrative television contract with NBC, led more than any other one single factor to the AFL-NFL merger. Wismer was left embittered and with debts totalling approximately $2,500,000, which he eventually struggled to settle for 78 cents on the dollar.
Final years
Wismer wrote a book,
The Public Calls It Sport, which was something of a combination
autobiography and explanation of his
philosophy of life. Sales were not particularly brisk. He got involved in the
Michigan Speedway project, which, to his great chagrin, was very slow to get under way. Wismer's health, far from brisk, broke completely from
depression and
alcoholism on top of his other problems after a trip overseas. In 1967 he sought treatment at the
Mayo Clinic for
cancer before returning to his hometown of Port Huron, where he underwent more treatments, including the replacement of his cancerous hip. Largely given up on, he rallied, and soon fulfilled his desire to return to New York City. Once there, he found that he was no longer a celebrity or even much noticed, and of those who did notice, more held him in contempt than liked him. His drinking problem returned with a vengeance, and on
December 2 he suffered a fall at a
restaurant while drunk, falling down a flight of stairs. Still weakened from his earlier heath problems, he died the next day. An
autopsy gave a skull fracture as being the immediate cause of death. Today Wismer is remembered, when he's remembered at all, primarily as something of an eccentric rather than as a crucial founder of the American Football League and one of the creators of professional football's modern era through shared broadcast revenues.
Quote
"...no matter how good you think you are, how shrewd you are, there's always someone down the block, across the street, in the next town, who is a little better, shrewder, more ruthless." From
The Public Calls It SportFurther Information
Get more info on 'Harry Wismer'.
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