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Jimmy Crum (1928-2009)

The Columbus Dispatch : Jimmy Crum: 1928-2009 | Legendary sportscaster had big heart

Jimmy Crum: 1928-2009 | Legendary sportscaster had big heart

Tuesday, January 6, 2009 3:27 AM
By Tim Doulin and Brenda Jackson


THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
CrumTwox_01-06-09_A2_LVCEH1G.jpg
File photo
Retired TV sportscaster Jimmy Crum worked to help sick children like Erica Atwood. He was a spokesman for the Easter Seals.

WBNS-10TV Slideshow

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Jimmy Crum, Columbus' "Dean of Sports," died yesterday at age 80.
The local TV legend, who spent more than 40 years as a sportscaster for WCMH-TV (Channel 4), was born Oct. 21, 1928, as James W. Crum, but was known to everyone as "Jimmy."
Crum died of apparent natural causes at his home at the Forum at Knightsbridge retirement community on the Northwest Side, according to Colleen Marshall, a WCMH anchor.
"He had that old-school journalistic ethical standard," Marshall said.
Crum was known for his flashy sport coats and quick smile, and had covered dozens of local and national sports figures, including boxer James "Buster" Douglas, and such Ohio State football figures as Woody Hayes, Archie Griffin and Art Schlichter.
He also worked for a time as a TV voice for play-by-play of OSU men's basketball and hosted former Coach Fred Taylor's show.
Crum joined WCMH in 1949 and retired in 1994, working for many years as the TV station's sports director.
But despite Crum's many years on the TV screen, he was perhaps better known for his work as a philanthropist. In 1993, a Channel 4 spokesperson estimated that Crum had been responsible for raising more than $23 million for charity.
And he continued that work until his death.
Channel 4's Marshall worked with Crum for years and talked about him visiting sick children in hospitals before going to the TV station to do his job.
"I think people will remember him more for what he did for the community and what he did for the children of this community," she said. "That had his heart."
Marshall recalled working with Crum on a firefighters' toy drive shortly after she joined the station about 25 years ago.
"The two of us were standing outside the station in the cold waiting for people to drop off toys and he said to me, 'This is the most important work I do. This is what we are here for.' He truly believed that."
Crum had been the founding chairman of the Columbus chapter of the Special Olympics, on the board of United Cerebral Palsy and spokesman for Easter Seals, among many other charities.
He also worked passionately for Recreation Unlimited, which celebrated its 50th anniversary last year.
The organization was founded to provide recreational activities for people with disabilities.
In 2004, Crum was awarded the Silver Circle Award by the Ohio Valley chapter of the National Television Academy, which is given to those who have excelled in broadcasting for at least 25 years. He was inducted into the Ohio Associated Press Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2002.
Crum was preceded in death by his wife, Miriam, in 2005. He is survived by son James Crum and daughter Kelly Delaveris, a local jazz singer.
Arrangements are pending.
 
I work for NBC 4...Jimmy was a fantastic human being and will be sorely missed - he was a pioneer and always carried himself with class.

Unfortunately, in this world we have too few Jimmy Crums and too many Keith Olbermans / Trey Wingos (arrogant I am smarter than you sportscasters).
 
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:osu:HOW ABOUT THAT?!?!?:osu:

Nobody in central Ohio would not know who spoke those words in teh 1960s and 1970s. Jimmy Crum was the much loved voice of Buckeye basketball when many of us grew up in Columbus.

I did not know him but met him twice as a kid. Once playing at a Fred Taylor basketball camp and earlier at an Ohio State game. He treated me like he'd known me my entire life and like I was a friend of his family.

I really liked him and always looked forward to his small commentary on the Buckeye games on the news each night. He seemed to me to be the kind of person we all hope to know. Genuine. Positive. A true Buckeye fan through and through and a decent human being.

God bless you, Jimmy Crum! Congratulations on what seems like a life well lived and rest in peace.
 
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