Behind the Yoi
eBook - PDF

Behind the Yoi

The Life of Myron Cope, Legendary Pittsburgh Steelers Broadcaster

  1. 361 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Behind the Yoi

The Life of Myron Cope, Legendary Pittsburgh Steelers Broadcaster

About this book

Myron Cope was the color commentator for Pittsburgh Steelers radio broadcasts from 1970 to 2005, the second-longest-serving team broadcaster in NFL history. At the peak of his popularity, an estimated 50 percent of Steeler fans turned down the volume on their TVs so they could listen to the radio as Cope, in his one-of-a-kind scratchy, raspy voice, barked out phrases like "Yoi" and "Okle-dokle, " often fueled by bursts of excitability and his own beautiful brand of homerism. About his voice, Cope said, "Mine isn't a broadcaster's voice; it tends to cut through concrete." Cope helped forge the unbreakable bond between the city of Pittsburgh and its football team. His evening talk show, one of the first sports talk programs in the nation, dominated its time slot for more than twenty years, and he became the first pro football announcer elected to the National Radio Hall of Fame. Born in Pittsburgh to parents of Lithuanian Jewish ancestry, Cope attended the University of Pittsburgh and became a journalist. Though he forged a successful career writing for magazines like Sports Illustrated, football fans grew to know Cope far more through the airwaves. Co-namer of the Immaculate Reception, he also created the Terrible Towel, the flag of Steelers Nation, when in 1975 he urged fans to bring gold towels to wave at a playoff game against the Baltimore Colts. Behind the scenes the Terrible Towel took on a deeper personal meaning, as Cope eventually assigned all royalties from the towels to the facility where his son, who was born with brain damage and never learned to speak, still resides. Throughout his life Cope, who passed away in 2008, raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for children with disabilities. Using Cope's own papers, correspondence, and tapes, plus interviews with friends and family, Dan Joseph and Elizabeth Cope, Myron's daughter, paint the first three-dimensional portrait of the creative, many-faceted man whom Pittsburghers still hold in high esteem and close to their hearts.

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Information

eBook ISBN
9781496241450
Year
2024

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Illustrations
  6. Preface
  7. A Few Words of Thanks
  8. Prologue: Original Passion
  9. 1. Sports Nut in Squirrel Hill
  10. 2. ā€œAn Industrious Young Journalistic Prospectā€
  11. 3. The Nut Specialist
  12. 4. A Trend toward Obnoxious Voices
  13. 5. Into the Steelers’ Booth
  14. 6. Gorillas, Franco, and Frank
  15. 7. Great Name for a Kosher Play
  16. 8. Growing Up Cope
  17. 9. The Lines Are Open
  18. 10. Super-Steelers Years
  19. 11. Enter the Towel
  20. 12. The Eighties
  21. 13. Myron the Contrarian
  22. 14. Rolling with the Nineties
  23. 15. The Towel Returns
  24. 16. That Terrible Towel
  25. 17. ā€œI’m Doneā€
  26. 18. Thankful
  27. 19. Bye Now
  28. Afterword: Honored
  29. Appendix: Cope’s Catalog
  30. Index