Interesting that his dad was a big star at St Lawrence University and that Billy was born in Wellsville, NY. Never knew he was a Yankee. He carved out a great career for himself even though, as his wiki pages alludes to, he had his share of detractors. I enjoy watching his son on the ACC network.
en.wikipedia.org
Wow, I never would have guessed Billy was from upstate NY. Wellsville is west of Elmira, just a little north of the Pennsylvania border.
I spent a lot of time disliking Billy. Respecting him but disliking him.
I was, as so many on the board were, a huge fan of the Big East and it seemed to me as though Billy was always overly effusive in his love for the ACC. He was reluctant to accept that the ACC had been eclipsed and it seemed to me as though he never quite gave Syracuse or Jim Boeheim the respect they deserved.
That said, he was a great announcer. I learned more about basketball listening to him do games than from anyone else. There is a lot that goes on within a game in basketball; individual matchups teams are looking to exploit; certain strategies to attack a defense, get a star player in foul trouble, etc.
He was exceptional at analyzing what was going on in a game and what it would lead to. 'Watch the matchup between player X and opposing player Y. Coach Z thinks he can exploit this situation and will go to player X whenever possible.' 'Pearl is too much for Jackson; Louie is going to have to switch him off or go to a zone now'. Things like that.
When he started, the standard names for the people doing the broadcast were the play by play and the color guys. Where the color guy was literally expected to provide colorful stories, tidbits like player nicknames, jokes about the appearance of players, etc.
Billy was the first guy in this role I remember who was clearly different. He was an analyst and what he provided was much more valuable and interesting, at least to me. I think he played a big role in changing how sports broadcasts were done, and this is his lasting impact on basketball and even other sports. It wasn't long after he became a voice of college basketball that he rightly started getting called an analyst. As an aside, I think Al was brought in specifically because the directors were afraid to replace the color role with an analyst and wanted someone else on the broadcast to fill the color role. Al brought some analysis too but he certainly was also good bringing color to broadcasts...
To this day, whenever I listen to a broadcast of a basketball game, I hold the analyst to the standards that Billy established. I expect the analyst to provide thought insights and great observations. A lot of analysts today would do well to look at some of Billy's old broadcasts and take notes on how to do the job the right way.
I am also a big fan of his son Mark. Good family. My condolences to him and the rest of the Packer family.