# Al DeRogatis

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{{Short description|American football player and sportscaster (1927–1995)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2024}}
{{Infobox NFL biography
| name        = Al DeRogatis
| image       = Al DeRogatis - 1951 Bowman.jpg
| caption     = DeRogatis on a 1951 Bowman football card
| number      = 78
| position    = [Defensive tackle](/source/Defensive_tackle), [tackle](/source/Tackle_(gridiron_football_position))
| birth_date  = {{Birth date|1927|5|5|mf=y}}
| birth_place = [Newark, New Jersey](/source/Newark%2C_New_Jersey), U.S.
| death_date  = {{death date and age|1995|12|26|1927|5|5}}
| death_place = [Neptune, New Jersey](/source/Neptune_Township%2C_New_Jersey), U.S.
| height_ft   = 6
| height_in   = 4
| weight_lb   = 238
| high_school = [Central](/source/Central_High_School_(Newark%2C_New_Jersey)) (Newark)
| college     = [Duke](/source/Duke_Blue_Devils_football)
| draftyear   = 1949
| draftround  = 2
| draftpick   = 14
| pastteams   =
* [New York Giants](/source/New_York_Giants) ({{NFL Year|1949|1952}})
| highlights  =
* First-team [All-Pro](/source/All-Pro) ([1951](/source/1951_All-Pro_Team))
* 2× [Pro Bowl](/source/Pro_Bowl) ([1950](/source/1951_Pro_Bowl), [1951](/source/1952_Pro_Bowl))
* Second-team [All-American](/source/College_Football_All-America_Team) ([1948](/source/1948_College_Football_All-America_Team))
* First-team All-[SoCon](/source/SoCon) ([1946](/source/1946_All-Southern_Conference_football_team))
* Second-team All-SoCon ([1948](/source/1948_All-Southern_Conference_football_team))
| statlabel1  = Games played
| statvalue1  = 46
| statlabel2  = Games started
| statvalue2  = 36
| statlabel3  = [Fumble](/source/Fumble) recoveries
| statvalue3  = 4
| pfr         = DeRoAl00
| CollegeHOF  = 1613
}}

'''Albert John DeRogatis''' (May 5, 1927 &ndash; December 26, 1995) was an American professional [football](/source/American_football) player and [television](/source/television) and [radio](/source/radio) [sportscaster](/source/sportscaster).

==Life and career==
DeRogatis was born in [Newark, New Jersey](/source/Newark%2C_New_Jersey), and attended the city's [Central High School](/source/Central_High_School_(Newark%2C_New_Jersey)), earning All-State honors at [center](/source/center_(American_football)).  At [Duke University](/source/Duke_University), after a [knee](/source/knee) injury shortened his junior season, he made the 1948 [All-America](/source/All-America) team as a tackle.

He was drafted the following year by the [New York Giants](/source/New_York_Giants) of the [National Football League (NFL)](/source/National_Football_League) and played [defensive tackle](/source/defensive_tackle). He was an NFL [All-Pro](/source/All-Pro) in both [1950](/source/1950_NFL_season) and [1951](/source/1951_NFL_season). A recurrence of the knee injury he suffered at Duke ended his playing career after four seasons of professional football. For thirty-three years beginning in 1953, he served as a vice president with [Prudential Insurance](/source/Prudential_Financial).

From 1966 through 1975, the bespectacled DeRogatis served as a [color commentator](/source/color_commentator) for professional and college football telecasts on [NBC](/source/NBC_Sports), primarily with [Curt Gowdy](/source/Curt_Gowdy) on the network's top broadcast team for [American Football League](/source/American_Football_League) (later, [American Football Conference](/source/American_Football_Conference)) regular-season and playoff matches, [Super Bowl](/source/Super_Bowl)s [III](/source/Super_Bowl_III), [VII](/source/Super_Bowl_VII) and [IX](/source/Super_Bowl_IX) and several [Rose Bowls](/source/Rose_Bowl_(game)). He also was paired with [Jim Simpson](/source/Jim_Simpson_(sportscaster)) to call a few [Orange Bowls](/source/Orange_Bowl_(game)). Prior to joining NBC, DeRogatis had begun his broadcasting career working with [Marty Glickman](/source/Marty_Glickman) on New York football Giants radio broadcasts on [WNEW-AM](/source/WBBR) from 1960 through 1965. DeRogatis was among several veteran announcers who returned to call some NFL telecasts for NBC in September 1988, while many of the network's regular broadcasters were busy calling that year's [Summer Olympics](/source/1988_Summer_Olympics) in [Seoul](/source/Seoul).

DeRogatis relinquished his NBC duties prior to the [1976 NFL season](/source/1976_NFL_season) despite one more year remaining on his contract with the network. He was also Vice President for Community Affairs with the [Prudential Insurance Company](/source/Prudential_Financial), president of the National Sight Foundation and afflicted with [glaucoma](/source/glaucoma) at the time.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1974/05/05/archives/college-fund-fete-to-honor-ewbank.html "College Fund Fete To Honor Ewbank," ''The New York Times'', Sunday, May 5, 1974.] Retrieved May 31, 2024.</ref><ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1976/10/03/archives/derogatis-kicks-the-pro-football-habit.html Wallace, William N. "DeRogatis Kicks the Pro Football Habit," ''The New York Times'', Sunday, October 3, 1976.] Retrieved May 31, 2024.</ref>

DeRogatis can be heard with Gowdy calling a football game in the 1978 film ''[Heaven Can Wait](/source/Heaven_Can_Wait_(1978_film))''.

DeRogatis was inducted into the [College Football Hall of Fame](/source/College_Football_Hall_of_Fame) in 1986.  A resident of [Spring Lake, New Jersey](/source/Spring_Lake%2C_New_Jersey), he died of [cancer](/source/cancer) at Jersey Shore Medical Center on December 26, 1995.<ref>via [Associated Press](/source/Associated_Press). [https://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/28/us/al-derogatis-68-sports-broadcaster.html "Al DeRogatis, 68, Sports Broadcaster"], ''[The New York Times](/source/The_New_York_Times)'', December 28, 1995. Accessed July 14, 2011. "Al DeRogatis, a former defensive tackle for the New York Giants who achieved considerable popularity and recognition through his keen analysis of pro football games on radio and television, died of cancer on Tuesday at the Jersey Shore Medical Center. He was 68.... DeRogatis, who lived in Spring Lake, N.J., is survived by his wife of 45 years, Louise; two daughters, Mary Ann D'Agostino and Diane Hagen; two brothers, Pat and Michael; two sisters, Rose Mastracchio and Paula Mossucco, and five grandchildren."</ref>

==Legacy==
''[Sports Illustrated](/source/Sports_Illustrated)'' magazine's "Dr. Z" (aka [Paul Zimmerman](/source/Paul_Lionel_Zimmerman)) has rated DeRogatis as his #1 football analyst of all time.<ref>{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20040725045726/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2004/writers/dr_z/07/21/announcers/ Masters of the Mic: NFL]}}, Sports Illustrated news web site, retrieved June 23, 2007.</ref>

Upon his death in 1995, DeRogatis was eulogized in the ''[Boston Globe](/source/Boston_Globe)'' as a prototype for what it means to be a [gentleman](/source/gentleman), in the sense of displaying a gracious, polite, kind and generous nature.{{Citation needed|date=June 2007}}  The ''Globe'' also published a picture of DeRogatis in the NBC booth together with Curt Gowdy and [Don Meredith](/source/Don_Meredith) in the ''2006: The year in photos'' series, after Curt Gowdy's death in 2006.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20110522133051/http://www.boston.com/news/specials/year_in_review/2006/gallery?pg=72 2006: The year in photos], The Boston Globe, retrieved June 23, 2007.</ref>

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
* [https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C04E1DE1239F93BA15751C1A963958260 "Al DeRogatis, 68, Sports Broadcaster," ''The New York Times'', Wednesday, December 27, 1995.]

{{s-start}}
{{succession box| title=''[NFL on NBC](/source/NFL_on_NBC)'' lead analyst| before=[Kyle Rote](/source/Kyle_Rote)| years=[1971](/source/1971_NFL_season)–[1974](/source/1974_NFL_season)| after=[Don Meredith](/source/Don_Meredith)}}
{{succession box | before=[Kyle Rote](/source/Kyle_Rote) | title=[Super Bowl television](/source/List_of_Super_Bowl_broadcasters) color commentator ([AFC package carrier](/source/American_Football_Conference)) | years=[1968](/source/Super_Bowl_III)-[1974](/source/Super_Bowl_IX)| after=[Don Meredith](/source/Don_Meredith)}}
{{s-end}}

{{Giants1949DraftPicks}}
{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Derogatis, Al}}
Category:1927 births
Category:1995 deaths
Category:American football centers
Category:American Football League announcers
Category:American people of Italian descent
Category:Central High School (Newark, New Jersey) alumni
Category:College football announcers
Category:College Football Hall of Fame inductees
Category:Deaths from cancer in New Jersey
Category:Duke Blue Devils football players
Category:Eastern Conference Pro Bowl players
Category:New York Giants announcers
Category:New York Giants players
Category:People from Spring Lake, New Jersey
Category:Players of American football from Newark, New Jersey

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Al DeRogatis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_DeRogatis) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_DeRogatis?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
