- Dick Berggren
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Dick Berggren Born May 27, 1942
Westerly, Rhode IslandNationality American Occupation Motorsports announcer and magazine editor Dr. Dick Berggren (born May 27, 1942) is a motorsports announcer and magazine editor from Manchester, Connecticut in the United States. Born in Westerly, Rhode Island, he now lives in Ipswich, Massachusetts with his wife Kathy. He is commonly seen wearing a trademark flat cap.
Contents
Academia
Berggren described himself as "the worst student" in high school.[1] No college accepted him, so he accepted a job as an office boy at United Aircraft.[1] He later was accepted at Quinnipiac College.[1] Berggren transferred to Southern Connecticut State University where his girlfriend Kathy was attending.[1] He graduated with an bachelor's degree in 1965.[1] Berggren earned his doctorate in psychology from Tufts University in 1970 with his dissertation on sleep deprivation.[2] He was a psychology professor at Emmanuel College in Boston for nine years.[2]
One day the only vehicle available in his driveway was his truck which was still attached to his race trailer. He drove the truck to the college and parked it in the faculty parking lot. The racecar was covered in mud, but his name and sponsor decals were visible. Berggren was called to the University President's office and told to remove it immediately. "I knew right then and there that my academic career and my racing didn't go together anymore," says Berggren. "At the time, my racing was going incredibly well and I needed to do it while I was still young. I felt I could always go back to academia."[3]
Driver
Berggren began racing in 1967 and won 26 events before his driving career ended in 1981. He had raced SuperModifieds, Modifieds, stock cars, and sprint cars.[4] He stopped racing after his racecar climbed a dirt bank at Boone Speedway, causing over 200 people to scatter to avoid being hit.[1]
Editor
Dr. Berggren started out writing for local newspapers. He started working at Stock Car Racing magazine while teaching at Emmanuel College and racing on the weekends.[1] He later became the magazine's editor. After working at the magazine for 22 years, he left the magazine in 1999 to start Speedway Illustrated in partnership with the owners of Down East, The Magazine of Maine.[1] The National Motorsport Press Association named Berggren the 1999 Writer of the Year.[4] Both magazines cater to short track racing fans.
Announcer
Berggren started out announcing at Arundel Speedway in Maine. He has announced in many genres of motorsports over the course of his career. He announced the 1979 Daytona 500 for the Motor Racing Network radio network.[5] He began his television announcer career at NASCAR races in 1981 as a pit road reporter for ESPN.[4] He has announced for NASCAR races at CBS, TBS, and TNN. He has worked the pits for the Busch Series (now the Nationwide Series), and Craftsman Truck Series (now the Camping World Truck Series), as well as the World of Outlaws sprint cars.[6] He also hosts the Speed Channel show NASCAR Performance.[6]
Currently, he is the lead pit reporter for NASCAR on Fox. He covers events in NASCAR's Sprint Cup Series from Daytona to Charlotte.
Acting
He appeared as himself in the movie Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.
Awards
Dr. Berggren was inducted into the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 2002. He was inducted in the New England Auto Racers Hall of Fame in 2008. Berggren received the 2007 Bobby Isaac Memorial Award for his outstanding contributions to short track racing.[7]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h Marianne Lippard (Spring 2007). "One part scholar. One part speed demon.". Southern Connecticut State University. http://www.southernct.edu/alumni/southernmag/07spring/features/p10.html. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
- ^ a b Michael Hiestand (2006-04-28). "Berggren's career well-thought out". USA Today. http://www.usatoday.com/sports/columnist/hiestand-tv/2006-04-28-hiestand-weekend_x.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
- ^ "Life in the Fast Lane". Tufts University. http://gradstudy.tufts.edu/1176904812269/GradStudy-Com_Article-GradStudy_Com_Article_Details_1182348066719.html. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
- ^ a b c Dick Berggren, NASCAR on Fox pit reporter; February 13, 2007; Fox Sports; Retrieved January 23, 2008
- ^ Al Pearce (March 23, 2003). "No. 1: An ending for the ages". Daily Press. http://www.dailypress.com/sports/motorracing/dp-73907sy0mar23,0,1545346.story?coll=dp-auto-utility. Retrieved 2007-06-11.
- ^ a b "Dick Berggren Biography, NASCAR Performance". Speed Channel. Archived from the original on 2007-12-22. http://web.archive.org/web/20071222225336/http://www.speedtv.com/speed/bio/490/. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
- ^ "Berggren to receive Bobby Isaac Memorial Award". motorsport.com. 2007-08-28. http://www.motorsport.com/news/article.asp?ID=267127&FS=BUSINESS. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
External links
NASCAR on Fox Commentators List of Fox broadcasters · Daytona 500Key figures Mike Joy · Larry McReynolds · Darrell Waltrip · Dick Berggren · Steve Byrnes · Krista Voda (2007-Present) · Matt Yocum · Chris Myers · Jeff Hammond · Jeanne Zelasko (2001-2006)Lore Death of Dale Earnhardt · The first race after Earnhardt's death · Gordon Got Loose, It's Harvick! Harvick by Inches! - NASCAR's Healing Moment · (Craven and Kurt Busch) Touch, They Touch . . . Craven Got Him! · Largest Modern Era Crash in Cup history · Last Lap Mayhem · Jeff Gordon surpasses Dale Earnhardt, Wins #77 · Keselowski Crashes Edwards to Win His First, Edwards' Wild Ride · Historic Moment of Silence · Most Competitive race in NASCAR history (88 Lead Changes among 29 Drivers) · Bayne Becomes the Youngest 500 Winner · Three by three at the lineMusic Daytona 500 Related articles NASCAR on SPEED Commentators List of Sprint All-Star Race broadcasters · Gatorade DuelKey figures Mike Joy · Larry McReynolds · Darrell Waltrip · Dick Berggren · Steve Byrnes · Krista Voda · Matt Yocum · Rick Allen · Jeff Hammond · Michael Waltrip · Phil Parsons · Kenny Wallace · Jimmy Spencer · John Roberts · Dave Despain · Ray Dunlap · Chad Knaus · Robert "Bootie" Barker · Elliott Sadler · Hermie Sadler · Kyle Petty · Ken Squier · Allen Bestwick · Johnny Benson · Wendy Venturini · Rutledge Wood · Adam AlexanderLore NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race NASCAR on CBS Commentators Ken Squier · David Hobbs · Ned Jarrett · Mike Joy · Buddy Baker · Richard Petty · Chris Economaki · Dick Berggren · Ralph Sheheen · Dave Despain · Benny Parsons · Neil Bonnett · Eli Gold · Bill StephensLore The Fight · Fastest 500 In History · The Bumpergate · The Slingshot Pass · Elliott's Dominant Performance · Beginning of the Curse of Dale Earnhardt · Like Father, Like Son · Waltrip's Fuel Milage · Derrike Cope's Upset over Earnhardt · The Dale and Dale Show · Smith/Bonnett Incidents and Photo Finish · Marlin's First Win/Tragedy in Speedweeks · Miller edges Skinner by 0.001 seconds · The Dale and Dale Show II · Earnhardt's Big Wreck at Talladega · This One's For You (Hendrick Podium Sweep) · Earnhardt's Daytona Win · Junior Breaks Through · Adam's lone start/Junior's First Cup WinDaytona 500 NASCAR on ESPN/ABC NASCAR Countdown Pit reporters Race coverage Allen Bestwick Play-by-Play (Sprint Cup Series only) • Marty Reid Play-by-Play (Nationwide Series only) • Dale Jarrett Color Commentary • Andy Petree Color Commentary • Dave Burns Nationwide Series Fill-in Play-by-Play • Ricky Craven Fill-in Color CommentaryFormer key figures Bob Jenkins • Ned Jarrett • Benny Parsons • Larry Nuber • Bill Weber • Ray Dunlap • Paul Page • John Kernan • Dick Berggren • Amy East • Jack AruteLore (includes races from ABC before 2006) Petty/Pearson Crash (ABC) • Petty's 200th Win (ABC) • Million Dollar Bill (ESPN) • Allison's crash into the fence (ESPN) • Pass In The Grass (ABC) • Kulwicki's Polish Victory Lap (ESPN) • Wallace spins Waltrip (ABC) • Controversial Caution leads Bodine for lone Cup win (ESPN) • Death of J.D. McDuffie (ESPN) • Kulwicki's Miracle (ESPN) • First race at the Brickyard (ABC) • Earnhardt's Lone Road Course Win (ESPN)• Earnhardt-Labonte Duel at Bristol (ESPN) • Gordon's Winston Million (ESPN) • Rattling His Cage (Earnhardt-Labonte Duel at Bristol II) (ESPN) • Mr. Restrictor Plate (ESPN) • Stewart wins after Smith's mistake (ABC) • Johnson Ties Cale (ABC) • Johnson wins 4th straight (ABC) • Kyle Busch makes history (ABC) • Gordon-Johnson Pit Swap Controversy (ESPN) • Jimmie beats Denny Hamlin for 5th straight title (ESPN)ESPN SpeedWorld • NASCAR Now • NASCAR Countdown • RPM 2Night • Wide World of Sports Major Racing Series Key figures Bob Jenkins · Larry Nuber · Jerry Punch · Marty Reid · Paul Page · Bob Varsha · Dave Despain · Todd Harris · Ned Jarrett · Benny Parsons · Scott Goodyear · Gary Gerould · Dick Berggren · Jack Arute · Rusty Wallace · Jamie Little · Derek Daly · David Hobbs · Steve Chassey · Larry RiceLore Million Dollar Bill · Death of Rich Vogler · Kulwicki's Miracle · Death of Ayrton Senna · Schumacher-Hill Incident at Australia · Mario's Last Ride · Earnhardt-Labonte Duel at Bristol I · IndyCar vs the Indy 500 · "It Hurt So Good!" · The Pass · Gordon's Winston Million · Schumacher-Villeneuve Incident at Jerez · Hornaday vs Sprague Title Battle · Rattling His Cage (Earnhardt-Labonte Duel at Bristol II) · Death of Greg Moore · The Big One at Daytona · Mr. Restrictor Plate · Zanardi's Accident · Five-Way Title Fight/Brack's AccidentOther Categories:- 1942 births
- American racecar drivers
- Living people
- Tufts University alumni
- People from Westerly, Rhode Island
- People from Ipswich, Massachusetts
- Sportspeople from Massachusetts
- Sportspeople from Connecticut
- Motorsport in Connecticut
- People from Manchester, Connecticut
- American people of Swedish descent
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