MNF mainstay Williams gearingup for start of NFL season
Kyle Hightower | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 4 months AGO
ORLANDO, Fla. - Standing on a makeshift football field atop a soundstage in the middle of flashing lights, dancing cheerleaders and screaming fans, Hank Williams Jr. lifted his cowboy hat and belted out the words that for more than 20 years have become synonymous with the start of the NFL season.
Hank Williams Jr., the man who popularized the lyrics "Are you ready for some football?" was in Florida on Thursday recording the opening promo to an upcoming season that, right now at least, is still in limbo, with owners and players trying to strike a new labor deal.
Williams said he has sympathy for both the fans who are crossing their fingers that the season begins on time and those around the negotiating table. In more than two decades associated with the league, he said he feels like a man in the middle of a fight between his friends.
"We were in there recording the audio and I said, 'Why are we doing that, they aren't gonna play it,'" Williams joked. "But I know a lot of people in the football world - the owners, the players, the marketing directors, and some of the great retired (players). So I see where they're coming from. I said, 'Well if we're going to Orlando to shoot this thing, I guess they're gonna play.'"
Whether or not Williams is right, what can't be disputed is that as much as famous broadcasters like Howard Cosell and Don Meredith were identified with "Monday Night Football," now too is the 62-year-old country star, who originally signed a one-year contract to be a part of the production in 1989.
His song "All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night," is a remixed version of his 1984 hit song "All My Rowdy Friends are Coming Over Tonight." The retooled version of the song won him four Emmy Awards in the early 1990s as the opening theme to Monday Night Football.
"You think about it, 22 years, there's a whole generation of kids that are just getting out of college that don't know Monday Night Football without Hank Williams, Jr.," said Bob Toms, an ESPN vice president who was with ABC when Williams was initially hired. "That song has become an anthem and that line has become the catchphrase that says Monday night. Hank's face and outfit, etc., kind of says 'Monday Night Football' to a lot of people."
ABC last produced the show for network television in 2005 before handing it over to fellow Walt Disney Company property ESPN full-time for the 2006 season. It was a seismic shift for a show that thrived outside of cable television for 35 years.
"I'm the only one, everybody else is gone. The true ABC Monday Night Football - they're gone," Williams said.
He said he hasn't always been a fan of all the bells and whistles that have been tried during his tenure.
"I'm not gonna name any names, but when they used some of those other things...some of the hosts they had - it didn't go over," Williams said. "But it's still great, no matter if they have Frank (Gifford) or Al or Mike Tirico hosting."
Dozens of extras were hired to be the background fans in Thursday's promo shoot. Wearing jerseys of NFL stars like Peyton Manning and Tom Brady, among others, they ranged in age from children to seniors.
Toms said it isn't lost on anyone involved with the production of the show that the sight of Williams in front of the cameras wearing his black and white cowboy hat enlivens their football spirit.
"I think the line 'Are you ready for some football' means a more this year than it has in a lot of years," Toms said. "And when he says 'Are you ready for some football?' I think a lot of people are ready to stop the business discussion, and start talking about teams, games, talent and get into the fun part about football and the part we all love about it.
"I know we're excited about it...and we'll keep our fingers crossed that it'll all be worked out and we'll be on the air soon enough."
No matter when the next Monday night game is broadcast, Williams said he will be watching from the comfort of his couch at one of his homes - in Montana, Alabama and Florida. He said he plans to keep enjoying his job, for as long as he has it.
"I don't run to the TV anymore, I just wait for one of my kids to say 'Daddy, you're on!'" Williams said. "The people I've worked with over the years, they know where I'm coming from and it's been a wonderful ride. And hopefully it's been very good for the game."