Upton Bell (Born 1938) is a former
American football executive. Upton is
currently a Talk Show Host and Commentator at WCRN Talk AM 830 in
Worcester Massachusetts. He is the son of former National Football
League commissioner
Bert Bell and Broadway
actress
Frances Upton.
Football executive
Upton Bell's first job in football was as a $65-a-week dressing
room attendant for the
Baltimore Colts in 1960.
After working in the Colts' scouting department, Bell became the
club's personnel director. His job included working in sales,
publicity, marketing and with the NFL draft. During his early days
with the Colts, his brother Bert Bell, Jr. was the team's business
manager. His responsibilities included scouting and negotiating
contracts with and signing of all college recruits. During Upton's
tenure, the Colts were in one NFL Championship game and two Super
Bowl Games, winning
Super Bowl V in
1971 under new Head Coach
Don
McCafferty. Seventeen of the 40-man roster on that winning team
were players drafted during Upton's stint as Personnel
Director.
[649700].
[649701] Bell held the personnel director's job
until he was hired to become the
General
Manager of the
New England
Patriots (Then known as the
Bay State
Patriots) in
1971.
At 33, Bell was the NFL's youngest General Manager. One of his
first moves with the Patriots was drafting
Jim Plunkett with the first overall pick in
that year's draft. Under his
leadership the Patriots improved from 2-12 to 6-8. Despite the
improvement, Bell wanted to fire head coach
John Mazur and hire a coach of his own choosing.
The team's board of directors agreed that if the Pats lost to the
Baltimore Colts, Mazur would be fired. Jim Plunkett landed an
88-yard pass to
Randy Vataha for a
21-17 Patriots win. The Patriots finished the following season with
a 3-11 record and Bell was fired on
December
5.
Bell returned to professional football in 1974 with the purchase of
the
New York Stars.
Bell relocated the
team to Charlotte,
North Carolina
where the team was renamed the Charlotte Hornets. This
venture would be short lived due to the folding of the
World Football League in 1975. One of
Bell's co-owners was
Arnold
Palmer.
Sports announcer
Starting in 1976, Bell began his media career by making guest
appearances on programs such as
John
Sterling's show on
WMCA.
In 1978 he became
co-host of WBZ's
"Calling All
Sports" with newcomer Bob Lobel.
Other
shows hosted by Bell include Sports Nightly on WHDH-TV
(1979-1980),
Sports Line on WEEI
(1980-1984),
Sports Beat on WSBK-TV
with Joe
Fitzgerald, Bob Ryan, and Bob Lobel, the
Will and Upton Show with Will
McDonough on WBZ-TV
(1984-1988),
and New England Sportsphile in 1989.
During the 1989 and 1990 NFL seasons, Bell served as an interviewer
for WBZ-TV during their Patriots pregame show and newscasts. Those
Bell interviewed for WBZ include
George H. W. Bush,
Mike Tyson,
Joe
Montana,
Pete Rozelle,
Howard Cosell,
Don
Shula,
Deion Sanders,
John Hannah,
Jim Kelly,
Patrick Ewing,
Stephen King.
Bell has also been a guest commentator on
NECN
and WBZ-TV's Sports Final.
Bell's
first color commentary experience came at WSMW
, where he
called college football with Bob
Fouracre from 1978-1982. In 1983, Bell served as the color
commentator for the Boston
Breakers Professional Football team on WNEV
and ESPN and was the studio host for SportsChannel New England's
Breakers broadcasts. He was the color commentator for
Boston College Eagles
football radio broadcasts with play-by-play announcers
Dan Davis in 1985 and Bob Lobel in 1986. Lobel and
Bell were removed from the BC broadcast booth after one season and
unsuccessfully sued for "breach of contract, deceit, negligent
misrepresentation". Bell was also a fill-in color commentator for
SportsChannel New England's
Boston
Celtics games.
Nationally, Bell worked on
PBS Ivy League football games alongside play-by-play
announcer
Dick Galiette and sideline
reporter
Sean McDonough in
1984.
Talk radio
Bell has
also worked in general talk radio since 1988, hosting shows on
WHDH
(1988-1989), WTAG
(1992-1998),
WRPT/WMEX
(1998-2000). He has interviewed
George H.W. Bush,
Bill
Clinton,
Henry Kissinger,
Ted Kennedy,
Geraldine Ferraro,
Regis Philbin,
Frank
McCourt,
Jay Leno,
Dr. Joyce Brothers,
Jackie Mason,
Johnny
Cochran and
Alan Dershowitz. For
three consecutive years, the
Upton Bell Show was
recognized by
The Associated
Press for Outstanding Talk Show in New England.
Today,
Bell appears three days a week on former Congressman Peter Blute's drive-time program on WCRN
.
References