The Tragic Death of Former Cowboys QB and Monday Night Football Legend


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SANTA FE, N.M. -- Don Meredith, one of the most recognizable figures of the early Dallas Cowboys and an original member of ABC's "Monday Night Football" broadcast team, died Sunday. He was 72..


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Joseph Donald Meredith (April 10, 1938 - December 5, 2010), nicknamed " Dandy Don " was an American football player, sports commentator, and actor who played quarterback for nine seasons with the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL).


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This Jan. 1972, photo provided by ABC, shows, from left, Don Meredith, Howard Cosell and Frank Gifford.. "Turn Out the Lights, the Party's Over," he would belt out after a game-clinching.


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Albuquerque, N.M. --Don Meredith, one of the most recognizable figures of the early Dallas Cowboys and an original member of ABC's "Monday Night Football" broadcast team, died Sunday. He was.


"Turn Out The Lights, The Party's Over." Don Meredith Flickr

Monday Night Football - Don Meridith's weekly solo once the outcome was clear


Don Meredith, of the early Dallas Cowboys and an original member of

Turn Out the Lights: Don Meredith Dies. Very sad news. One of my first/favorite memories as a snotty-nosed little kid was sitting atop Dad's shoulders at the Cotton Bowl, watching Bob Hayes race.


With Don Meredith, Monday night was a football party even if his

"Turn out the lights, the party's over. . . ." Somewhere, Don Meredith is singing that tune right now. The one that he sang on countless Monday nights, when he concluded that the game he was calling with Frank Gifford and Howard Cosell no longer was in dispute, to the certain dismay of ABC executives who would have preferred that the audience didn't receive a musical invitation to.


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Turn Out the Lights My night at the Dallas Cowboys old-timers reunion is over, but it left me wondering why Don Meredith didn't show up, whether Tom Landry deserved his reputation as a coaching.


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In the immortal words of the late Don Meredith (R.I.P.): "Turn out the lights, the party's over" for "We can do it right here!" - Captain America Negroes, Mi.


ExCowboys QB, 'Monday Night' announcer Dandy Don dies at 72

"The Party's Over" is a song written and recorded by American country music singer Willie Nelson during the mid-1950s. After arriving in Houston, Texas, Nelson was hired to play for the Esquire Ballroom band, where he would be allowed to close the shows singing the song.


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Don Meredith, the iconic Monday Night Football broadcaster and the original Dallas Cowboy, died Sunday after suffering a brain hemorrhage in Santa Fe, N.M. Turn out the lights: Iconic 'Dandy Don.


Don Meredith Turn out the lights, the party's over

they say that all good things must endRIP Dandy Don Meredith


Don Meredith A chance to have known him and sing a duet of "Turn out

"Don Meredith was a huge part of what has made Monday Night Football so special. His approach, attitude and love of football came thought in every broadcast. Just the phrase, "Turn out the lights, the party's over" makes any football fan watching in the 70s and early 80s break out in a smile.


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[Verse 1] What a crazy, crazy party, never seen so many people Laughing, dancing, look at you, you're having fun But look at me I'm almost crying But that don't keep her love from dying Misery,.


The Tragic Death of Former Cowboys QB and Monday Night Football Legend

"Turn out the lights," he'd sing, "the party's over." A correction was made on Dec. 10, 2010: An obituary on Tuesday about Don Meredith, the former Dallas Cowboys quarterback and.


Don Meredith's last game Benched after throwing INTs in 1968 playoff

Don Meredith, one of the most recognizable figures of the early Dallas Cowboys and an original member of ABC's "Monday Night Football" broadcast team, died Sunday. He was 72. Meredith's wife,.

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