Chris Mortensen Health Cancer Died 72 Years Old
Longtime ESPN commentator Chris Mortensen has died at age 72, the cable sports channel announced Sunday.
Mortensen retired last April after having covered his 33rd
NFL draft. Since he started at ESPN in 1991, he reported for the network's
largest NFL broadcast shows, as well as the "SportsCenter segment"
"Inside the Huddle."
Mortensen, who had battled esophageal cancer for years,
wrote on X in September that he had decided to focus on his health, family and
faith. He had initially taken a leave of absence after he announced his
diagnosis in early 2016.
"The gratitude and humility is overwhelming. It’s not a classic retirement. I’ll still be here talking ball," he wrote of his retirement. "It’s just time. God Bless you all."
Before his iconic sports broadcasting career, Mortensen
covered the Atlanta Braves, the Atlanta Falcons and the NFL for The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, winning a George Polk Award in 1987 for his reporting. He
then covered the NFL for The National Sports Daily, a now-defunct newspaper,
before he joined ESPN.
In 1991, he published a book, "Playing for Keeps: How
One Man Kept the Mob from Sinking Its Hooks into Pro Football."
Mortensen is survived by his wife, Micki Mortensen, and a son, Alex Mortensen, who is a football coach and former professional quarterback.