Background
Gabriel was born in 1940 in Wisconsin and grew up in Palos Heights, Illinois.
Gabriel was born in 1940 in Wisconsin and grew up in Palos Heights, Illinois.
He graduated from Sandburg High School.
Foreign the Slovak soccer player, see Ján Gabriel. Sunday! Sunday!"
Gabriel produced commercials for Community Discount stores and worked behind the microphone at WJOB in Hammond as a disc jockey. In the 1950s, Gabriel had billed himself as "Chicago"s youngest teenage DJ" when he started at record hops.
lieutenant wasn"t until 1968 that he combined his love of announcing and racing into a stint at Santa Fe Speedway in Hinsdale, Illinois. While other announcers would usually just do a play-by-play at other racetracks, Gabriel would usually go wild with his announcing duties, usually being in the middle of track while announcing.
In 1968, Ben Christ, the track owner of the United States. 30 drag strip in Hobart, Indiana, wanted to advertise and make it known that his tracks were open on Sundays. He enlisted the help of Steve Cronen at Starbeat Recording Studios in Deerfield, Illinois.
Originally, the idea for the tagline was to have two announcers trade intonations of "Sunday!"
Not southern In 1967 The Sunday, Sunday, Sunday radio spot was recorded at WLTH radio in Gary, Indiana by Jerry Wilkerson and Peter Jerome at 10 Department of Administration and Management on Thursday mornings.
lieutenant usually took an hour to "get it together" because the copy was so long it ran more than 60 seconds to record, or the announcers screwed up, lost their breath or just missed a word.
Because it was tape, the announcers had to record it again from the beginning. A courier from Chicago, who brought the copy with him, would run the taped spot back to Chicago for distribution to World's Largest Store and possibly WCFL for air Thursday afternoon through Sunday morning. "Where the great ones run," was not yet used as a tag line in the spots in 1967.
After dismissing nearly 50 announcers because they weren"t vibrant enough, Gabriel"s announcing was picked as the iconic tagline by Cronen.
The spots ended with "Where the great ones run!", read and echoed by Gabriel. His deep voice and tagline was extensively used by Christ in many of his other racing venues advertisements, with Gabriel often recording fresh tracks up until the 1980s.
The tagline was often imitated by other racetrack announcers and in popular culture till its decline in the 1980s as many small tracks and drag strips closed down or were absorbed by other organizations. In 1980, suffering from polycystic kidney disease, Gabriel underwent a kidney transplant.
Another transplant was needed and setup in 2004, but Gabriel was unable to find a suitable donor.
His legs were amputated below the knee in 2005. Gabriel was the host and producer of the syndicated television show The Super Chargers Show, which ran from 1982 to 1994. The show covered many aspects of Motorsport and car culture along with celebrity guests.
Gabriel is credited in bringing both National Association of Stock Car Auto Racing and the National Hot Rod Association on television, as well as popularizing Monster Trucks.
Still connected to motorsports, he helped to transfer Team Demolition Derby, a Santa Fe Speedway standby, to Route 66 Raceway in Joliet, Illinois. In 2003, Gabriel invited drivers from Canada, Australia and New Zealand to compete in the Team Demo Association World Championship. Gabriel died on Sunday, January 10, 2010, from polycystic kidney disease and complications from peripheral artery disease.
Funeral services were held on Sunday, January 17 at his home in Lombard, Illinois.