Anthony William Packer was an American
college basketball player,
sportscaster, and author. Packer spent more than three decades working as a
color analyst for television coverage of
college basketball.
Packer was born Anthony William Paczkowski in
Wellsville, New York.
His parents subsequently changed their
Polish surname from Paczkowski to Packer. His father Tony was an outstanding athlete in football, basketball, and baseball at
St. Lawrence University and was inducted into the University’s Hall of Fame in 1982. Tony’s 35 years of service at
Lehigh University included 16 seasons as
the school’s men’s basketball head coach from 1950 to 1966.
Packer was a graduate of
Liberty High School in
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. He attended
Wake Forest University in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina from 1958 to 1962 and played guard on the school’s
basketball team for his last three years of college (at the time, freshmen were not eligible for varsity sports). He led Wake Forest to two
Atlantic Coast Conference titles and the 1962
Final Four. He was a member of the Delta Nu chapter of
Sigma Chi fraternity.
After graduation, he had a brief stint as an assistant coach for his alma mater. In 1972, Packer began his career in broadcasting in
Raleigh, North Carolina, when he was asked to fill in as color analyst for a regionally televised
ACC game. He became a regular the next season.
Packer first worked at the network level with
NBC (1974–1981) and then
CBS (1981–2008). He covered every
NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Championship, including the
Final Four from 1975 to 2008. For many years he also covered ACC games for
Raycom Sports. In 1986 he helped create the computer game
Hoops.
[5] He won a
Sports Emmy Award in 1993.
In 2005, Packer received the Marvin Francis Award for “notable achievement and service in coverage of the ACC,” as reported by
The Washington Post.