Timothy J. Russert Sr., father of the late "Meet the Press" moderator Tim 
Russert, has died at age 85, CNN reported Thursday.
Known as "Big Russ," the elder Russert became famous in his own right after 
being the subject of a best-selling book by Tim, who died of a heart attack at 
58 in June 2008.



In a statement released Thursday, the Russert family asked for privacy.



"It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Timothy Joseph 
Russert," it read.



"While he was affectionately known to the world as "Big Russ,' he carried no 
more important nor meaningful titles than those of father, grandfather, 
great-grandfather, patriot and friend. He passed peacefully with his family at 
his side from natural causes at the age of 85," the statement continued.



"Big Russ & Me: Father and Son -- Lessons of Life" was published in 2004 and 
chronicled the life of the man who Tim Russert said steered him through life 
with his scrappy South Buffalo wisdom and salt-of-the-earth Irish Catholic 
values.



"Big Russ" had learned that his son died of a heart attack two days before 
Father's Day in June 2008.



In a June 16, 2004, appearance with his father on NBC's "Today Show," Tim 
Russert recalled some of the lessons he learned from the senior Russert.



"He used to say: "Put your nose to the grindstone and hope for the best,' " Tim 
Russert told "Today Show" host Matt Lauer.



Tim Russert also described his father as an eternal optimist.



Friends of the younger Russert noted at the time that father and son were very 
close, according to a June 15, 2008, Buffalo News article following Tim 
Russert's death.



Don Huber, a family friend, said at the time that "Big Russ" never missed "Meet 
the Press" on Sunday mornings. A few years back, while his father was 
hospitalized, Tim Russert ended the program by announcing that he was sending 
him a gift that afternoon. "Big Russ" didn't know what the gift would be. Then, 
Russert "walked in the door. . . . What it was, was him," Huber recalled.



"No matter what, they called each other every day on the phone," recalled 
another friend, Raymond E. McGirr, a member of American Legion Post 721 and the 
Blackthorn Club, a social club for Irish-American men.

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