Product Code Database
Example Keywords: the legend -cap $88
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Brent Musburger
Tag Wiki 'Brent Musburger'.
Tag

Brent Woody Musburger (born May 26, 1939) is an American , currently the lead broadcaster and managing editor at Vegas Stats and Information Network (VSiN).

With from 1973 until 1990, he was the original host of their program The NFL Today and is credited with coining the phrase "March Madness" to describe the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament while covering the Final Four. While at CBS, Musburger also covered the , , the , U.S. Open tennis, and , including and Catholics vs. Convicts.

Joining and in 1990, Musburger continued to cover the NBA Finals, as well as hosting Monday Night Football and providing play-by-play for Saturday Night Football and the . He covered the Indianapolis 500 motor race, U.S. Open and British Open golf, the FIFA World Cup in soccer, the in horse racing, the Rose Bowl and the College Football national championship among other big events. In January 2017, he left the and ABC television networks after 27 years, briefly retiring from play-by-play of live sports before returning as the play-by-play voice of the Las Vegas Raiders from 2018 until 2022.

Raised in Billings, Montana, he is a member of the Montana Broadcaster's Association Hall of Fame.


Early life and career
Musburger was born in Portland, Oregon, and raised in Billings, Montana, the son of Beryl Ruth (Woody) and Cec Musburger. His brother, , is a prominent sports agent.

His love of sports began as a boy, where he played Little League Baseball and was a boyhood friend of former Major League pitcher . He also sold programs at Billings Mustangs games in the late 1940's and early 50's.

Musburger's youth included some brushes with trouble: when he was 12, he and his brother stole a car belonging to their mother's cleaning lady and took it for a joy ride. His parents sent him to the Shattuck-St. Mary's School in Faribault, Minnesota. Educated at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, he was kicked out for a year for owning and operating a car without a license.

Around this time, Musberger was a minor league baseball umpire in the Class-D for the 1959 season. While previously reported that Musberger was the home plate umpire when future MLB All-Star and Ford C. Frick Award winner made his professional baseball debut that summer for the , the story is apocryphal. However, Musberger did umpire games of McCarver's later in that season.

Musburger began his career as a for the now-defunct newspaper, where his editor was sportswriter Warren Brown. In 1968, Musburger penned a column regarding and 's protest of racial injustice in the United States with a Black Power salute on the medal stand during the 1968 Summer Olympics. In it he stated "Smith and Carlos looked like a couple of black-skinned storm troopers" who were "ignoble," "juvenile," and "unimaginative". In a 1999 article in The New York Times, Musburger stated that comparing the two to the was "harsh", but he stood by his criticism of the pair's action:

According to Carlos, Musburger never apologized:

Carlos later told during a 2019 discussion that "Brent Musburger doesn't even exist in my mind. He didn't mean anything to me 51 years ago. He doesn't mean anything to me today. Because he's been proven to be wrong."Tom Schad, Olympian John Carlos on 1968 Brent Musburger criticism: He 'doesn't even exist in my mind', USA Today, May 30, 2019, Accessed June 1, 2019.

In 1968, Musburger began a 22-year association with , first as a sports anchor for WBBM radio and later for . In the mid-1970s, Musburger moved to and anchored news and sports for KNXT (now ); there he worked alongside as a co-anchor on KNXT's evening newscasts from 1978 until 1980, when he joined full-time.

In 2020, Musburger told the Sports Illustrated Media Podcast that he has always won while betting the length of the Super Bowl national anthem by having his friends attend the rehearsal the day before the game and time it: "Some people have lip-synched it and that was an easy win because that recording is automatic."


CBS Sports (1973–1990)
Beginning in late 1973, Musburger was doing play-by-play for . He started out doing regular season National Football League games (future The NFL Today co-host was also doing NFL games at that time as well). Musburger was paired with or , who provided the color commentary. A year later, Wayne Walker would be paired with Musburger in the booth.

By 1975 at , Musburger went from doing NFL play-by-play (and other items, mostly on CBS' Sports Saturday/Sunday programs) to rising to prominence as the host of the network's National Football League studio show, The NFL Today. Suddenly, Musburger began to cover many assignments for CBS Sports. Among the other events he covered, either as studio host or announcer, were college football and basketball, the National Basketball Association, , the U.S. Open (tennis) tournament, and The Masters golf tournament. He would even lend his talents to weekend afternoon fare such as The World's Strongest Man contests and the like. Musburger also called Major League Baseball games for CBS Radio.


The NFL Today
But it was Musburger's association with The NFL Today that made him famous. During his tenure, CBS' NFL pregame show was consistently the #1 pregame show. One of the signatures of the program was Musburger's show-opening teases to the various games CBS would cover, along with live images from the various stadiums. Musburger's accompanying intro to each visual, "You are looking live at ..." became one of his catch phrases. In promoting the network, his voice often tailed off on the last letter of "CBS" ( "C.B. eeezz"), creating another catch phrase.

Musburger made headlines when he got into a fist-fight with The NFL Todays betting analyst Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder in a Manhattan bar on October 27, 1980. However, the fist-fight incident was quickly regarded as water under the bridge as the two cheerfully appeared on The NFL Today the following week wearing boxing gloves on camera.


CBS departure
By the late 1980s, Musburger was CBS's top sportscaster. He was the main host and play-by-play announcer for the , college basketball, , the , and the College World Series. He also hosted a New Year's Eve countdown for CBS. Musburger is regarded as the first broadcaster to apply the term March Madness to the annual NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship tournament.

Early in 1990, underwent a significant management change. During the early morning hours of April 1, 1990, Musburger was fired from CBS. His final assignment for CBS came the following evening, doing play-by-play for the 1990 NCAA men's basketball final, which was Duke versus UNLV. When the game was completed, Musburger thanked the audience and CBS Sports, and the analysts that he had worked with through the years like , who was standing next to him.

At the time of his firing (which he originally thought was an joke), Musburger had been set to handle play-by-play duties for CBS's television coverage of Major League Baseball later that month; he was replaced by in that capacity. His position at The NFL Today was filled by . His position as the lead play-by-play announcer for college basketball was filled by .


ABC Sports and ESPN (1990–2017)
Following his dismissal from CBS, Musburger considered several offers, including one to return to Chicago and work at , ultimately settling at ABC. With entrenched as ABC's top broadcaster, Musburger focused on college football and basketball. After his hiring, ABC's merger with under the Disney umbrella allowed him to work on ESPN as well (increasingly since 2006), including Major League Baseball, NBA games, , golf tournaments, , the Indianapolis 500, Little League World Series, soccer games, , and even some NFL games (including hosting halftime duties for Monday Night Football and Wild Card round games). Musburger was also the main studio host during ABC's coverage of the 1998 World Cup and the 2006 World Cup, was briefly the studio host for ESPN and ABC's NASCAR coverage and has hosted Tour de France coverage for ABC.


Major League Baseball
In 1995, Musburger called Games 3-5 of the American League Division Series between the Seattle Mariners and New York Yankees alongside for ABC in association with The Baseball Network. The fifth and decisive game went into the bottom of the 11th inning before Edgar Martínez won it for Seattle with a double that scored both and Ken Griffey Jr., sending them to the League Championship Series for the first time in their franchise's history.

Musberger's call, dramatic as it was, incorrectly implied that Bernie Williams fielded the double in left. Bernie was playing center field at the time. Gerald Williams was in left field playing the ball and making the late throw back to the infield.

Musburger and Jim Kaat later called Games 1-2 of the 1995 American League Championship Series, while the rest of the games were called by and on NBC.


College football
Musburger's college football duties for ESPN and ABC included calling seven BCS National Championship games (2000, 2004, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014).

Beginning in 2006, Musburger called ABC Sports' college football prime time series, along with analysts Bob Davie and . Musburger called the 2007 Rose Bowl, taking over for the retired . He also called games on ESPN during his time at ABC.

During the 2013 BCS National Championship Game between Alabama and Notre Dame, a camera turned to , who was in the stands cheering for her boyfriend, Alabama quarterback, A. J. McCarron. Musburger remarked, "I'm telling you, you quarterbacks get all the good-looking women. What a beautiful woman. Wow!" and continued commenting in a similar fashion. The next day, ESPN apologized for his comments, saying they "went too far". The controversy died down quickly afterwards, largely due to Webb stating that she was not bothered at all by Musburger's comments. As the Raiders' new radio broadcaster in 2018, Musburger jokingly revisited the incident with a Twitter post welcoming the now-married McCarrons to Oakland after the Raiders acquired AJ from the .

Musburger's involvement with Saturday Night Football concluded when he and were named ESPN's lead game commentators for college football coverage on the in 2014. Musburger nevertheless called some games on ESPN and ABC after that time.


VSIN, Oakland/Las Vegas Raiders (2018–2021)
At the 2017 Sugar Bowl, held in early January, Musburger made controversial comments about then-University of Oklahoma . Mixon had previously punched and broken a woman's jaw.

Later in the same month, Musburger announced that he would retire from play-by-play broadcasting and would call his final game at in Lexington, Kentucky, on January 31, 2017.Cindy Boren, ESPN official says the network learned that Musburger was thinking of retiring 10 days, The Washington Post, January 25, 2017.

Musburger stated he planned to help his family get a business started in Las Vegas, have a sports gambling show on Radio, and enjoy personal travel. Brent Musburger to Retire From ESPN Next Week, Associated Press, January 25, 2017. The new venture, Vegas Stats & Information Network (VSiN) is the first multichannel network dedicated to information and is broadcast from a custom-built studio at the South Point Hotel, Casino & Spa. Musburger serves as managing editor of the network, and hosts its program My Guys in the Desert (a reference to his sly mentions of events of interest to bookmakers during his play-by-play). Musburger and his sons sold VSiN to in March 2021 while remaining executives and on-air personalities with the network; DraftKings sold VSiN back to the Musburgers in 2024.

On July 17, 2018, it was reported that Musburger would be making his return to the broadcast booth, this time as the new radio voice for the Oakland Raiders under a three-year contract (which included its inaugural season in Las Vegas in 2020), succeeding . Musburger continued as announcer through the 2021 season.


Style
Musburger has a down-to-earth manner of speaking, often addressing his viewers as "folks". In a Sports Illustrated profile done on Musburger in January 1984, he stressed his hesitance to "pontificate" during his broadcasts. In 2004, CNN Sports Illustrated's selected him as the second-best college football announcer, behind . Mandel said of Musburger, "His voice will always be associated with some of the sport's most memorable, modern moments."

Musburger has a reputation for pointing out attractive women in the crowds of the games he calls; among those who later rose to fame include , , , and .


Other media
Musburger was a reporter in and had his role immortalized in a 2006 action figure. He also played the right leg of the fictional monster Scuzzlebutt on an episode of . He also made cameo appearances in The Main Event and . In Cars 2 and Planes, he played Brent Mustangburger, a fictionalized version of himself. He appeared as himself in the episode "Lying Around" on the ABC sitcom Happy Endings.

Musburger is portrayed by John Dellaporta and has a voice cameo as himself in the HBO series . He was also parodied by on Saturday Night Live.


Bibliography


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs