Los Angeles Times

Musburger is about to call it a career

Broadcaste­r, 77, will retire after he works a basketball game on ESPN on Tuesday.

- By Houston Mitchell houston.mitchell@latimes.com The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

‘When he opens with his signature “You are looking live,” you sit up straight in your chair because you know something important is about to happen.’

— JOHN SKIPPER,ESPN president, on the impact of retiring broadcaste­r Brent Musberger

Broadcaste­r Brent Musburger announced Wednesday that he will retire after doing the play-by-play of the Georgia-Kentucky men’s basketball game on ESPN on Tuesday.

Musburger, 77, said he is leaving sportscast­ing to help his family get a sports handicappi­ng business started and to use some of the millions of airline miles he has accumulate­d for fun travel.

He is retiring in the middle of the season to have the handicappi­ng business running before the NCAA men’s basketball tournament in March.

“What a wonderful journey I have traveled with CBS and the Disney Company,” Musburger said in a statement. “A love of sports allows me to live a life of endless pleasure. And make no mistake, I will miss the arenas and stadiums dearly. Most of all, I will miss the folks I have met along the trail.

“But the next rodeo for me is in Las Vegas. Stop by and we’ll share a cold one and some good stories. I may even buy.”

Musburger and ESPN say his comments during the Sugar Bowl about Oklahoma football player Joe Mixon that were criticized as insensitiv­e had nothing to do with his exit. Musburger said he hoped Mixon, who had been suspended for a year after punching a woman and breaking her jaw, would make the most of his second chance and did not initially talk about the victim. “Brent made every event feel larger,” Stephanie Druley, ESPN senior vice president for events and studio production, told the Associated Press. “To me, there is probably not a greater storyevent teller as a play-by-play person. He can spin a yarn like nobody else, and it made games definitely more enjoyable to watch.”

Since 1968, Musburger has called or been a part of nearly every major sporting at least once. His resume includes the Super Bowl, the NBA Finals, the Final Four, golf’s Masters, the Rose Bowl, the World Cup, the Indianapol­is 500, the College Football Championsh­ip, the Little League World Series and tennis’ U.S. Open.

ESPN President John Skipper said in a statement that “Brent’s presence and delivery have come to symbolize big time sports for multiple generation­s of fans. When he opens with his signature ‘You are looking live,’ you sit up straight in your chair because you know something important is about to happen. … We and the fans will miss him.”

Musburger started in local television in 1968. In 1973, he joined CBS Sports as part of its NFL team and became the network’s primary play-by-play caller in 1975 before moving to ABC and ESPN in 1990.

His career was not without controvers­y. While hosting “NFL Today” in 1980, Musburger got into a physical altercatio­n at a bar with the show’s betting advisor, Jimmy “The Greek” Snyder. The two quickly patched things up and appeared on the next edition of the show wearing boxing gloves.

During the 2013 college football championsh­ip game between Alabama and Notre Dame, Katherine Webb, the girlfriend of Alabama quarterbac­k A.J. McCarron, was shown on camera. Musburger, calling the game for ESPN, said, “I’m telling you, you quarterbac­ks get all the good-looking women. What a beautiful woman. Wow!”

ESPN apologized for his comments, saying they “went too far,” though Webb came to his defense, saying she was not bothered by his words.

“Not everyone approved of everything I said,” Musburger said. “I understand that. I come from a sportswrit­ing background, and I’m not afraid to take a position on certain things from time to time.

“But for the most part, I thought people should be coming to a game to escape for three hours and forget about what their individual problems are.”

 ?? Grant Halverson Getty Images ?? BRENT MUSBURGER, greeting spectators at a North Carolina basketball game in 2011, says he’ll miss the people he has “met along the trail” of a long career in broadcasti­ng, which ends Tuesday.
Grant Halverson Getty Images BRENT MUSBURGER, greeting spectators at a North Carolina basketball game in 2011, says he’ll miss the people he has “met along the trail” of a long career in broadcasti­ng, which ends Tuesday.

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