The Standard Journal

Musburger is retiring from sportscast­ing at age 77

- AP Television Writer

NEW YORK — Brent Musburger is calling it a career at ESPN after being the play-by-play man in the booth at sporting events enjoyed by millions of Americans, most prominentl­y when he was the lead voice for CBS Sports in the 1980s.

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

His last game was the Kentucky-Georgia men’s basketball game on Jan. 31. That takes him back to Rupp Arena, where he called Villanova’s historic NCAA championsh­ip upset over Georgetown in 1985.

Both Musburger and ESPN say comments about Oklahoma football player Joe Mixon that were criticized as insensitiv­e during the Sugar Bowl earlier this month 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 his victim.

A former sportswrit­er, Musburger’s broadcast fame took off through his work on “NFL Today,” the pro football pregame show. He broadcast the NBA, college basketball, the Masters and tennis — most of CBS’ marquee events.

He was behind the mic for one of college football’s most memorable plays, Doug Flutie’s “Hail Mary” pass that beat Miami for Boston College in 1984. He confessed to Flutie later that it took him awhile to identify Gerard Phelan, Flutie’s roommate, as the receiver for that pass — and Flutie told him he didn’t know, either, until he had run off the field.

Musburger was abruptly dropped by CBS in 1990 in what was perceived as a salary dump, then came to work for ABC and ESPN.

“Brent made every event feel larger,” said Stephanie Druley, ESPN senior vice president for events and studio production. “To me, there is probably not a greater storytelle­r as a play-byplay person. He can spin a yarn like nobody else and it made games definitely more enjoyable to watch.”

Musburger’s opportunit­ies for national expo- sure grew more limited in recent years when ESPN assigned him to its SEC network for college football. But he still called college basketball r egularly and even though ESPN has been trying to save money lately by cutting higher-cost talent, Druley said the network had no interest in seeing him leave.

Sportscast­ing today “has become more and more numbers- driven, advanced statistics and everything,” Musburger said. “That’s fine. I was never going to change because I’m a people guy. I like pulling up a chair in a saloon with a cold beer and telling stories.”

Musburger took heat for backward thinking in 2013 when he extolled the attractive­ness of an Alabama quarterbac­k’s girlfriend, a controvers­y he finds silly. “I called a beauty queen beautiful,” he said. “Are you kidding me?”

He said he hoped peo- ple felt comfortabl­e listening to him.

“Not everyone approved of everything I said,” he said. “I understand that. I come from a sports writing 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.”

He said he’s not ready to fully retire (“I don’t do shuffleboa­rd well),” he said), but his decision lets ESPN escape from an uncomforta­ble decision. Having a broadcaste­r of college games publicly identified with a sports handicappi­ng business wouldn’t fly. That accounts for the odd timing of his departure in the middle of the college basketball season; his family wants the site fully operationa­l by the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

 ??  ?? Brent Musberger (center) voiced his last game for ESPN on Jan. 31.
Brent Musberger (center) voiced his last game for ESPN on Jan. 31.

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