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

Key Information

With CBS Sports 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 Super Bowl, NBA Finals, the World Series, U.S. Open tennis, The Masters and college football, including Hail Flutie and Catholics vs. Convicts.

Joining ESPN and ABC Sports 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 SEC Network. He covered the Indianapolis 500 motor race, U.S. Open and British Open golf, the FIFA World Cup in soccer, the Belmont Stakes in horse racing, the Rose Bowl and the College Football national championship among other big events. In January 2017, he left the ESPN 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,[1][2] he is a member of the Montana Broadcaster's Association Hall of Fame.[3]

Early life and career

[edit]

Musburger was born in Portland, Oregon, and raised in Billings, Montana, the son of Beryl Ruth (Woody) and Cec Musburger.[4][5] His brother, Todd Musburger, 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 Dave McNally. He also sold programs at Billings Mustangs games in the late 1940s and early 50s.[6]

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.[5] 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.[5]

Around this time, Musburger was a minor league baseball umpire in the Class-D Midwest League for the 1959 season. While previously reported that Musburger was the home plate umpire when future MLB All-Star and Ford C. Frick Award winner Tim McCarver made his professional baseball debut that summer for the Keokuk Cardinals, the story is apocryphal. However, Musburger did umpire games of McCarver's later in that season.[7]

Musburger began his career as a sportswriter for the now-defunct Chicago American newspaper, where his editor was sportswriter Warren Brown. In 1968, Musburger penned a column regarding Tommie Smith and John Carlos'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 Nazis was "harsh", but he stood by his criticism of the pair's action:

Did [Smith and Carlos' action] improve anything? ... Smith and Carlos aside, I object to using the Olympic awards stand to make a political statement.[8]

According to Carlos, Musburger never apologized:

We are talking about someone who compared us to Nazis. Think about that. Here we are standing up to apartheid and to a man in Avery Brundage who delivered the Olympics to Hitler's Germany. And here's Musburger calling us Nazis. That got around. It followed us. It hurt us. It hurt my wife, my kids. I've never been able to confront him about why he did this. Every time I've been at a function or an event with Brent Musburger and I walk towards him, he heads the other way.[9]

Carlos later told Jemele Hill 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."[10]

In 1968, Musburger began a 22-year association with CBS, first as a sports anchor for WBBM radio and later for WBBM-TV. In the mid-1970s, Musburger moved to Los Angeles and anchored news and sports for KNXT (now KCBS-TV); there he worked alongside Connie Chung as a co-anchor on KNXT's evening newscasts from 1978 until 1980, when he joined CBS Sports 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."[11]

CBS Sports (1973–1990)

[edit]

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

By 1975 at CBS, 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 play-by-play announcer, were college football and basketball, the National Basketball Association, horse racing, the U.S. Open (tennis) tournament, and The Masters[12] 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

[edit]

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 rated 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 Today's betting analyst Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder in a Manhattan bar on October 27, 1980.[13] 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.[14]

CBS departure

[edit]

By the late 1980s, Musburger was CBS's top sportscaster. He was the main host and play-by-play announcer for the NBA Finals, college basketball, college football, the Belmont Stakes, 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.[15]

Early in 1990, CBS 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 Billy Packer, who was standing next to him.[16]

At the time of his firing (which he originally thought was an April Fools 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 Jack Buck[17] in that capacity. His position at The NFL Today was filled by Greg Gumbel. His position as the lead play-by-play announcer for college basketball was filled by Jim Nantz.

ABC Sports and ESPN (1990–2017)

[edit]

Following his dismissal from CBS, Musburger considered several offers, including one to return to Chicago and work at WGN-TV, ultimately settling at ABC. With Al Michaels entrenched as ABC's top broadcaster, Musburger focused on college football and basketball. After his hiring, ABC's merger with ESPN under the Disney umbrella allowed him[18] to work on ESPN as well (increasingly since 2006), including Major League Baseball,[19][20][21][22] NBA games, ESPN Radio, golf tournaments, horse racing, the Indianapolis 500, Little League World Series, soccer games, college football, 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

[edit]

In 1995, Musburger called Games 3-5 of the American League Division Series between the Seattle Mariners and New York Yankees alongside Jim Kaat 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 Joey Cora and Ken Griffey Jr., sending them to the League Championship Series for the first time in their franchise's history.

No balls and a strike to Martínez. Line drive, we are tied! Griffey is coming around! In the corner is Bernie. He's going to try to score! Here's the division championship! Mariners win it! Mariners win it!

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 Bob Costas and Bob Uecker on NBC.

College football

[edit]
Brent Musburger departs the College GameDay bus in Austin, Texas, in 2006

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 Kirk Herbstreit. Musburger called the 2007 Rose Bowl, taking over for the retired Keith Jackson. 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 Katherine Webb, 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.[23] The next day, ESPN apologized for his comments, saying they "went too far".[24] 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 Buffalo Bills.[25]

Musburger's involvement with Saturday Night Football concluded when he and Jesse Palmer were named ESPN's lead game commentators for college football coverage on the SEC Network in 2014.[26] Musburger nevertheless called some games on ESPN and ABC after that time.[27][28]

VSIN, Oakland/Las Vegas Raiders (2018–2021)

[edit]

At the 2017 Sugar Bowl, held in early January, Musburger made controversial comments about then-University of Oklahoma running back Joe Mixon. Mixon had previously punched and broken a woman's jaw.[29][30]

Later in the same month, Musburger announced that he would retire from play-by-play broadcasting[31][32][33] and would call his final game at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky, on January 31, 2017.[34]

Musburger stated he planned to help his family get a sports handicapping business started in Las Vegas, have a sports gambling show on Sirius XM Radio, and enjoy personal travel.[34][35] The new venture, Vegas Stats & Information Network (VSiN) is the first multichannel network dedicated to sports gambling information and is broadcast from a custom-built studio at the South Point Hotel, Casino & Spa.[36] 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).[37] Musburger and his sons sold VSiN to DraftKings in March 2021 while remaining executives and on-air personalities with the network;[38] DraftKings sold VSiN back to the Musburgers in 2024.[39]

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 Greg Papa.[40][41][42] Musburger continued as announcer through the 2021 season.[43]

Musburger made a special appearance at the 2025 Pro Football Hall of Fame Game as part of the NBC broadcast team, to commemorate Musburger's receiving the Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award from the Hall of Fame that year.[44] On September 21, 2025, Musburger made a guest appearance on The NFL Today as part of a special edition commemorating the program's 50th anniversary.[45][46][47]

Style

[edit]

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 Stewart Mandel selected him as the second-best college football announcer, behind Ron Franklin. Mandel said of Musburger, "His voice will always be associated with some of the sport's most memorable, modern moments."[48]

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 Susan “Busty Heart” Sykes,[49] CJ Perry,[50] Jenn Sterger,[51] and Katherine Webb McCarron.[52]

Other media

[edit]

Musburger was a reporter in Rocky II and had his role immortalized in a 2006 action figure.[53] He also played the right leg of the fictional monster Scuzzlebutt on an episode of South Park.[54] He also made cameo appearances in The Main Event and The Waterboy. 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.[55]

Musburger is portrayed by John Dellaporta and has a voice cameo as himself in the HBO series Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty.[56] He was also parodied by Kevin Nealon on Saturday Night Live.[57]

References

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Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Brent Woody Musburger (born May 26, 1939) is an American sportscaster whose career in broadcasting spans more than five decades, primarily focused on football, basketball, and horse racing.[1][2] He began in local Chicago radio and television before joining CBS Sports in 1973, where he hosted The NFL Today pregame show and provided play-by-play for NFL games, including multiple Super Bowls, as well as NCAA Final Fours and U.S. Open tennis.[1][3] In 1990, Musburger moved to ABC Sports and ESPN, continuing to call major college football games and serving as the voice of events like the NCAA men's basketball tournament until his departure from ESPN in 2017.[2][4] Since 2017, he has been the lead broadcaster and managing editor at Vegas Stats & Information Network (VSiN), focusing on sports betting analysis.[5] Musburger's distinctive baritone voice, rapid-fire delivery, and willingness to express opinions have defined his style, earning him accolades like the 2025 Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award from the Pro Football Hall of Fame, though his candid commentary has also drawn criticism for remarks on athletes' appearances and off-field issues, such as defending Oklahoma running back Joe Mixon amid a domestic violence scandal.[5][6][7]

Early Life

Family Background and Childhood

Brent Woody Musburger was born on May 26, 1939, in Portland, Oregon, to Cec Musburger and Beryl Ruth Woody Musburger.[8] [9] His father, born in Bismarck, North Dakota, had relocated as a child to Ashland, Montana, establishing deep family ties to the state.[9] The family moved to Billings, Montana, in 1941 when Musburger was two years old, where he spent his formative years.[10] [11] In Billings, Musburger grew up alongside his younger brother, Todd, who later became a prominent sports agent.[11] [12] His father played a key role in local youth sports by chartering Billings' first Little League program in the early 1950s, fostering an environment that emphasized community involvement and athletics.[11] Musburger attended local elementary and junior high schools, developing an early affinity for sports; during his teenage years in the 1950s, he served as an umpire for minor league baseball games.[13] [11] Musburger's childhood included episodes of youthful rebellion, notably at age 12 when he and his brother Todd stole a car belonging to their mother's cleaning lady, prompting his parents to enroll him at Shattuck-St. Mary's, a military preparatory school in Faribault, Minnesota.[12] This disciplinary measure, as Musburger later reflected, stemmed from his tendency to prioritize fun over structure—"I was having fun, mom and dad weren't," he noted—yet it marked a turning point in instilling discipline amid his Billings upbringing, which he described as fortunate for its tight-knit community and outdoor opportunities.[11]

Education and Initial Career Aspirations

Musburger attended Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, graduating with a degree in the field.[3] While still a student there, he began contributing as a sportswriter for the Chicago American, an afternoon newspaper that later merged into the Chicago Today.[5] Prior to formal education in journalism, Musburger's early involvement in sports centered on umpiring, reflecting familial influences from his father, who umpired baseball and founded the Billings Little League program in 1952.[14] In 1959, at age 20, he served as a minor league baseball umpire in the Class-D Midwest League, including home plate duties in catcher Tim McCarver's professional debut.[1] This role marked an initial aspiration toward direct participation in baseball operations rather than media coverage, though he soon pivoted to print journalism as a career path.[15] Following graduation, Musburger envisioned a future in newspaper sports reporting, securing a position as a sports columnist at the Chicago American, where he honed skills in deadline writing and game analysis before transitioning to broadcasting in 1968.[15][1] This print foundation underscored his early professional goals, prioritizing investigative sports journalism over on-field roles like umpiring.[2]

Pre-Broadcasting Journalism

Newspaper Reporting Roles

Musburger commenced his professional journalism career as a sportswriter for the Chicago American, an afternoon newspaper published in Chicago from 1900 until its closure in 1975 following mergers with other local outlets.[15][16] After graduating from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism in the early 1960s, he covered local and national sports events, including college football matchups such as the 1966 Michigan State–Notre Dame "Game of the Century," which he reported on as a 27-year-old columnist.[17] His work emphasized straightforward game recaps and analysis, reflecting the era's focus on athletic performance over broader social commentary in routine reporting. During his approximately five-to-seven-year tenure at the Chicago American, Musburger authored columns that occasionally ventured into opinion, most notably a October 1968 piece decrying the black power salutes by U.S. sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the Mexico City Olympics.[18] He described their podium protest as a "nasty demonstration" that shamed the United States and argued the athletes were "lower than barnacles" for politicizing an international sports event dedicated to competition rather than activism.[18] This stance, rooted in a traditionalist view prioritizing sports purity, drew later criticism amid evolving cultural norms but aligned with contemporaneous journalistic norms against conflating athletics with politics. Musburger departed the newspaper in late 1968 to pursue broadcasting opportunities at WBBM in Chicago.[1]

Transition to Television News

Following his work as a sports columnist at the Chicago American newspaper in the mid-1960s, Musburger entered broadcasting in 1968 as sports director at Chicago's WBBM, initially for radio and soon extending to television as a sports anchor on the CBS affiliate.[15][1][19] This move represented his initial foray into on-air television news, focusing on sports segments within local newscasts. The position at WBBM established the foundation for a 22-year affiliation with CBS, allowing Musburger to develop broadcast delivery skills amid the era's growing emphasis on visual journalism.[1] He later advanced to co-anchoring the nightly news at KNXT-TV in Los Angeles, a CBS-owned station, where he handled general news reporting beyond sports.[19][20] These early television roles, spanning sports-specific anchoring to broader news duties, bridged his print journalism background with the demands of live TV, emphasizing concise reporting and audience engagement before his pivot to national sports coverage in the early 1970s.[21][1]

CBS Sports Career (1973–1990)

Launching The NFL Today

In 1975, CBS Sports relaunched its NFL pregame program as The NFL Today, transitioning from a pre-taped format hosted by Jack Whitaker to the first live pregame show in television history, with Brent Musburger appointed as the primary host.[22][23] This change occurred as Musburger, who had joined CBS in 1973 after a journalism background in Chicago, was rising in sports broadcasting.[1] The show's debut aligned with CBS's NFL coverage, airing Sundays at noon Eastern Time before doubleheader games, and featured a studio set in New York with Musburger delivering opening lines like "You are looking live!" to emphasize the live element.[24] Musburger anchored alongside analyst Irv Cross, a former NFL player; Phyllis George, a former Miss America who became one of the first women in a prominent sports TV role; and Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder, providing betting odds analysis.[1][22] This ensemble format under executive producer Lance Barrow emphasized personality-driven discussion, injury updates, and predictive segments, setting a template for modern pregame shows across networks.[23] Musburger's straightforward, authoritative delivery—honed from his newspaper reporting days—helped the program draw strong ratings, often exceeding 20 million viewers weekly during the 1970s season, contributing to CBS retaining NFL broadcast rights amid competition from NBC.[25] The launch marked a pivotal moment for Musburger, solidifying his status at CBS Sports after earlier assignments in college basketball and horse racing coverage.[1] The NFL Today ran for 15 years under his hosting tenure until 1990, influencing industry standards by prioritizing live interaction and diverse contributor perspectives over scripted narration.[25]

Additional Sports Coverage and Contributions

Musburger expanded his CBS Sports portfolio to include play-by-play and hosting for the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament, notably serving as the voice for six Final Four events during the 1980s.[1][26] He also handled coverage of the NBA, anchoring six Finals telecasts beginning in 1975, which featured matchups such as the Boston Celtics versus the Los Angeles Lakers.[26][27] In addition to basketball, Musburger contributed to CBS's broadcasts of major golf events, including the Masters Tournament, and tennis coverage such as the U.S. Open.[1] He hosted horse racing's Belmont Stakes and provided play-by-play for the College World Series in baseball.[1] These assignments underscored his versatility, as he anchored a broad spectrum of CBS's top-tier sporting events throughout the 1970s and 1980s, often delivering signature phrases and analysis that became hallmarks of network programming.[10]

Contract Dispute and Firing

In early 1990, CBS Sports president Neal Pilson and executive producer Arthur Shaker initiated contract negotiations with Brent Musburger, whose 5.5-year agreement, valued at approximately $2 million annually, was set to expire in July.[28][29] Discussions broke down during the spring, leading CBS to announce on April 1, 1990—coinciding with April Fools' Day and the eve of the NCAA men's basketball Final Four—that it would not renew the deal.[30][31] The network relieved Musburger of duties immediately after his broadcast of the Final Four semifinal games but honored the remaining contract term by continuing payments without further assignments.[32] Musburger publicly described the ouster as a "vendetta" orchestrated by Pilson and Shaker, claiming they viewed him as "too big for my britches" and conducted sham negotiations with no intent to retain him.[33][30] He asserted the executives conspired to replace him, a charge echoed in his later reflections on the abrupt timing, which he said undermined his long tenure at the network.[34] In contrast, CBS cited the need to promote younger on-air talent, such as Jim Nantz, and noted Musburger's prior criticism by television reviewers for overexposure across multiple events, which had prompted reductions in his assignments in preceding years.[35][33][36] Despite the announcement, Musburger called the 1990 NCAA championship game on April 2 between UNLV and Duke, providing continuity for that event before departing CBS after 17 years.[32] The decision drew widespread media attention for its timing and perceived harshness, though CBS maintained it aligned with broader programming shifts amid network cost pressures and rights losses, such as the NFL package to Fox in prior years.[36]

ABC and ESPN Period (1990–2017)

Shift to ABC and Early Assignments

Following his dismissal from CBS Sports on April 1, 1990, amid a contract dispute, Brent Musburger signed with ABC Sports on May 2, 1990, under a reported six-year contract valued at $11 million.[37][38] The move positioned him within ABC's sports division, which would later integrate with ESPN following their 1996 merger, expanding his platform for multi-network coverage.[1] Musburger's debut for ABC occurred on June 25, 1990, when he hosted the two-hour prime-time special The All-Star Sports Awards from the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City.[39] His initial on-site event assignment followed shortly thereafter, covering the Hambletonian Stakes horse race in August 1990.[40] Early responsibilities at ABC emphasized college athletics, with Musburger handling play-by-play and studio hosting for college football and basketball games, reflecting the network's emphasis on those sports during the 1990s.[1][37] Additional duties included anchoring the Super Bowl pregame show, NBA All-Star Game coverage, one of ABC's NBA Finals broadcasts, and the Little League World Series, allowing him to rebuild his profile across diverse events while leveraging his established expertise in high-profile sports programming.[37][41]

College Football Primetime and Major Events

Musburger served as the lead play-by-play announcer for ABC's Saturday Night Football, the network's weekly primetime college football series that debuted in 2006 as the first such regular broadcast television package.[42] He called games alongside analysts Kirk Herbstreit and Bob Davie through 2013, covering high-profile matchups that drew significant viewership during the prime evening slot.[19] This role solidified his status as a staple voice for marquee college football telecasts on ABC.[3] In major events, Musburger broadcast seven BCS National Championship Games between 2000 and 2014, including the 2000 Orange Bowl (Florida State vs. Virginia Tech), 2004 Sugar Bowl (LSU vs. Oklahoma), and the 2010 through 2014 title games such as Auburn's 22-19 victory over Oregon in 2010 and Florida State's 34-31 win against Auburn in 2014.[21] [1] His calls spanned both radio for early editions (2008–2009) and television for later ones, often partnering with Herbstreit.[43] Musburger also handled multiple Rose Bowl Games, including the 2007 USC-USC matchup, the 2010 Ohio State-Ohio State contest, the 2015 Stanford-Iowa game, and narrating the 2016 pregame open for Stanford-Iowa.[44] [45] These assignments highlighted his coverage of traditional bowl spectacles, emphasizing his versatility in calling postseason clashes at iconic venues like Pasadena's Rose Bowl Stadium.[1]

Basketball and Other Broadcasts

Musburger's basketball assignments at ABC and ESPN encompassed both college and professional levels. Upon joining ABC in May 1990, he focused initially on college basketball coverage alongside college football. His portfolio expanded to include NBA games broadcast on ABC and ESPN networks, reflecting the broadened scope of his play-by-play duties following the ABC-ESPN merger under Disney in 2006. He also handled ESPN Radio play-by-play for NBA Finals series, contributing to nine such broadcasts between 1996 and 2004.[1][2][4] Beyond basketball, Musburger's ABC and ESPN tenure featured diverse non-football sports broadcasts, showcasing his versatility as a host and play-by-play announcer. He called Major League Baseball games after the 2006 merger, capitalizing on ESPN's expanded MLB rights. For 12 consecutive years, from 2000 to 2011, he served as the primary broadcaster for the Little League World Series, delivering play-by-play for the annual tournament in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania.[42][46][1] Musburger anchored studio coverage for international events, including ABC's Tour de France broadcasts and the 1998 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 2006 FIFA World Cup. His assignments further included horse racing such as the Breeders' Cup, golf events like PGA Tour tournaments and the British Open, tennis majors including Wimbledon and the U.S. Open, the Indianapolis 500, and Winter Olympics coverage. These roles underscored his role in hosting pre-game, halftime, and wrap-up segments across ESPN's multifaceted sports slate.[42][2]

Post-Network Career (2018–Present)

Establishment of VSIN and Sports Betting Focus

Following his departure from ESPN in June 2017, Brent Musburger co-founded the Vegas Stats & Information Network (VSIN), a 24/7 multimedia platform dedicated to sports betting analysis, in partnership with his son Brian Musburger and other family members. The network was announced on January 30, 2017, ahead of Super Bowl LI, with an initial launch date of February 27, 2017, from studios at the South Point Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.[47][48] This venture marked Musburger's relocation to Las Vegas, positioning him as the network's managing editor and host of flagship programs such as My Guys in the Desert, a daily show providing real-time betting insights, odds movements, and statistical breakdowns across major sports leagues.[49][50] VSIN's establishment capitalized on the growing legalization of sports betting in the United States, particularly in anticipation of the 2018 Supreme Court decision overturning the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA), which had previously restricted wagering outside Nevada. The network differentiated itself by offering independent, data-driven content free from league or bookmaker affiliations, featuring expert handicappers, live odds feeds, and programming focused on line shopping, injury impacts, and probabilistic modeling rather than entertainment-driven commentary. Musburger emphasized VSIN's role in educating bettors with verifiable edges, drawing from his decades of broadcast experience to host segments like Countdown to Kickoff, which integrated traditional game previews with wagering-specific metrics such as implied probabilities and value assessments.[51][52] Under Musburger's leadership, VSIN expanded to include over 18 hours of daily original programming by 2019, covering NFL, NBA, MLB, and college sports with a emphasis on empirical handicapping over speculative picks, while maintaining editorial independence even after a 2021 acquisition by DraftKings (from which it was repurchased by Musburger Media in July 2024). This focus shifted Musburger's career from mainstream play-by-play to a niche in quantitative betting media, where he advocated for transparency in odds discrepancies and player prop evaluations, influencing the broader integration of gambling analytics into sports discourse.[53][54]

Raiders Radio Play-by-Play Role

In July 2018, Brent Musburger agreed to a three-year contract to become the radio play-by-play announcer for the Raiders, replacing Greg Papa, who had held the position for the prior two decades.[55][56] The Raiders officially announced the hire on July 23, 2018, noting Musburger's extensive experience calling NFL games during his CBS tenure from the 1970s onward.[57] He debuted in the role for the 2018 season, handling play-by-play duties for the Oakland Raiders' games broadcast on the Raiders Radio Network, including flagship station KRLV 98.1 FM in Las Vegas and affiliates across the region.[58] Musburger continued in the position through the team's relocation to Las Vegas ahead of the 2020 season, calling games for the newly rebranded Las Vegas Raiders amid their transition to Allegiant Stadium.[59] His broadcasts emphasized straightforward narration drawn from decades of professional football coverage, often incorporating historical context from his prior NFL assignments.[60] At age 80 during the 2019 season, Musburger expressed enthusiasm for the role, describing it as an unexpected return to NFL play-by-play after focusing on his Vegas Stats and Information Network (VSIN) venture.[60] Musburger's tenure concluded after the 2021 season, with the Raiders announcing his departure on June 3, 2022, as part of a broadcast team restructuring.[61][59] The split was described as mutual, allowing him to prioritize VSIN operations; he publicly thanked the organization for the opportunity.[62] During his four seasons, he covered 64 regular-season games plus playoff appearances in 2021, contributing to the Raiders' radio presence as the franchise established its Las Vegas identity.[59]

Recent Guest Appearances and Activity

In 2025, Musburger received the Pro Football Hall of Fame's Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award, recognizing his contributions to NFL broadcasting, during Enshrinement Week events including the Gold Jacket Dinner.[5] On July 31, 2025, he made a guest appearance on NBC's broadcast of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game, marking a return to national television play-by-play coverage.[63] Musburger continued his regular hosting duties at VSIN, including the Sunday program Countdown to Kickoff, where he provided sports betting analysis and NFL previews.[64] He also contributed weekly columns and betting picks for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, such as NFL Challenge selections through Week 8 of the 2025 season.[65] Throughout 2025, Musburger made multiple guest appearances on sports talk programs. On September 21, he joined CBS's The NFL Today for a full-hour throwback episode celebrating the show's 50th anniversary, appearing alongside hosts James Brown, Nate Burleson, Matt Ryan, and Bill Cowher in a recreated 1975 studio set.[23] This was followed by an extended interview on CBS Saturday Morning on September 26, where he reflected on the original NFL Today era and its legacy.[66] Earlier, on August 28, he discussed the upcoming NFL season and his career on NFL Network's Good Morning Football.[67] In August, he appeared on the Dan Patrick Show (August 4), the Rich Eisen Show (August 4), and the Tim Murray podcast (August 20), covering topics from his Hall of Fame induction to Super Bowl predictions.[68][69][70] His Raiders radio play-by-play role persisted into the 2025 season, with Musburger calling games for the Las Vegas-based franchise, alongside commentary on team developments like the hiring of Pete Carroll, which he endorsed in a February 3 appearance on the What the Football podcast.[71] These engagements highlighted Musburger's ongoing influence in sports media, particularly in NFL and betting contexts.

Broadcasting Style and Techniques

Iconic Phrases and Delivery

Musburger's broadcasting delivery was characterized by a gravelly, authoritative voice that conveyed excitement and gravitas, often elevating routine plays into memorable moments through enthusiastic narration and candid reactions.[72][73] His style emphasized storytelling, focusing on the immediacy of the action rather than excessive analysis, which made every game feel significant and helped viewers grasp the historical weight of key events.[72] ESPN President John Skipper noted that Musburger's presence and delivery symbolized big-time sports for generations of fans.[42] One of his most enduring phrases, "You are looking live at...," originated during his tenure on CBS's The NFL Today in the 1970s, where it introduced pre-game visuals of stadium conditions, initially serving as a practical cue for Las Vegas gamblers assessing weather impacts on betting lines.[74] Musburger carried this catchphrase into his ABC and ESPN college football broadcasts starting in the 1990s, using it to vividly set the scene and build anticipation, as in his calls for major bowl games like the Rose Bowl.[74] Other notable phrases emerged from high-stakes calls, such as "Holy Buckeye!" during the November 9, 2002, Ohio State vs. Purdue game, exclaimed as quarterback Craig Krenzel connected with Michael Jenkins for a crucial 37-yard gain on 4th-and-1, preserving Ohio State's undefeated season.[75] He also popularized exclamations like "Hello, record book!" for milestone achievements, such as rushing records, and "That was brand new" to highlight innovative or unexpected plays, reflecting his knack for punchy, reactive phrasing that amplified the drama without overcomplication.[76] These elements of his delivery persisted into his post-network roles, including Raiders radio play-by-play from 2018 to 2022, where his hyped tone continued to energize narratives around pivotal moments.[77]

Analytical Approach and On-Air Persona

Musburger's analytical approach in broadcasting emphasized direct, opinionated commentary integrated into play-by-play narration, marking a departure from the era's convention of neutral, fact-only descriptions. As the first network announcer to routinely interject "spicy opinions and analysis," he provided viewers with interpretive insights on plays, strategies, and athlete performances, often drawing from his extensive experience to challenge prevailing narratives or defend controversial figures.[78] This method prioritized causal explanations rooted in observable game dynamics over speculative hype, as evidenced by his reluctance to "pontificate" or adopt a professorial tone during calls, instead favoring concise breakdowns that highlighted historical precedents and tactical implications.[79] In college football broadcasts, for instance, he connected individual moments to broader team legacies and event significance, fostering deeper viewer engagement through contextual storytelling rather than rote statistics recitation.[42] His on-air persona blended authoritative gravitas with approachable familiarity, addressing audiences as "folks" to cultivate a conversational rapport while maintaining a brash, fearless delivery that conveyed unfiltered conviction.[79] Critics occasionally labeled this style pompous, likening it to Howard Cosell's self-assuredness, yet Musburger's approach avoided emotional histrionics, opting for analytical clarity that amplified game stakes without undue drama.[80] This persona, honed over decades covering events from Super Bowls to NCAA championships, positioned him as a trusted guide who elevated broadcasts by treating viewers as informed participants rather than passive observers.[81]

Controversies and Public Backlash

Athlete Defense Incidents

During the January 2, 2017, broadcast of the Sugar Bowl semifinal between Oklahoma and Auburn on ESPN, Brent Musburger highlighted the performance of Sooners running back Joe Mixon, describing him as "a great young man" who had "made a mistake" in reference to Mixon's 2014 assault on a female Oklahoma student, Amari Bryant, which fractured her jaw in four places as captured on surveillance video.[82] Musburger noted that Mixon had "owned up to it, apologized, [and] served his suspension," framing the incident as a redeemable error amid praise for his on-field talent and the player's return after a one-year team suspension following a misdemeanor plea to disorderly conduct.[83] Responding to real-time criticism on Twitter during the second quarter, Musburger defended his remarks on air, stating, "By the way, for those of you on Twitter who blasted me... read the reports," and emphasizing Mixon's accountability and character, which escalated the exchange into an impassioned rebuttal against detractors.[84] This on-air pushback drew immediate backlash from viewers and media outlets, who accused Musburger of minimizing the severity of the assault—a premeditated punch shown in video evidence—and prioritizing athletic redemption over the victim's trauma, with critics arguing it exemplified a pattern of leniency toward athletes in domestic violence cases.[6][7] The comments amplified scrutiny of Musburger's broadcasting style, particularly his tendency to foreground players' potential and second chances, as seen in his alignment with Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops' decision to reinstate Mixon despite public outcry over the university's handling of the case.[85] While supporters viewed the defense as consistent with Musburger's old-school emphasis on personal growth post-punishment—Mixon had completed community service, counseling, and probation without further incidents—opponents, including columnists from major publications, labeled it tone-deaf and contributory to a culture excusing violence against women in sports.[86] The episode occurred amid Musburger's final months at ESPN, contributing to perceptions of his tenure ending on a divisive note, though ESPN did not formally discipline him for the remarks.[21]

Comments on Women and Objectification Claims

During the broadcast of the 2013 BCS National Championship Game on January 7 between the University of Alabama and the University of Notre Dame, Musburger made extended remarks about Katherine Webb, the girlfriend of Alabama quarterback A.J. McCarron, focusing on her physical attractiveness.[87] He stated, "You quarterbacks, you get all the good-looking women," and later added, "Fifteen and a half years old when she was Miss Alabama... twenty-three years old. Unbelievable," while the camera lingered on Webb in the stands.[88] Color commentator Kirk Herbstreit chimed in, agreeing, "She is a looker."[87] The comments drew immediate backlash on social media and from media outlets, with critics labeling them as objectifying, creepy, and emblematic of outdated attitudes toward women in sports broadcasting.[88] Accusations centered on the remarks diverting attention from the game to Webb's appearance, reducing her to an object of admiration rather than acknowledging her as Miss Alabama USA 2012 in her own right.[89] ESPN issued an apology the following day, stating, "The comments were inappropriate and we regret they were made," while defending Musburger's overall professionalism but acknowledging the focus had gone too far.[88][90] Musburger has since dismissed the controversy as overblown, maintaining in a 2020 interview that the reaction was "silly" and that his comments were harmless compliments, not objectification.[91] Some commentators echoed this view at the time, arguing the remarks were mild in the context of sports media's casual banter and that public outrage reflected hypersensitivity rather than substantive misconduct.[92][93] No formal disciplinary action was taken against Musburger, who continued broadcasting for ESPN until his 2017 retirement.[94] The incident highlighted tensions between traditional broadcaster styles and evolving expectations for gender commentary in sports, though Webb herself later expressed no offense and credited the exposure for boosting her modeling career.[91]

Professional and Ethical Disputes

On April 1, 1990, CBS Sports declined to renew Brent Musburger's contract, which expired in July after 15 years with the network, a decision announced on the eve of the NCAA men's basketball championship game he was scheduled to call. Industry sources attributed the outcome to stalled negotiations influenced by salary considerations—Musburger earned approximately $2 million annually—his opposition to a proposed lighter workload, and CBS's interest in elevating younger announcers like Jim Nantz.[36][32] Musburger characterized the non-renewal as a personal "vendetta" by CBS Sports president Neal Pilson and executive producer Ted Shaker, whom he accused of conspiring against him for being "uncontrollable" and defaming him through leaked criticisms portraying him as arrogant. He labeled the negotiation process a "sham" involving unethical deception by CBS, denying demands for a raise to $3 million and asserting money was never substantively discussed; additionally, he claimed Shaker had directed him not to mention Loyola Marymount player Hank Gathers' on-court death during a March 23 broadcast, implying undue editorial interference. CBS officials rejected claims of animosity, framing the change as a strategic refresh, though Musburger maintained it reflected a preference for compliant talent over independent broadcasters.[33] In his early career as a sportswriter for the Chicago American, Musburger faced enduring criticism for a October 1968 column decrying U.S. sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos's Black Power salute during the Mexico City Olympics medal ceremony, which protested racial injustice and poverty; he described the athletes as "a pair of black-skinned stormtroopers" committing a "bizarre" and "ignoble" act that tarnished their medals without addressing their grievances. The phrasing, evoking Nazi imagery, has been cited as racially inflammatory and dismissive of civil rights symbolism, contributing to backlash against the protesters who faced expulsion from the U.S. Olympic team and subsequent hardships including death threats. Demands for a public apology from Musburger, voiced by figures like John Carlos as recently as 2019, have gone unheeded, with no recorded retraction or acknowledgment from him.[95][18] During ABC's September 16, 2006, broadcast of USC's 28-10 win over Nebraska, Musburger detailed USC quarterback John David Booty's hand signals to receivers, explaining adjustments made after earlier interceptions; USC athletic director Mike Garrett filed a formal complaint with ABC, deeming the revelation of "privileged information" unconscionable and potentially advantageous to opponents in a 28-year career first for such a breach. Some journalists defended the commentary as routine analysis of observable tactics, arguing USC overreacted since signals are not proprietary secrets and Musburger's observation aided viewer understanding without insider sourcing. ABC reviewed the matter but issued no reprimand, and the incident did not result in professional consequences for Musburger.[96][97]

Personal Life and Interests

Family and Relationships

Brent Musburger married Arlene Clare Sander on June 8, 1963, and the couple has maintained the marriage for over 60 years as of 2025.[8][98] They have two sons, Blake Musburger and Scott Musburger.[99][100] The family divides time between residences in Las Vegas, Nevada, and Hamilton, Montana, where the sons are based.[11] Musburger's parents were Cec Musburger, a lawyer, and Beryl Musburger; he has a brother, Todd Musburger, who pursued a career in public relations.[100] No public records indicate additional marriages, divorces, or significant relational controversies for Musburger.[101] The stability of his family life contrasts with the high-profile nature of his broadcasting career, with Arlene occasionally accompanying him at events and sharing interests such as golf and ranching on their Montana property.[101]

Gambling Advocacy and Business Ventures

Musburger has long incorporated gambling-related commentary into his broadcasting career, frequently referencing point spreads and over/under totals during games as early as the mid-1980s.[102] These allusions occasionally drew rebukes from networks; for instance, during an ESPN broadcast of a Notre Dame-Ohio State game, he faced internal scrutiny for on-air betting references.[103] In 2017, he publicly urged the NFL to abandon its opposition to legalized sports betting, arguing it should prioritize issues like player protests over gambling resistance.[104] Following his departure from ESPN in January 2017, Musburger co-founded the Vegas Stats & Information Network (VSiN), the first multi-platform network dedicated to sports betting analysis, launching that year from a Las Vegas studio.[50] As managing editor and lead host, he anchored daily programming providing odds, handicapping, and betting strategies, capitalizing on Nevada's established gambling market.[105] VSiN expanded amid the U.S. Supreme Court's 2018 ruling striking down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA), which enabled statewide sports wagering; Musburger expressed no surprise at the decision, viewing it as an inevitable evolution.[106] In 2021, DraftKings acquired VSiN to bolster its content offerings in the burgeoning legal betting sector.[53] Musburger continued hosting shows, including interviews with figures like professional bettor Billy Walters, while critiquing the NFL's rapid pivot from opposing betting to partnering with sportsbooks as "stunning."[107] By July 2024, his production company, Musburger Media, repurchased VSiN from DraftKings for an undisclosed sum, regaining control and reaffirming his commitment to independent betting media.[108] In early 2025, VSiN renewed distribution on SiriusXM, broadening access to its programming.[109]

Legacy and Recognition

Awards and Hall of Fame Inductions

Musburger was inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame in 2011, recognizing his extensive career in sports journalism and broadcasting.[3] In 2017, he received induction into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame, honoring his role as a pioneering play-by-play announcer and host across major events including NFL games, NBA Finals, and college football championships.[42] He was named an honorary inductee into the Northwestern University Athletics Hall of Fame on March 18, 2015, acknowledging his contributions as an alumnus and broadcaster.[110] In 2021, Musburger joined the Montana Football Hall of Fame class, reflecting his roots in Billings, Montana, and early involvement in local sports coverage.[111] On April 10, 2025, the Pro Football Hall of Fame announced Musburger as the recipient of the Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award, presented annually for excellence in NFL broadcasting; he was honored during the Enshrinement Week ceremonies in Canton, Ohio, for his decades calling NFL games, hosting The NFL Today, and delivering iconic play-by-play across 17 Super Bowls and numerous playoffs.[5]

Influence on Sports Media and Cultural Impact

Musburger's tenure as host of CBS's The NFL Today from 1975 revolutionized pregame programming by establishing a dynamic, personality-infused format that emphasized live energy and expert analysis, introducing his signature opening "You are looking live!" which became emblematic of engaging sports studio presentation.[112] This approach set the template for modern Sunday NFL pregame shows across networks, prioritizing viewer retention through charismatic hosting over staid reporting.[112] During CBS's coverage of the NCAA men's basketball tournament starting in 1982, Musburger popularized the term "March Madness"—originally coined for Illinois high school tournaments—applying it nationally to the college event, which amplified its branding and contributed to the tournament's emergence as a cultural phenomenon drawing millions in viewership.[113][114] His authoritative play-by-play and studio style further influenced sports media by blending journalistic rigor with accessible excitement, mentoring subsequent broadcasters in maintaining credibility amid expanding commentary landscapes.[52] In 2017, Musburger co-founded the Vegas Stats & Information Network (VSiN), the first dedicated sports betting media outlet, relocating to Las Vegas and leaving ESPN to deliver odds analysis and insider insights years before the 2018 Supreme Court ruling overturning PASPA fully legalized nationwide sports wagering.[52][115] This venture normalized betting discussions in sports media, providing a platform for professional handicapping that bridged traditional broadcasting with the burgeoning gambling industry, fostering a cultural shift where wagering became an integrated aspect of fan engagement rather than a sidelined activity.[116] By 2024, under his Musburger Media, VSiN repurchased independence from DraftKings, sustaining its role in shaping informed betting content amid explosive industry growth.[117]

References

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