Jim Nantz Remembers His Top 25 Memories During His 25 Years at CBS

It’s hard to believe that Jim Nantz has been at CBS for 25 years, but he has. He’s called just about every major sport at CBS except for baseball which he acknowledges he can’t do well. But other than MLB, if CBS had the rights for the sport, Jim has just about called or hosted at least one broadcast or game. He started with CBS in 1985 as host of its college football coverage, then he latched on to the PGA Tour and also did the NFL. In addition, he did some NBA games in the 1980’s, but Jim really took off in the 1990’s when he became the #1 play-by-play man for college basketball and the PGA Tour, plus he had hosting duties for the Winter Olympics in 1992, 1994 and 1998.

Now, he’s Mr. Everything for CBS, on the #1 team for the NFL, NCAA Tournament and the PGA Tour. As he’s about to call his second Super Bowl for CBS and one of just two men to host and call a Super Bowl (Greg Gumbel is the other), we have this press release offering Jim’s top moments at CBS. Get ready to scroll for a while. It’s not Top 5 or Top 10, it’s Top 25.

JIM NANTZ REMEMBERS 25 TOP MOMENTS IN 25 YEARS WITH CBS SPORTS

CBS Sports culminates its coverage of the 2009-10 NFL season with SUPER BOWL XLIV on Sunday, Feb. 7 (6:28 PM, ET kick-off) from Sun Life Stadium in Miami, Fla., live on the CBS Television Network.  Super Bowl XLIV will be the Network’s 17th Super Bowl broadcast overall.

CBS Sports’ Jim Nantz, 2008 Emmy Award winner for “Outstanding Sports Personality – Play-by-Play” and five time National Sportscaster of the Year (2009, 2008, 2007, 2005, 1998), calls the action, marking the second time in his illustrious 25-year CBS Sports broadcasting career that Nantz calls play-by-play for the Super Bowl.  He called his first Super Bowl in 2007 and hosted the Network’s Super Bowl pre-game show, THE SUPER BOWL TODAY, in 2001 and 2004. 

Following is a list of Nantz’s Top 25 memories of his career at CBS Sports:

1. April 12, 1992:  Fred Couples, Jim Nantz’ former college roommate at the University of Houston wins the Masters, and Nantz interviews him for the green jacket ceremony — just as they had rehearsed in their dorm room back in 1979. “It’s a perfect fit!… Fred Couples… Masters champion,” Nantz said that day in Butler Cabin. Reflecting back, Nantz says: “I cannot imagine ever witnessing a moment that will touch me more deeply than this perfect fulfillment of a glorious dream that was shared by intimate friends for so many years.”

2.  April 13, 1986:  46-year-old Jack Nicklaus wins his historic sixth green jacket with a final round 65 (including a back nine 30) to become the oldest man to win the Masters — and increase his record of major victories to 18. Nicklaus’ birdie on 16 elicited Nantz’s famous summation: “The Bear has come out of hibernation!”  About calling his first Masters at age 26, Nantz comments: “As much as I’d like to think that I had always been preparing myself for that moment, I must confess that I was so nervous my teeth were chattering involuntarily. I was worried that the noise emanating from my clicking molars would be picked up by my open microphone.”

3. January 21, 2007: Peyton Manning and the Colts register the greatest comeback in NFL championship game history by overcoming a 21-3 halftime deficit in the final minute against their playoff nemesis, the New England Patriots. The 38-34 victory put Indianapolis into Super Bowl XLI against Chicago.

4. April 1, 1991: Mike Krzyzewski wins his first NCAA championship as Duke, having defeated unbeaten UNLV in the national semifinals, overcomes Kansas in the title game highlighted by a memorable Grant Hill dunk shot.

5. 1992, 1994, 1998 Winter Olympic Games: Hosting on weekends (Albertville, France; Lillehammer, Norway) and prime-time (Nagano, Japan) with a myriad of storylines from the Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan showdown to Dan Jansen‘s redemption to Alberto Tomba’s triumphs and the glorious pageantry of the opening and closing ceremonies.

6. April 13, 1997: Tiger Woods, 21 years and 104 days old, wins the Masters, his first major championship, by 12 strokes over Tom Kite. Woods’ four-day total of -18 (270) was a record low score at Augusta.  He’s the first man of African or Asian descent — and the youngest — to win the Masters. Nantz’s summation call at 18: “A win for the ages!”

7. February 4, 2007: The Colts defeat the Bears in Super Bowl XVI.  Chicago’s Devin Hester becomes the first player in Super Bowl history to return the opening kickoff for a touchdown. Nantz recalls: “Two things raced through my mind as Hester wove his way down the field. One of my broadcasting heroes, Jack Whitaker, had counseled me earlier in the week: ‘Just be prepared for the opening kickoff, Jimmy.’ Then, I flashed back to the first NFL play I ever witnessed – my dad and I were standing in a smoky aisle in old Tulane Stadium in 1967, when John Gilliam ran back the opening kickoff of the first game in New Orleans Saints’ franchise history.  So there was a sense of ‘perfect symmetry’ to my first Super Bowl play-by-play call.”

8. April 11, 2004: Phil Mickelson claims his first-ever major championship and Masters green jacket by firing a final-round 69 to get the best of a compelling back-nine shootout with Ernie Els.  As Mickelson birdied the final hole for his breakthrough victory, Nantz captured the end of Lefty’s frustration with the call: “Is it his time? Yes, at long last!”

9. February 1, 2004:  Jim Nantz hosted THE SUPER BOWL TODAY, leading up to Super Bowl XXXVIII in his adopted hometown of Houston. He also created and hosted the first-ever Super Bowl Opening Ceremony: “A Houston Salute” on the Monday night before.  Nantz remembers: “Immediately after we signed off I raced to visit my dad, an Alzheimer’s disease patient, who was in a nursing home 10 minutes from the stadium. His room was completely dark except for the flickering image of the TV from which my voice had been emanating all day – but I will never know if he was able to recognize that it was his son.”

10.  April 7, 2008: Kansas comes back from nine points down with 2:12 left in regulation to tie the game when Mario Chalmers hit a rainbow three with 2.1 seconds remaining. The Jayhawks went on to beat Memphis in overtime to win the NCAA Basketball Championship. It was Nantz’s last game with long-time partner, Billy Packer (at whose insistence that was not publicly revealed at the time in order not to “overshadow the players or the game”).

11. December 19, 1992: Marshall University soccer player Willy Merrick is pressed into emergency placekicking duty when his brother, David, the Thundering Herd’s regular kicker is suspended on the eve of the national championship game for violating team rules. In his first college football game, Merrick kicks a dramatic 22-yard FG to beat Youngstown State for the Division I-AA title – 22 years after a plane crash killed the 1970 Marshall football team.

12.  August 16, 2009: Y.E. Yang of South Korea outduels Tiger Woods in the final round of the PGA Championship at Hazeltine to become the first Asian-born golfer to win a men’s major title. It was also the first time that Woods failed to win a major that he had led after 54 holes.

13. April 5, 1993: Dean Smith wins his final NCAA championship as Michigan’s Chris Webber called a timeout in the closing seconds – after the Wolverines had exhausted all of their available timeouts. This gaffe resulted in a technical foul.

14. April 14, 1996:  Nick Faldo wins his third Masters as Greg Norman inexplicably squanders a six-shot lead in the final round.

15. August 19, 1991: 25-year-old PGA Tour rookie John Daly, the ninth alternate, not only made it into the PGA Championship at the l
ast minute, he stunned the golf world with mammoth drives that tamed the long and difficult Crooked Stick (Indiana) course leading to an improbable major victory.

16. September 6, 1998: Following an absence of 1,687 days, Jim Nantz, hosting THE NFL TODAY, welcomes the NFL back to CBS with a tribute to the many legends who had been a part of THE NFL ON CBS’s coverage dating back to 1956.

17. June 2, 2002: Ken Venturi exits the stage at the Kemper Open after 35 years with CBS. A tearful day of goodbyes to the longest-running lead analyst in network history ends with a tribute set to “My Way,” sung by Venturi’s close friend, Frank Sinatra. Nantz told his broadcast partner of 17 years: “You won’t be in that chair any longer, but as long as I’m here, you’ll be my side.”

18. October 27, 1990: Notre Dame defeats Miami, 29-20, to conclude the most heated rivalry of the decade. Raghib (Rocket) Ismail had a 94-yard kickoff return for a Fighting Irish touchdown.

19. April 9, 1995: An emotional Ben Crenshaw, nearing the end of his competitive days, wins his second Masters just days after his long-time teacher and mentor Harvey Penick is laid to rest.

20. December 9, 1989:  Navy defeats Army on Frank Schenk‘s FG with 11 seconds remaining. “It was a classic college football game,” Nantz says. “But more than that was the remarkable ‘purity of sport’ among these athletes who weren’t going on to the NFL; they were going into harm’s way to defend their country.” After the game-winning kick, a Midshipman’s hat, tossed in jubilation, flew into the CBS broadcast booth at the Meadowlands. “Midshipman Mackowitz, if you’re out there, I now have your hat,” Nantz said on the air.

21. August 17, 1997: Davis Love III captures the 1997 PGA Championship at Winged Foot. As he lined up his final putt, a spectacular rainbow appeared. Director Steve Milton had cameraman Davey Finch shoot it so that the cup became the “pot of gold” at the end of the rainbow. 

22. March 31, 1997: Lute Olson‘s Arizona Wildcats win a “Cat fight” in overtime against Rick Pitino‘s heavily favored Kentucky Wildcats. Arizona became the only team to defeat three number-one seeds en route to a national title.

23. April 8, 2007: JIM NANTZ REMEMBERS AUGUST: THE 1960 MASTERS — For the first time, a  sporting event that originally aired live in black-and-white was rebroadcast in color, as a result of more than 10,000 man-hours of labor and new digital technology. “Just as I hoped that the current generation of golfers and fans would finally see what Arnold Palmer and Kenny [Venturi, who lost to Palmer by a stroke] were all about in their prime,” Nantz notes, “I also hoped hearing Jim McKay once more in all his glory might touch others, just as his words and delivery had once touched me.”

24. August 5, 2001: Tom Pernice, Jr. wins The International. After the winning putt, his blind six-year-old daughter Brooke ran her fingers over her father’s face to determine how big his smile was.

25. Jim Nantz’s CBS debut on September 14, 1985: Brent Musburger, live at Michigan Stadium (for Notre Dame @ Michigan), introduces the 26-year-old Nantz (in the New York studio with Pat Haden for THE PRUDENTIAL COLLEGE FOOTBALL REPORT) to the CBS Television Network audience. Nantz recalls: “My pulse was racing in high gear; I had never en
countered such a flash of tongue-tying anxiety before — not even during Mr. Applegate’s public-speaking class back in high school.”

That’s it.

About Ken Fang

Ken has been covering the sports media in earnest at his own site, Fang's Bites since May 2007 and at Awful Announcing since March 2013. He provides a unique perspective having been an award-winning radio news reporter in Providence and having worked in local television. Fang celebrates the three Boston Red Sox World Championships in the 21st Century, but continues to be a long-suffering Cleveland Browns fan.

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