NBC Kicks Off Super Bowl Week With the 2012 Pro Bowl From Hawaii

NBC starts Super Bowl Week with the airing of the 2012 Pro Bowl live from Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, HI. Calling the game live will be Dan Hicks and Mike Mayock. Doug Flutie (!), coming over from NBC Sports Network, joins Hicks and Mayock in the booth. Roaming the sidelines will be Alex Flanagan and Randy Moss (the white bald guy, not the former NFL wide receiver).

Bob Costas, Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison will be seen live during halftime doing the studio segment live from the NBC Sports Super Bowl set in Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

Five quarterbacks will be wired for live sound and so will linebacker Ray Lewis. Plenty of stuff to attract viewers on Sunday.

We have the press release from NBC Sports.

NBC SPORTS’ SUPER BOWL WEEK KICKS OFF WITH LIVE PRIMETIME COVERAGE OF 2012 NFL PRO BOWL, SUNDAY 7 P.M. ET

Bob Costas, Tony Dungy & Rodney Harrison Host Pre-Game, Halftime and Post-Game Coverage from Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Site of Super Bowl XLVI
Aaron Rodgers, Drew Brees, Cam Newton, Ben Roethlisberger, Philip Rivers and Ray Lewis Will Wear Microphones Throughout the Game
Access to Coach/QB Radio Transmissions Highlight NBC’s Production

NEW YORK – January XX, 2012 – Super Bowl XLVI Week on NBC begins this Sunday at 7 p.m. ET with the NFL’s top stars competing in the 2012 NFL Pro Bowl. The NFL’s All-Star Game will take place once again at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii and is the signature event to start the week leading up to Super Bowl XLVI, to be played between the New England Patriots and New York Giants in Indianapolis on Sunday, Feb. 5, on NBC.

Dan Hicks (play-by-play), Mike Mayock and Doug Flutie (analysts), Alex Flanagan and Randy Moss (sideline reporters) call the action from Aloha Stadium.

Football Night in America’s Bob Costas, Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison will host the pre-game, halftime and post-game coverage from inside Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, the site of Super Bowl XLVI.

The 43-man teams are comprised of 21 offensive and 17 defensive players plus five specialists, including a long snapper. The AFC All-Star team will be led by Gary Kubiak and the coaches from the Houston Texans while Mike McCarthy and the Green Bay Packers’ coaching staff will guide the NFC Pro Bowl squad.

Green Bay Packers QB Aaron Rodgers and New Orleans Saints QB Drew Brees lead the NFC against the NFL’s leading rusher Maurice Jones-Drew of the Jacksonville Jaguars and Pittsburgh Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger.

PRO BOWL PRODUCTION ELEMENTS: Five quarterbacks in the game – Rodgers, Brees, Roethlisberger, Cam Newton and Philip Rivers, along with Ray Lewis – will wear microphones during the game. In addition, NBC will have access to coach-quarterback radio transmission and will deploy its ‘stedi-cam’ operator into the teams’ huddles.

NBC Sports’ Notre Dame Football producer Rob Hyland, who worked as the Sunday Night Football replay producer for three years under SNF producer Fred Gaudelli, will produce the game. Artie Kempner, who directs NFL games for NFL Network and Fox, and who directed Super Bowl XLII, will direct.

NBC AND THE PRO BOWL: Sunday’s broadcast marks fourth time ever and the second time in three years that NBC has broadcast the Pro Bowl. The last NBC broadcast of the Pro Bowl was the week after Super Bowl XLIII in February 2009. Prior to that NBC’s last Pro Bowl broadcast was on Jan. 20, 1974 from Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City when the AFC, coached by then Raiders coach and former NBC analyst John Madden, defeated the NFC 15-13 on five Garo Yepremian field goals. Curt Gowdy and Al DeRogatis called the game for NBC. The only other time the Pro Bowl was on NBC was two years earlier, on Jan. 23, 1972, when the AFC defeated the NFC 26-13. That game took place at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

PRO BOWL STARTERS:

AFC OFFENSE
QB — Ben Roethlisberger, Steelers
RB — Maurice Jones-Drew, Jaguars
FB — Vonta Leach, Ravens
WR — A.J. Green, Bengals
WR — Mike Wallace, Steelers
TE — Antonio Gates, Chargers
T — Joe Thomas, Browns
T — D’Brickashaw Ferguson, Jets
G — Ben Grubbs, Ravens
G — Marshal Yanda, Ravens
C — Nick Mangold, Jets

AFC DEFENSE
DE — Elvis Dumerville, Broncos
DE — Dwight Freeney, Colts
DT — Haloti Ngata, Ravens
DT — Richard Seymour, Raiders
OLB — Tamba Hali, Chiefs
OLB — Von Miller, Broncos
ILB — Ray Lewis, Ravens
CB — Darrell Revis, Jets
CB — Champ Bailey, Broncos
FS — Ed Reed, Ravens
SS — Eric Weddle, Chargers

AFC SPECIAL TEAMS
P — Shane Lechler, Raiders
K — Sebastian Janikowski, Raiders
KR — Antonio Brown, Steelers
ST — Montell Owens, Jaguars

NFC OFFENSE
QB — Aaron Rodgers, Packers
RB — LeSean McCoy, Eagles
FB — Michael Robinson, Seahawks
WR — Larry Fitzgerald, Cardinals
WR — Steve Smith, Panthers
TE — Jimmy Graham, Saints
T — Jason Peters, Eagles
T — Joe Staley, 49ers
G — Jhari Evans, Saints
G — Carl Nicks, Saints
C — Ryan Kalil, Panthers

NFC DEFENSE
DE — Jared Allen, Vikings
DE — Jason Babin, Eagles
DT — Justin Smith, 49ers
DT — Jay Ratliff, Cowboys
OLB — DeMarcus Ware, Cowboys
OLB — Clay Matthews, Packers
ILB — Patrick Willis, 49ers
CB — Charles Woodson, Packers
TBA
FS — Earl Thomas, Seahawks
SS — Adrian Wilson, Cardinals

NFC SPECIAL TEAMS
P — Andy Lee, 49ers
K — David Akers, 49ers
KR — Patrick Peterson, Cardinals
ST — Corey Graham, Bears

That will do 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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