Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Pat Summerall" ¶ 17
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Summerall and teamed
In 1981, Summerall was teamed with former Oakland Raiders coach John Madden, a pairing that would last for 22 seasons on two networks and become one of the most well-known partnerships in TV sportscasting history.
Summerall and Madden were first teamed on a 1979 broadcast of a Minnesota Vikings – Tampa Bay Buccaneers game.
During many of these years he teamed with Pat Summerall and was the lead expert commentator at the US Open.

Summerall and with
Entering the fourth quarter, the Browns held a 10-3 advantage, but the Giants tied it then won it with two minutes left on a 49-yard field goal by Pat Summerall under snowy conditions.
The game was televised in the United States by CBS, with Ray Scott handling the play-by-play duties and color commentators Pat Summerall and Jack Kemp in the broadcast booth.
Super Bowl IV was broadcast in the United States by CBS with play-by-play announcer Jack Buck and color commentators Pat Summerall and Frank Gifford.
The game was broadcast in the United States by CBS with play-by-play announcer Ray Scott and color commentator Pat Summerall.
The game was televised in the United States by CBS with play-by-play announcer Ray Scott and color commentators Pat Summerall and Bart Starr.
CBS televised the game in the United States with play-by-play announcer Pat Summerall ( calling his first Super Bowl in that role ) and color commentator Tom Brookshier.
The game, the first Super Bowl to be played in prime time, was broadcast in the United States by CBS with play-by-play announcer Pat Summerall and color commentator Tom Brookshier.
CBS televised the game in the United States with play-by-play announcer Pat Summerall and color commentator Tom Brookshier.
This was the first of three Super Bowls to be called by Summerall and Madden while with Fox ( Super Bowls XXXIII and XXXVI being the others ).
The game was broadcast in the United States by Fox television, with the broadcast team of play-by-play announcer Pat Summerall and color commentator John Madden.
Late in the 1990 NFL season, Buck's onetime CBS broadcasting partner, Pat Summerall, was hospitalized with a bleeding ulcer after vomiting on a plane during a flight after a game, and was out for a considerable amount of time.
While Verne Lundquist replaced Summerall on games with lead analyst John Madden, Buck ( who was at the time the network's lead Major League Baseball announcer ) filled in for Lundquist, teaming with Dan Fouts to call two games ( both of which coincidentally featured the Cardinals, who had moved from St. Louis to Arizona by that time ).
The game was broadcast in the United States by ABC with Al Michaels handling the play-by-play duties and color commentator John Madden, who became the first person to announce Super Bowls on different networks in consecutive years, having called Super Bowl XXXVI on Fox and then moving to ABC after Pat Summerall retired.
Fechet intervened with Army Chief of Staff Gen. Charles P. Summerall to have Arnold's exile ended by assigning him in August 1928 to the Army's Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth.
John Madden, who along with Pat Summerall played himself throughout the movie and was " calling " the Sentinels's touchdown in detail, was the head coach of the Raiders at the time of the Holy Roller play.
* Pat Summerall – played ten years in the NFL, primarily as a kicker ; best known as a broadcaster, gaining prominence with his partner John Madden.
Summerall is best known for his work with John Madden on NFL telecasts for CBS and Fox.
Summerall played the pre-season with the Lions before breaking his arm, which ended the year for him.
Summerall, a straight-ahead kicker, made the field goal with just two minutes to play, keeping the Giants alive for another week ( they defeated Cleveland a week later, 10-0, in the Eastern Conference tiebreaker playoff before losing the sudden-death playoff to Baltimore the week after that ).
CBS initially paired Summerall with Chris Schenkel on Giants games ; three years later he shifted to working with Jim Gibbons on Washington Redskins games.
In 1968, after CBS abandoned the practice of assigning dedicated announcing crews to particular NFL teams, Summerall ascended to the network's lead national crew, pairing with Jack Buck and then Ray Scott.
The network's # 1 NFL crew now consisted of Summerall and analyst Tom Brookshier ( with whom he had previously worked on This Week in Pro Football ), and the colorful Summerall-Brookshier duo worked three Super Bowls ( X, XII, and XIV ) together.

Summerall and Brian
However, since Madden had left to take over the color commentator position on Monday Night Football for ABC and Fox had promoted Joe Buck to be its number one football play-by-play voice, Summerall was paired with Brian Baldinger on regional telecasts.

Summerall and Baldinger
Summerall and Baldinger were joined by Daryl Johnston, who at the time was working as Fox's # 2 color man with Dick Stockton and who was a longtime teammate of Smith's with the Cowboys, for this game.
Summerall retired again following the 2002 season but in 2006, he served as a substitute for Kenny Albert alongside Baldinger for the Week 8 ( October 29 ) game between the eventual NFC champion Chicago Bears and the San Francisco 49ers.
Summerall returned for one game the following year to take Stockton's place alongside Baldinger and provide the play-by-play for the December 9, 2007 game between the Cincinnati Bengals and St. Louis Rams in Cincinnati.

Summerall and on
On January 7, 1931, Summerall ’ s successor, General Douglas MacArthur, confidentially reopened work on a new design, involving the Washington Commission of Fine Arts.
* John Madden and Pat Summerall portray themselves, offering commentary on all the games.
Initially, this was Pat Summerall ( Madden's partner during his days at CBS and Fox during the early 1980s on through the early 2000s ) until Summerall retired ; the role was then filled by Al Michaels, John's broadcast partner on ABC Monday Night Football ( 2002 – 2005 ) and NBC Sunday Night Football ( 2006 – 2008 ).
* The number of Citadel cadets on the Summerall Guards
Stationed here are: The First and Fourth battalions of the 3rd U. S. Infantry Regiment, ( The Old Guard ) — and since August 2011, ' A ' Company ( Commander in Chief's Guard ), which was stationed at Fort McNair, D. C ; The U. S. Army Band “ Pershing's Own ”; The grave site of Black Jack, the riderless horse in the state funerals of General of the Army Douglas MacArthur and U. S. Presidents John F. Kennedy, Herbert Hoover and Lyndon B. Johnson, is located on Summerall Field, northeast of the parade ground's flagpole.
His best professional year statistically was 1959, when Summerall scored 90 points on 30-for-30 ( 100 %) extra-point kicking and 20-for-29 ( 69 %) field goal kicking.
After retiring from football, Summerall was hired by CBS Sports in 1962 to work as a color commentator on the network's NFL coverage.
Summerall, Brookshier, NFL on CBS producer Bob Wussler, and Miami Dolphins owner Joe Robbie appeared as themselves during the 1977 film Black Sunday, which was filmed on location at the Orange Bowl in Miami during Super Bowl X.
It is often mistakenly assumed that Summerall and Madden handled the call on CBS-TV for the 1981 NFC Championship Game, when San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Dwight Clark made " The Catch " to lift the 49ers to a 28 – 27 victory over the Dallas Cowboys and a berth in Super Bowl XVI.
Since Stram was Jack Buck's color commentator on CBS Radio, Summerall substituted for Stram as Buck's partner ; this was the first time Buck and Summerall had called a game together since 1974, when then-lead color commentator Summerall was moved off of Buck's team to become CBS television's lead play-by-play voice for the NFL.

Summerall and Cotton
From 2007 until 2010, Summerall appeared as the play-by-play voice of the network's coverage of the Cotton Bowl Classic game between Auburn and Nebraska.
In 2011, Summerall appeared on the pre-game coverage of the Cotton Bowl.

0.369 seconds.