Everything about Bob Costas totally explained
Robert Quinlan "Bob" Costas (born
March 22,
1952) is an
American sportscaster, on the air for the
NBC network since the early 1980s.
Life and honors
Bob Costas was born in
Queens, New York, the son of Jayne (
née Quinlan) and John George Costas, who was an electrical engineer. He grew up in
Commack, New York, graduating from
Commack South High School. Following high school, he attended the
S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at
Syracuse University, though he left school before graduating to begin his professional career.
His sportscasting career started while attending Syracuse University, as an announcer for the
Syracuse Blazers minor hockey team. His career as a professional began as play-by-play announcer for the
Spirits of St. Louis of the
American Basketball Association, followed by a stint with
KMOX radio in
St. Louis. Costas later did play-by-play for
Chicago Bulls broadcasts on
WGN-TV during the
1979-1980 season. He was briefly employed by the
CBS network prior to joining NBC Sports in
1980.
ABA
Costas is a prominent contributor to the ABA book . He is extensively quoted on many topics, and the book includes his reflections of ABA life during his tenure as radio voice of the Spirits of St. Louis.
Baseball
Costas is a devoted baseball fan (he's been suggested as a potential
commissioner) and wrote the best-selling in
2000. For his 40th birthday,
Oakland Athletics manager
Tony La Russa allowed Costas to manage the club during a spring training game. The first time Costas visited baseball legend
Stan Musial's St. Louis eatery, he left a
$3.31 tip in homage to Musial's lifetime batting average (.331). Costas delivered the
eulogy at
Mickey Mantle's
funeral. In eulogizing Mantle, Costas described the baseball legend as
"a fragile hero to whom we'd an emotional attachment so strong and lasting that it defied logic." Costas has even carried a
1958 Mickey Mantle
baseball card in his wallet.
Costas has been fairly outspoken about his disdain for Major League Baseball instituting a
wild card. Costas believes that it diminishes the significance of winning a divisional championship. He prefers a system in which winning the wild card puts a team at some sort of disadvantage, as opposed to on an equal level with teams by which they were outplayed over a 162 game season. Or, as explained in his book
Fair Ball, have only the three division winners in each league go to the postseason, with the team with the best record receiving a bye into the League Championship Series. Once, on the air on
HBO's
Inside the NFL, he mentioned that the NFL regular season counted for something, but baseball's was beginning to lose significance.
In
1999, Costas teamed with his then-
NBC colleague,
Joe Morgan to call two weekday night telecasts for
ESPN. The first was on
Wednesday,
August 25 with
Detroit Tigers playing against the
Seattle Mariners. The second was on Tuesday,
September 21 with the
Atlanta Braves playing against the
New York Mets.
In
2002, Bob was the play-by-play announcer, alongside
ESPN's
Harold Reynolds, for
Triple Play 2002 during the ballgame for
PlayStation 2 and
Xbox.
Family
Costas was married from
1983 to
2001 to Carole Randall Krumenacher, who goes by "Randy." They had two children, son Keith, born in
1986, and daughter Taylor, born in
1989. Costas once jokingly promised
Minnesota Twins center fielder
Kirby Puckett that if he was batting over .350 by the time his child was born he'd name the baby Kirby. True to his word, since Kirby was hitting better than .350, Bob's son was given the name
Keith Michael Kirby Costas, whose first name comes from Randy's brother. On
March 12,
2004, Costas married Jill Sutton.
Awards and honors
Bob Costas has won multiple National Sportcaster of the Year awards (from the National Sportcaster and Sportswriter Association) and nearly 20
Emmy Awards for outstanding sports announcing. In
1999, Costas was a recipient of the
Curt Gowdy Award, which is awarded to members of the electronic and print media for outstanding contributions to baseball. He is also an honorary board member of the
Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation
He was selected as the
Dick Schaap Award for Outstanding Journalism recipient in
2004.
In
2006, Costas was also awarded an honorary doctorate in humane letters from
Loyola College in Maryland.
On
April 19,
2007, while at the
Iowa Cubs vs.
Albuquerque Isotopes Pacific Coast League baseball game, Costas was made an honorary member of the Iowa Cubs Video Production Team during a brief induction ceremony in the
Principal Park pressbox.
Television career
NBC Sports
When Costas was first hired by NBC,
Don Ohlmeyer, who at the time, ran
NBC Sports, told the then 28 year old Costas that he looked like a 14 year old. Ohlmeyer presumably based his reaction on Costas' modest stature (Costas is 5' 7" (1.70 m) in height) and boyish, babyfaced appearance (Costas' appearance has, at times, been compared to actor
Mark Hamill's). After
Boston Red Sox pitcher
Curt Schilling made disparaging remarks about
Barry Bonds (concerning Bonds' alleged steroid use) in a 2007
HBO interview with Costas, Bonds immediately responded by dismissing Schilling's comments and calling Costas a "midget" who "knows absolutely jack shit about baseball".
He has been an in-studio host of
National Football League coverage and
play-by-play man for the
NBA and for
Major League Baseball. Costas has teamed with
Isiah Thomas and
Doug Collins for
basketball telecasts (from
1997-
2000) and
Tony Kubek (from
1983-
1989),
Joe Morgan and
Bob Uecker (from
1994-
2000) for
baseball telecasts. Before becoming the studio host for
The NFL on NBC in
1984, Costas did play-by-play with analyst
Bob Trumpy for NFL games.
Olympics
Costas has frontlined many Olympics broadcasts for
NBC. They include the Olympics in
Barcelona in
1992,
Atlanta in
1996,
Sydney in
2000,
Salt Lake City in
2002,
Athens in
2004, and
Turin in
2006. A personal influence on Costas has been legendary
ABC Sports broadcaster
Jim McKay, who hosted many Olympics for
ABC from the 1960s to the 1980s.
Costas confirmed on
Late Night with Conan O'Brian that he'll be broadcasting from Beijing during the
2008 Summer Olympics.
Major League Baseball on NBC
One of Bob Costas' most memorable broadcasts occurred on
June 23,
1984 (in what would go down in baseball lore as
The Sandberg Game). Costas along with Tony Kubek, were calling the Saturday baseball
Game of the Week from Chicago's
Wrigley Field. The game between the
Chicago Cubs and
St. Louis Cardinals in particular was cited for putting future
Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg (as well as the
1984 Cubs in general, who would go on to make their first postseason appearance since
1945) "on the map." In the ninth inning, the Cubs trailed 9-8, and faced the premier relief pitcher of the time,
Bruce Sutter. Sandberg, then not known for his power, slugged a home run to left field against the Cardinals' ace closer. Despite this dramatic act, the Cardinals scored two runs in the top of the tenth. Sandberg came up again in the tenth inning, facing a determined Sutter with one man on base. Sandberg then shocked the national audience by hitting a second home run, even further into the left field bleachers, to tie the game again. The Cubs went on to win in the 11th inning. Costas said when Sandberg hit that second home run,
"Do you believe it?!"
While broadcasting Game 4 of the
1988 World Series between the
Los Angeles Dodgers and
Oakland Athletics on
NBC, Costas angered many members of the Dodgers (especially the team's manager,
Tommy Lasorda) by commenting that the team quite possibly had the weakest-hitting lineup in World Series history. Later, after the Dodgers had won Game 4 (en route to a 4-1 series victory), Lasorda sarcastically suggested that the MVP of the 1988 World Series should be Bob Costas.
Besides calling the
1989 American League Championship Series for NBC, Costas also filled-in for a suddenly ill
Vin Scully (who had come down with
laryngitis.) for Game 2 of the
1989 National League Championship Series. Game 2 of the NLCS occurred on Thursday,
October 5, which was an off day for the ALCS. NBC then decided to fly Costas from Toronto to Chicago to substitute for Scully on Thursday night. Afterwards, Costas flew back to Toronto, where he resumed work on the ALCS the next night.
Bob Costas anchored NBC's pre and post-game for NFL broadcasts and the pre and post-game shows for numerous World Series and
Major League Baseball All-Star Games during the 1980s (the first being for the
1982 World Series). Costas didn't get a shot at doing play-by-play (as the games on NBC were previously called by
Vin Scully) for an All-Star Game until
1994 and a World Series until
1995 (when NBC split the coverage with
ABC). It wasn't until
1997 when Costas finally got the chance to do play-by-play for a World Series from start to finish. Costas ended up winning a
Sports Emmy Award for
Outstanding Sports Personality, Play-by-Play.
NBA on NBC
When NBC gained the NBA network contract from
CBS in
1990, Costas hosted the telecasts and was teamed in the studio with ex-
Lakers coach
Pat Riley. He also hosted the studio program
Showtime and did play-by-play for the
1991 All-Star Game. In
1997, Costas began a three year stint as the lead play-by-play man for
The NBA on NBC. NBC enlisted Costas' services after they were forced to (temporarily) remove
Marv Albert from their broadcasts due to lingering personal and legal problems at the time. Costas stepped aside following the
2000 NBA Finals, in favor of a returning Marv Albert.
While this, in essence, ended his active role on the
NBA on NBC program (by this point,
Hannah Storm and
Ahmad Rashad had replaced Costas on studio anchoring duties), Costas would return to due play-by-play for selected playoff games. Costas also anchored NBC's NBA Finals coverage in
2002, which was their last to date.
Costas is a critic of the raunchier side of pro wrestling. He condemned
Karl Malone during a live NBA broadcast for participating periodically in
WCW matches.
NHL on NBC
On
December 17,
2007, NBC announced that Costas would host the network's coverage of the
AMP Energy NHL Winter Classic, an outdoor regular season game between the
Buffalo Sabres and the
Pittsburgh Penguins at
Buffalo's Ralph Wilson Stadium on
New Year's Day 2008.
Breeders' Cup
Costas filled in for
Tom Hammond at the hosting desk during the
2002 Breeders' Cup when Hammond had to undergo open-heart surgery.
Football Night in America
In
2006, Costas returned to studio hosting duties on
The NFL on NBC (under the
Football Night in America banner), which was returning after a near ten year hiatus. Costas last hosted NFL telecasts for NBC in
1992.
Costas is nicknamed "Rapping Roberto" by
New York Daily News sports media columnist Bob Raissman.
Al Michaels also called him "Rapping Roberto" during the telecast between the
Indianapolis Colts and the
New York Giants on
September 10,
2006 in response to Costas calling him "Alfalfa."
Later
Costas hosted
Later with Bob Costas on NBC,
1988-
1994. This show was something of a break from the typical TV talk show format of the era, featuring Costas and a single guest having a conversation for the entire half hour, without a band, opening monologue or studio audience. On several occasions, Costas held the guest over for multiple nights, and these in-depth discussions won Costas much praise for his interviewing skills. (Following his departure, the show became a much more conventional talk show, hosted first by
Greg Kinnear and later by
Carson Daly. Daly still hosts the show today.)
Syndicated radio
Costas also hosted the syndicated
radio program
Costas Coast to Coast, 1986-1996, which has recently been revived as
Costas on the Radio. Like
Later, Costas' radio shows have focused on a wide variety of topics, and have not been limited to sports discussion. Bob's current radio show,
Costas on the Radio, airs on 200 stations nationwide each weekend and syndicated by the
Clear Channel owned
Premiere Radio Networks.
HBO
In
2001, Costas was hired by
HBO to host a 12 week series called
On the Record with Bob Costas.
On the Record with Bob Costas was similar to the format of the old
Later program as they both concentrated on in-depth celebrity interviews.
In
2002, Costas began a stint as co-host of HBO's long running series
Inside the NFL. Costas remained host of
Inside the NFL through the end of the
2007 NFL season. He hosted the show with
Cris Collinsworth and former NFL legends
Dan Marino and
Cris Carter. The program aired each week during the NFL season.
In
2005,
On the Record with Bob Costas was revamped to become
Costas Now, a monthly show that would focus more on sports and air year-round in a 9 p.m. ET/PT time slot.
Costas Now is more akin to HBO's
Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel.
Larry King Live
In June 2005, Costas was named by
CNN president,
Jonathan Klein, as a regular substitute anchor for
Larry King's
Larry King Live for one year. Costas, as well as Klein, have said that Costas isn't trying out for King's position on a permanent basis.
Nancy Grace was also named a regular substitute host for the show.
On
August 18,
2005, Costas refused to host a
Larry King Live episode where the subject was missing teen
Natalee Holloway. Costas said he'd no hard feelings about the subject, but that he was uncomfortable with it.
Other appearances
Costas appeared on the
War to Settle the Score, a pre-
WrestleMania program that
WWE aired on
MTV.
Apart from his normal sportscasting duties, Costas also announced periodic dogsled and elevator races on
Late Night with David Letterman.
Costas once appeared on the television program
NewsRadio as himself. He hosted an award show and later had some humorous encounters with the crew of WNYX. Costas also once appeared as a guest on the faux talkshow cartoon
Space Ghost Coast to Coast.
Bob Costas has been impersonated several times by
Darrell Hammond on
Saturday Night Live.
Costas appeared as himself along with his rival/counterpart
Al Michaels (who now works for NBC) from
ABC in the movie
BASEketball. Costas also appeared as himself in the movie
Pootie Tang.
In a supposed effort to fulfill a deal he made on
The Late Late Show with
Craig Kilborn, as coverage of a game resumed he sipped a glass of pink lemonade and said
"Ah, that's restaurant quality lemonade."
Costas guest-voiced (as himself) on the
Family Guy episodes "
Patriot Games" and "
Petergeist".
Costas is very loosely associated with the
Dave, Shelly, and Chainsaw morning show of
San Diego, California, and has been known to appear frequently on that show, where, due to one of the show's in-jokes, some of the show's hosts (as well as many San Diego residents) know Costas, belovedly, as the "King of Doucheville." He also appeared in
Dave, Shelly, and Chainsaw's motion picture
The JK Conspiracy.
Jim Rome considers Costas to be one of the most intelligent people he's interviewed on
The Jim Rome Show. One of the more famous callers to the show, 'Jeff in
Richmond', often refers to Costas as his "good friend and colleague". Costas has good-naturedly mentioned his bemusement regarding the hoopla that has come from all this.
Costas was name checked in a
Ludacris song after he'd mentioned being a fan on the late night talk show
Last Call with Carson Daly.
In
2006, Costas voiced the animated character
Bob Cutlass, a race announcer, in the movie
Cars.
On
October 18,
2007, Costas appeared along with former
Baseball Commissioner,
Fay Vincent at
Williams College for "A Conversation About Sports" moderated by
Will Dudley, Associate Professor of Philosophy.
Politics
Costas is a self-avowed
liberal and declared on
June 27,
2007, that the presidency of
George W. Bush had "tragically failed."
I think it's now overwhelmingly evident, if you're honest about it, even if you're a conservative Republican, if you're honest about it, this is a failed administration. And no honest conservative would say that George W. Bush was among the 500 most qualified people to be President of the United States. That's not based on political leaning. If a liberal, and I tend to be liberal, disagrees with a conservative, they can still respect that person's competence and the integrity of their point of view.
Further Information
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