Find out who will be calling the Week 1 game between the Chargers and Raiders.
The Chargers will kick off the 2024 regular season against the Raiders on Sunday, Sept. 8, at 1:05 p.m. PT.
The AFC West divisional bout will be televised on CBS and Jim Nantz and Tony Romo will have the call.
Los Angeles looks to turn things around under new head coach Jim Harbaugh, who has a proven track record of winning at all of his coaching stops in college and the NFL.
Harbaugh and offensive coordinator Greg Roman seek to enforce a physical brand of football, and it starts with establishing the run. Gus Edwards and J.K. Dobbins will handle the backfield duties.
Justin Herbert will be without Keenan Allen and Mike Williams, but he’s proven to be one of the premier players at his position, throwing to lesser-known names. Joshua Palmer headlines the wide receiver room, with Ladd McConkey, Quentin Johnston and DJ Chark making up the rest.
After finishing as one of the worst defenses in the league, defensive coordinator Jesse Minter will look to turn things around. Minter will have Joey Bosa, Khalil Mack, Asante Samuel Jr., Derwin James and Alohi Gilman at his disposal. Poona Ford, Kristian Fulton and Denzel Perryman are the notable new additions.
“It had to be over-the-top. Come on, coming off the other one (at Pebble)? It had to be.”
Every home ought to have a backyard golf hole. At least that’s the way Jim Nantz looks at life.
When Nantz built his dream home at Pebble Beach several years ago, he created a replica of Pebble’s iconic par-3 seventh hole, which went viral thanks to his former CBS partner Nick Faldo posting video of his ace there during the 2018 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.
“The homage to Pebble Beach’s No. 7 made perfect sense given that from the perch of the tee across the Bay you can see the actual hole off in the distance,” Nantz said.
Three years ago this summer, Nantz moved his family to a suburb of Nashville so he can spend less time on a plane and more time with his wife and two young children, daughter Finley and son Jameson.
That also meant the opportunity to build another backyard golf hole. He spent significant time plotting it out, modeling out different possibilities, including the sixth green at Riviera Country Club, before settling on an homage to the 13th hole at Augusta National with a few twists of his own.
“It makes the backyard a playground,” he said, “not just for my kids but for me too.”
Nantz worked with architect Shane Whitcomb, who flew in from Arizona for site visits, and some of his favorite parts of the project consisted of figuring out the scale and drainage and the hidden truths of golf course architecture. To do so, they ripped up the back yard, hauled in a mountain of dirt, built a base, installed drainage pipes, cut out a replica of a creek bed – his version of Rae’s Creek – before they could shape the nooks and crannies and slopes and lay out the green.
Nantz decorated the property with 15 magnolia trees, an assortment of azaleas and pine straw wherever there isn’t green. Ultimately, his L-shaped backyard meant that the back right corridor was the best spot for the putting surface.
There are five tees in all – there was talk of building a tee off of the second-floor guest balcony but that plan got scratched. “It was an engineering nightmare,” he lamented.
Three tees represent the straight-away layup third shot that golfers would face at Augusta’s famed par-5 13th hole. The one to the far left is hugging the Magnolia tree line, and a difficult spot for the back left hole location but a perfect spot to attack the back-right flag, Nantz said. There’s a straight on tee for the perfect layup and another to the right. Destined to be a crowd pleaser is an elevated shot from the former screened-in porch that has a retractable screen controlled by a remote that is about a 30-yard shot. How would you like to have your own version of a Topgolf hitting bay in your house with heaters in the ceiling and a bar under construction for the full experience?
“I told you, it had to be over-the-top. Come on, coming off the other one (at Pebble)? It had to be,” Nantz said.
The fifth option for a tee is located on the far side of his pool deck, hitting across the pool and over the pool house. It’s a full shot between 55-60 yards, which with the modified-distance almostGOLF balls he uses, is a full swing for Nantz with his 56-degree wedge.
The still-unnamed course (Nantz National has a nice ring to it, does it not?) has been in the works for more than two years. “I like to sit and let it marinate,” he said.
Nor is it completely finished as Nantz pointed out he’s still completing his Comfort Station, replete with a Margarita/Slurpee machine, a Soft-Serve ice cream machine and a hot dog roller/bun warmer.
“I’m getting the industrial version of all of these,” he said. “You get hungry and tired when you’re out playing.”
Indeed, you do.
Those aren’t the only bells and whistles. He’s got his own manual scoreboard in white and green with “Hello Friends” painted in big stencil lettering on top as well as a few directional signs, the type Bryson DeChambeau famously lifted over his shoulder at the Masters in April.
On the leaderboard, his three kids are tied for the lead late on the second nine on Sunday with star-studded names like Woods, Nicklaus and Palmer giving chase. When friends of Jameson, Nantz’s youngest, have come over, he tells them that he’s got the edge because he still has the par-5 15th to play.
“He’s so competitive he’s convinced himself he’s going to win this imaginary golf event,” Nantz said.
(Watch out, Jameson, for that Freddie Couples guys. He and your dad have been known to do a winner’s interview from Butler Cabin.) Nantz noted he’s got Faldo’s name already made for the scoreboard but not yet on display. Outdoor lighting will allow for night play or just to admire the beauty of it all. What do Nantz’s friends who have seen a sneak-peek of the hole have to say about his latest backyard project? “Nobody is surprised, let’s put it that way,” Nantz said. “They’ll say, ‘Of course, you are.’ ”
He’s had this vision for the hole in his head for a long time now. But bringing it to fruition has been a labor of love.
“I remember one time I asked Kevin Costner, what’s it like to be a director? Because I was blown away by what he did with “Dances with Wolves.” He told me, ‘The director sees the film in his head before they’ve shot anything and then you have to go through the process of getting everyone involved in the project to see what you’re seeing, to get them to do whatever their role might be to see that final product.’ How do you get them to see that final vision and dream? That applies to a lot of things in life. It’s about how you lead people whether you’re directing a movie, producing a TV show or building a backyard hole – you need people to see your vision,” Nantz said. “I knew what it was going to feel like, look like and sound like. That’s why every light, every fixture, every speaker, every azalea, every magnolia were all part of the overall vision before we even broke ground.”
Much like the Costner hit movie, “Field of Dreams,” Nantz has gone the distance. He’s outdone himself. Here’s a case that lives up to the saying, “Build it and they will come.”
If you’re tuning in to 2024 NCAA men’s tournament and you hear the familiar voices of Bill Raftery and Grant Hill on a broadcast, you know it’s truly March Madness.
If you’re looking around for Jim Nantz’s voice on any of the 2024 March Madness games, given that we’ve heard it on CBS’s coverage for decades, I have bad news for you.
You won’t find Nantz on the call. And why is that? You’ve come to the right place.
Say what you want about CBS analyst and former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, but he knows football.
Romo and Jim Nantz will be on the call for Super Bowl LVIII as the Kansas City Chiefs look to repeat against the NFC’s No. 1 seed, the San Francisco 49ers.
As Romo made the media rounds this week in preparation for Sunday’s game, he was questioned about the Washington Commanders and their new head coach, Dan Quinn. Romo, who played 14 NFL seasons with the Cowboys, knows Quinn well. The new Washington head coach spent the past three seasons as Dallas’s defensive coordinator.
No surprise, Romo loves the hire.
“Great fit,” Romo said when asked if Quinn was a good fit in Washington.
“I think that was a home-run hire. He’s one of the rare coaches who taught me, at this point, because I’ve talked to so many, I’ve learned so much about the game. I’m always inquisitive. I want to learn. I want to learn. When I retired, I wasn’t able to sit there and be like, ‘Oh, I’m going to go coach the defensive backs.’ I know coverages, I knew fronts, but I didn’t why they were in a five high, six high, why it’s an over or an under front, I just know that they’re in that and here’s how to attack it. Dan, Belichick, there are other coaches, too. I love learning, and for me, to be able to learn from a coach is a gift. Dan was one of those guys. They hit a home run there.”
Major praise from Romo. Remember, as a game analyst, he travels to a different game every week, interviewing the coaching staffs of both teams. He talks to everyone. And his Dallas ties gave him some valuable insight into Quinn. He’s a fan.
Teaching has been one of the many things Quinn has been praised for. Before he chose coaching as a profession, Quinn planned on becoming a teacher. So it’s no surprise analysts such as Romo enjoy speaking to Quinn.
Super Bowl 58 is less than two weeks away. CBS already has its announce team plans set for the game between the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers.
#49ers vs. #Chiefs
Super Bowl LVIII
Sunday, February 11
6:30 pm ET/3:30 pm PT
CBS
Jim Nantz wasted no time making Bills fans feel worse.
Buffalo Bills fans are accustomed to postseason torment. Scott Norwood’s “wide-right” miss to lose Super Bowl 25 is perhaps the most famous (and infamous) play in franchise history. If that’s the case, then Tyler Bass’s wide-right miss to lose to the rival Kansas City Chiefs might be a very worth second place.
CBS announcer Jim Nantz captured the moment of heartbreak in a particularly devastating fashion. After it was clear that Bass’s kick had hooked right, Nantz wasted no time invoking past demons in the Bills’ history. Because of course he did.
Nantz isn’t wrong. The last thing Buffalo needed was for “wide right” to potentially mean one of two heartbreaking defeats. Sunday night proved to be another dark day in Buffalo professional football lore.
The Club at Pasadera was purchased from a group of local investors by Concert Golf Partners. The Jack Nicklaus-designed track is a 6,673-yard, par-71 golf course, which carries a 73.7 course rating and a slope of 143.
“The Club at Pasadera is one of the underrated gems of California golf,” said Nantz. “The club and course are absolutely spectacular.”
This marks the first California purchase for the Florida-based Concert Golf Partners, which now owns 33 properties, including The Club at Longview in Charlotte, N.C.; The Club at Renaissance in Ft. Myers, Florida; White Manor Country Club in Philadelphia; and The Muttontown Club on Long Island, N.Y.
“We’re thrilled to welcome The Club at Pasadera, a perfectly crafted golf course and premier club located in one of golf’s elite global destinations, into the Concert Golf family,” said Concert Golf Partners Senior Vice President Jordan Peace. “Our commitment to safeguarding the rich heritage of this club aligns seamlessly with our overarching mission.”
Here’s more from the Herald:
The Club at Pasadera golf course and country club is the centerpiece of the 565-acre, 250-home Pasadera Community. It opened in 2000 at a cost of $42 million, and was bought 10 years later by HNA Group, a Chinese conglomerate, for about $7.5 million after the original owners, Pasadera Country Club, LLC., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. It had been in discussions with the Trump Organization about a possible sale, though the deal fell through in December 2008 over loan conditions and the threat of lawsuits. In late 2018, a group of local investors purchased Nicklaus Club Monterey for about $3.2 million and renamed it The Club at Pasadera.
If you’re watching any of the NFL games on CBS on Sunday in Week 16, you may notice an absence: There’s no Jim Nantz or Tony Romo on the mics anywhere for the network.
Why is that the case?
There’s a very good reason for that: It’s because Nantz and Romo will be calling the Christmas Day game between the Las Vegas Raiders and Kansas City Chiefs on Monday, Dec. 25 for CBS. So they’re getting Christmas Eve off as they prep for that contest the next day.
There’s your answer! You’ll see them tomorrow! Happy Holidays and enjoy your Sunday of NFL action.