Joe Buck practiced announcing at home with a hilarious play-by-play call of his family

“Oh, and he has hit his mom! He has hit his mom.”

With the coronavirus pandemic forcing the cancellation of basically every sporting event on the planet (except for hockey in Belarus), it has been a decidedly slow time for sports fans … and broadcasters.

After all, it’s awfully difficult to be a sports announcer with no sports to announce, so leave it to lead Fox Sports announcer Joe Buck to come up with a solution in the meantime.

He’s just going to call play-by-play for everyday life.

On Sunday, Buck tweeted out to his followers — while in isolation with his family — and asked for videos of everyday activities. He planned to supply play-by-play audio of those moments. He wanted to get some announcing reps in to stay sharp.

He also wanted those who had their videos posted to donate to a cause during quarantine. He got the idea started with a play-by-play call of his wife, Michelle Beisner-Buck, and one of their young sons. Things really escalated.

“Oh, and he has hit his mom! He has hit his mom.”

That’ll be up there with the Minneapolis Miracle.

Keep these videos coming, Joe. The sports world needs this.

[jwplayer PV3RSadh-D3ux87Cq]

Ranking 15 of the most valuable NFL broadcasters of all-time

There have been athletes and broadcasters who have done incredible work in the NFL broadcast booth.

The report ESPN could be trying to swing a trade with NBC for Al Michaels inspired thought on who have been the most valuable broadcasters to call NFL games. This would be play-by-play and game analysts. Not studio people who weigh in from afar.

15. Jim Nantz

Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports

Jim Nantz has been the voice of CBS for the Final Four, golf and the NFL for many years. He’s smooth on play-by-play. However, don’t think there is an iconic call or any one NFL moment that leaps off the mic.

Joe Buck explains why he checks his phone while calling games (including the Super Bowl)

We spoke with Buck and Troy Aikman about their secrets to broadcasting the Super Bowl.

Joe Buck and Troy Aikman will be calling their sixth Super Bowl for FOX on Sunday.

But it doesn’t mean they’re not affected by the pressure of calling an NFL game that will be seen by a gargantuan audience of fans, both casual and die-hard, those who have rooting interests or don’t.

“The stakes just feel higher every year,” Buck told For The Win in a recent phone interview. “I think the familiarity gets erased by feeling like the general population is more educated on the NFL than it was when we started.”

Aikman — who won three rings as a player, quarterbacking the Dallas Cowboys — concurred that the enormity of it can be daunting.

“It’s easy to say it’s another game and plays the same way,” he said, “but then once you get out there, leading up to it, you realize it’s a big game. The electricity in the air, the urgency, the pageantry of it all, you’re reminded at every turn that it’s a big event.”

So how do they stay calm in the face of all that pressure? Besides their chemistry and what Buck described as “muscle memory” from a year on the air, they have little things they rely on.

(AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)

There are always a variety of flavored nuts for refueling purposes, although Buck avoids them during the broadcast in case a piece gets caught in the back of his throat. Aikman reminds himself to balance the information he’s providing between hardcore fans of the AFC and NFC champions and those who have no idea about the teams playing.

Buck has other strategies. He writes up a board for each team with notes and stats on each player — he posted his NFC championship board in a recent tweet (see below). Then, he’ll either write a message that will make him laugh — “it’s just an (expletive) game” — if he sees it, or put a photo of his family there to keep him grounded.

“It’s best if I remind myself we’re not reversing the flow of the Nile when we’re sitting in the booth,” he said.

Believe it or not, Buck will actually go on his phone occasionally during the broadcast.

“I do that all the time,” he said “World Series, Super Bowl, championship game, random game in September. I think it kind of pops the balloon around me a little bit and connects me to my real world with my friends and family. There are stretches where, if I feel we’re in an intense moment in the game, I’ll turn it over.”

“Sometimes it’s helpful because I’ll get an outsider’s perspective on what we’re watching,” he added. “It’s both a diversion and applicable to the game that I might even use.”

But it all comes back to chemistry for Aikman and Buck, who hang out when they’re not in the broadcast booth.

“There’s a comfort level with he and I, not only professionally, but we’re really good friends,” Aikman said. “That helps.”

Buck agreed.

“Our level of familiarity and comfort grows every year.” Buck said. “We get that feel for what the other person’s rhythm is, either for the course of the year or just that day. I know when he’s stressed out, I’m sure he knows when I am. I know when he needs a laugh, I’m sure he knows when I need a laugh. It’s a really comforting feeling going into a game knowing the person I’m working with so well that it eliminates a lot of the unknowns.”

[jwplayer NDfhp14o-q2aasYxh]

Super Bowl 54 schedule: Game time, location, broadcast info and more

All the information you need to know about Super Bowl LIV between the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers.

The Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers are set for what appears to be an exciting battle in Super Bowl LIV on Feb. 2. The Chiefs advanced to their first Super Bowl since 1970 with a thrashing of the Tennessee Titans behind star quarterback Patrick Mahomes. The 49ers, meanwhile, manhandled the Green Bay Packers for the second time this season.

Here’s the information you need to know about Super Bowl LIV:

Date: Feb. 2, 2020

Venue: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens (FL) This will be the 11th time the Miami metropolitan area will play host to a Super Bowl.

Home team: AFC is home on even years, NFC on odd. That means the Chiefs will be the home team.

How much are tickets? The least expensive tickets on Stubhub.com are $4,464. The priciest are more than $45,000. The secondary market for this game figures to be a hot one.

Television broadcast: FOX (Joe Buck and Troy Aikman)

Radio broadcast: Westwood One Network

Stream: fuboTV (try for free)

Time: 6:30 p.m. ET

National anthem: Demi Lovato. Christine Sun Kim, internationally renowned sound artist and performer, will sign the National Anthem in American Sign Language.

Halftime: Jennifer Lopez and Shakira

 

Eagles vs. Cowboys was highest-rated Week 16 game since 2015

Eagles vs. Cowboys was highest-rated Week 16 game since 2015

The Cowboys-Eagles rivalry has always been good for business and last Sunday’s Weeks 16 matchup with playoff implications was no different.

According to Sports Media Watch, the Eagles 17-9 victory over the Cowboys scored the NFL’s highest Week 16 ratings in four years.

Sunday’s Week 16 NFL national window (Cowboys-Eagles in 88% of markets) averaged a 14.2 rating and 25.32 million viewers on FOX, marking the highest-rated and most-watched Week 16 NFL window since 2015 (mostly Packers-Cardinals: 15.5, 27.81M).

The telecast ranks as the third-highest rated and fifth-most watched of the season. The Cowboys have played in three of the top five.

Five NFL windows this season have exceeded 25 million viewers, the most in a single season since 2016 (ten), and the Eagles have been involved two of those matchups (Patriots-Eagles).

Philadelphia was the top market followed by Seattle, where fans were monitoring the teams’ loss to the Arizona Cardinals.