April 16, 2009 5:35 PM

Iconic NFL Broadcaster John Madden Retires

By
CBSNews
(CBS/ AP)  John Madden is retiring from football announcing, where his enthusiastic, down-to-earth style made him one of sports' most popular broadcasters for three decades.

The Hall of Fame coach spent the last three seasons on NBC's "Sunday Night Football." His final telecast was the Super Bowl in February.

"You know at some point you have to do this - I got to that point," Madden said on his Bay Area radio show Thursday. "The thing that made it hard is not because I'm second guessing, `is it the right decision?' But I enjoyed it so damn much.

"I enjoyed the game and the players and the coaches and the film and the travel and everything."

In an interview with KCBS radio in San Francisco, Madden said his health is fine. But at the age of 73, he wanted to spend more time with his family. His 50th wedding anniversary is this fall, and his five grandchildren are old enough to notice when he's gone.

"If you hated part of it or if something was wrong, it'd be easy," Madden told KCBS.

Listen to Madden's interview with KCBS
Cris Collinsworth will replace Madden, moving over from the network's studio show, NBC Sports chief Dick Ebersol said. Collinsworth filled in when Madden took a game off last October.

Ebersol called Madden "absolutely the best sports broadcaster who ever lived."

Madden said his health is fine, but at the age of 73, he wanted to spend more time with his family. His 50th wedding anniversary is this fall, and his five grandchildren are old enough to notice when he's gone.

"If you hated part of it or if something was wrong, it'd be easy," Madden said.

Madden's blue-collar style and love for in-the-trenches football endeared him to fans. His "Madden NFL Football" is the top-selling sports video game of all time.

Madden is reluctant to fly and often traveled to games in a specially equipped bus.

Longtime broadcast partner Al Michaels said Madden will have a unique place in pro football history.

"No one has made the sport more interesting, more relevant and more enjoyable to watch and listen to than John," Michaels said in a statement. "There's never been anyone like him and he's been the gold standard for analysts for almost three decades."

Madden began his pro football career as a linebacker coach at Oakland in 1967 and was named head coach two years later, at 33 the youngest coach in what was then the American Football League.

Madden led the Raiders to their first Super Bowl victory and retired in 1979. He joined CBS later that year.

He worked at CBS until 1994 when the network lost rights to broadcast NFL games, leading him to switch to Fox. He left Fox in 2002 to become the lead analyst for ABC's "Monday Night Football" and joined NBC in 2006 when that network inaugurated a prime-time Sunday game.

Madden said that for the last several years, he waited until two months after the season to determine whether to continue, not wanting to rush into a decision. He surprised Ebersol when he told him last week he was retiring.

Ebersol flew to California on Wednesday morning and spent 11 hours with Madden, trying to persuade him to change his mind. Ebersol even offered to allow Madden to call games only in September and November and to take October and December off.

"I knew right away there was no way of talking him out of it," Ebersol said. "I knew in his voice he really thought about this."

Madden was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2006.

"There is one thing football fans have agreed on for decades: they all love John Madden," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. "John was a Hall of Fame coach before becoming one of the most-celebrated personalities in sports. He had an incredible talent for explaining the game in an unpretentious way that made it more understandable and fun.

"John's respect and passion for the game always stood out. He was the ultimate football fan who also happened to be an extraordinarily talented coach and broadcaster."

CBS/ AP
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by tessmant April 17, 2009 4:57 AM EDT
"The road to Easy Street goes through the sewer.?
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by Henri_Rochard April 16, 2009 6:10 PM EDT
I always enjoyed John Madden's commentary. On all 4 networks, no less.

To me, he explained the f'ball game with clarity so I could understand game strategy and come away from a broadcast a little smarter than at the beginning. (Joe Morgan is a similar excellent analyst for baseball.)

IMHO, during a game Madden was working, each team would have been well served with an assistant coach listening to Madden to get his insight on what was happening.

By the by, after Jack Tatum paralyzed Darrell Stingley during a pre-season game, Madden visited Stingley in his hospital room and summoned help when Stingley's respirator failed. Stingley might've died at that time had Madden not been there.
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by jwninil April 16, 2009 5:35 PM EDT
will miss Madden's highlites of the game buttt pleaseee no no collinsworth
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by tpeks40 April 16, 2009 5:06 PM EDT
Whoever thinks Chris Collinsworth is a fine replacement for John Madden must be deaf. That guys voice is as grating as bare knees on the sidewalk, and that ever present smirk makes me want to slap my television. Farewell John, enjoy your retirement, but PLEASE do not replace him with Collinsworthless.
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by specialty8 April 16, 2009 4:49 PM EDT
I liked Madden, and most people did also or he would not have been there for so long. We will miss you.
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by jxknowles April 16, 2009 3:43 PM EDT
BOOM. He's gone!
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by mjm117 April 16, 2009 2:47 PM EDT
Please just tell me that Tony Kornholer isn't going to get any more commentating gigs...
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by mjm117 April 16, 2009 2:44 PM EDT
You guys are too much. I was just as guilty for cracking a "Maddenism" joke from time to time...but you gotta give his guy the respect he deserves...
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by noirviolette April 16, 2009 2:43 PM EDT
All the very best to you Mr.Madden.I missed you as a coach and I shall miss you in the broadcaster booth.Enjoy your retirement.
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by texanforlogi April 16, 2009 2:32 PM EDT
Thank heavens--now I can stop muting the TV when watching football.
True, the man does know his football and can call a game quite capably, it's just that he would never shut up! He would say the same thing over and over and over again, until I had to hit the mute button in self-defense. He would belabor the obvious until I was ready to scream.
That being said, good luck John--I wish you very well in your future endeavors and I will definitely never forget you.
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