Al Michaels
Al Michaels | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Born | November 12, 1944 |
| Occupation | Sportscaster |
| Spouse(s) | Linda Anne Stamaton (1966-present) |
| Children | Steven Michaels Jennifer Michaels Cohn |
| Parent(s) | Jay and Lila Michaels |
Alan Richard "Al" Michaels (born November 12, 1944) is an American sportscaster. He was best known working for ABC Sports for nearly three decades. He was the lead voice of NBC Sunday Night Football and currently the lead play by play voice for NFL Thursday Night Football on Amazon Prime.[1] He was the daytime anchor for two Olympics: 2010 Vancouver Olympics and 2012 London Olympics. He called games for many years for the National Football League games.[2]
Michaels has won many awards during his career, including the Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Personality (Play-by-Play Host) five times, the NSSA Award from the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association three times, and "Sportscaster of the Year" once each from the American Sportscasters Association and the Washington Journalism Review. In October 2004, Michaels was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Michaels had an acting role in a 1970 episode of Hawaii Five-O. He has appeared as himself in the movies Jerry Maguire and BASEketball, as well as on several TV shows including Coach and Spin City. His call of the U.S. hockey team's victory in the 1980 Olympics can be heard in the 2004 movie Miracle.
References
[change | change source]- ↑ "NBC acquires Michaels for cartoon bunny, golf". The Associated Press. 2006-02-13.
- ↑ "Michaels, Theismann, Kolber, Tafoya to crew MNF". ESPN. 2005-07-26.
- National Football League broadcasters
- National Basketball Association broadcasters
- Major League Baseball broadcasters
- Olympic Games broadcasters
- Golf broadcasters
- College basketball broadcasters
- Motorsports broadcasters
- National Hockey League broadcasters
- Boxing broadcasters
- College football broadcasters
- Bowling broadcasters
- Disney people
- Living people
- 1944 births
