Super Bowl 2022: Did Al Michaels call his last game for NBC Sports as Rams beat Bengals?

It could be the end of an era at NBC Sports.

Al Michaels appears set to leave the network following Super Bowl LVI Sunday between the Los Angeles Rams and Cincinnati Bengals, a 23-20 win by L.A.

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New York Post’s Andrew Marchand reports the 77-year-old Michaels “has a standing offer from Amazon Prime Video that may reach $11 million a year, according to sources.”

This Michaels deal has been at the 1-yard line for a long time, and Amazon has waited to see if an agreement will finally be pushed across the goal line.

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Amazon Prime is set to become the exclusive home of Thursday Night Football beginning with the 2022 season. Amazon is paying $1 billion annually for its football rights.

According to NBC Sports, Sunday was Michaels’ 11th Super Bowl play-by-play assignment, tying him with former CBS Sports and FOX Sports announcer Pat Summerall for the most ever by a TV commentator.

Marchand also reports FOX Sports’ Troy Aikman remains linked to Michaels as targets for Amazon Prime’s top broadcast team.

Aikman negotiated an opt-out for this season, which allows him to seek a better deal. He makes around $10 million, which forces him to crane his neck to look at (Tony) Romo money (10 years, $180 million). … There is a thought that Aikman could split his time between FOX and Amazon. This half-foot in, half-foot out approach would possibly allow Aikman to approach Romo money and still do the biggest games on FOX.

Other Amazon Prime notes

– Former NFL stars Marshawn Lynch and Tony Gonzalezwill likely be a part of its pregame coverage.”

– Analyst Cris Collinsworth is not an option after agreeing to a new deal for $12.5 million per season to work on Sunday Night Football for NBC.

Drew Brees, who joined NBC Sports following his retirement last year, “remains an Amazon Thursday night possibility.”

– Broadcasting wild cards for Amazon Prime include Tom Brady, Sean Payton and Kurt Warner.

– If Amazon Prime doesn’t land Michaels, play-by-play options include CBS Sports’ Ian Eagle and FOX’s Kevin Burkhardt. “Both would be popular and long-term choices.” NBC Sports’ Mike Tirico, set to replace Michaels as the voice of Sunday Night Football, could pull “a possible NFL TV daily double in which he could make up for lost time and call Amazon on Thursdays and NBC on Sundays.”

– Sunday Night Football producer Fred Gaudelli has been hired for Thursday Night Football.

Here’s a deep dive on Michaels from NBC Sports:

Al Michaels, the play-by-play voice for NBC’s Sunday Night Football, calls Super Bowl LVI on February 13, 2022 on NBC and Peacock. The Super Bowl will mark Michaels’ 11th Super Bowl play-by-play assignment – the most ever for a television commentator, joining former CBS and FOX announcer Pat Summerall (11).

One of the most renowned sports broadcasters of all time and the commentator called “TV’s best play-by-play announcer” by the Associated Press, Michaels recently completed his 16th season as the voice of NBC’s Sunday Night Football and record 36th campaign as the play-by-play announcer of the NFL in primetime.

SNF averaged 18.5 million TV viewers in 2021 (with a Total Audience Delivery average of 19.3 million viewers), and is on pace to rank as primetime’s #1 TV show in all key metrics for an unprecedented 11th consecutive year – adding to its record for the most successive years atop the charts (since 1950), based on official live plus same day data provided by Nielsen.

In December 2020, Michaels was honored with the 2021 Ford C. Frick Award for excellence in broadcasting by the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Michaels is one of only five distinguished broadcasters to be recognized with the baseball honor and the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Pete Rozelle Award (Dick Enberg, Lindsey Nelson, Jack Buck, and Curt Gowdy).

In the first 15 seasons on NBC (2006-20), Sunday Night Football has won 30 Sports Emmys. Following the 2018 season, NBC SNF became the first-ever 10-time honoree for Outstanding Live Sports Series and won its 11th honor in the category following the most recent NFL season (2020). From the 2008-13 NFL seasons, Sunday Night Football won six consecutive Outstanding Live Sports Series honors – also a Sports Emmy record – and won again following the 2015-2018 and 2020 NFL seasons.

In September 2018, as Michaels began his 10th season in the SNF booth with Cris Collinsworth, USA Today profiled the duo, writing: “Michaels and Collinsworth — oh, heck, let’s just call them Al and Cris; they’re on a first-name basis with America…Turn on the TV. Listen to the timbre of Al’s voice. Hear the mirth audible in Cris’. Taken together, their voices have come to mean Big Game.”

On February 4, 2018, Michaels called Super Bowl LII on NBC – his 10th Super Bowl in the booth In addition, Michaels’ call of the Eagles-Patriots title game from U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, came nearly 30 years to the day since his first Super Bowl play-by-play assignment – ABC’s broadcast of Super Bowl XXII. He is the only TV commentator with a Super Bowl play-by-play run of three decades.

On August 4, 2017, NBC Sunday Night Football was honored with a display in the Pro Football Hall of Fame for “its record run as the #1 show in all of primetime television.”

In 2016, Michaels also served as the play-by-play voice of the NBC/NFL Network Thursday Night Football series, which ranked as primetime’s #2 show in the 2016-17 TV season.

In February 2015 in Arizona, Michaels called Super Bowl XLIX – the thrilling four-point New England Patriots victory over the Seattle Seahawks which still ranks as the most-watched show in U.S. TV history (average of 114.4 million viewers). Michaels’ previous Super Bowl — Super Bowl XLVI, which Michaels called with Collinsworth on NBC in February 2012 — was the most-viewed program in U.S. television history at the time.

At the 2016 Rio Olympics, Michaels served a host on NBC’s daytime coverage. He hosted NBCSN’s weekday afternoon and NBC’s weekend daytime coverage of the 2014 Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, and served in the same role for NBC at the 2012 Olympic Games in London, the most-watched event in U.S. television history, and the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver. In 2015, Michaels served as host of the first events in the “PBC on NBC” boxing series.

Michaels’ autobiography, You Can’t Make This Up (released Nov. 18, 2014), was for two months on the New York Times best-seller list for hard-cover, non-fiction titles.

One of television’s most respected journalists, Michaels has covered more major sports events than any sportscaster, including 20 years as the play-by-play voice of Monday Night Football. He is the only commentator to call the Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals and host the Stanley Cup Final for network television. In addition, Michaels called the classic 1985 championship boxing match between Thomas “Hit Man” Hearns and “Marvelous” Marvin Hagler.

Among his many accolades, Michaels has captured eight Emmy Awards – seven for Outstanding Sports Personality – Play-by-Play and one in 2011 for the Lifetime Achievement Award, and has three times (1980, 1983 and 1986) received the NSSA Award from the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association; he was inducted into the NSSA Hall of Fame in 1998. Michaels was named Sportscaster of the Year in 1996 by the American Sportscasters Association, and, in 1991, he was named Sportscaster of the Year by the Washington Journalism Review. In 2004, he was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Michaels received three major industry honors in 2013. First, he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame with the prestigious Pete Rozelle Radio & Television Award, which distinguishes long-time exceptional contributions to radio and television in professional football. Michaels was then inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, which annually recognizes television’s most distinguished “innovators and icons.” Finally, in December 2013, the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame recognized Michaels for his “excellence and lifetime achievement,” and he was inducted as a member of its 2013 Hall of Fame Class.

Michaels garnered his first Sportscaster of the Year award in 1980, the year he made his memorable call, “Do you believe in miracles? Yes!” on the U.S. men’s hockey team’s dramatic upset victory over the USSR at the Lake Placid Winter Olympics. His reputation for Olympic acumen grew with his coverage of figure skating and hockey at the 1984 Winter Games in Sarajevo, and track & field and road cycling at the Summer Games in Los Angeles. He also called hockey during the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympic Games.

Regarded as one of the best baseball announcers of all time, Michaels was ABC’s lead baseball play-by-play announcer during the network’s coverage of Major League Baseball. He has also earned praise as a journalist and became just the second sportscaster in history to receive a News Emmy nomination for his coverage of the San Francisco earthquake during the 1989 World Series.

Michaels currently resides in Los Angeles, California.

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Mike Rosenstein may be reached at [email protected].


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