Chris Berman

Chris Berman

NFL Studio Host

In October 1979 – one month after its inception – ESPN hired a little known 24-year-old sports anchor named Chris Berman. For more than four and a half decades, Berman has been one of America’s most respected, popular, and in many ways, most beloved sportscasters of his era. A legend in the industry, Berman has also been recognized by the Pro Football Hall of Fame, his peers and countless other organizations for his exceptional contributions to sports broadcasting. With his trademark combination of genuine enthusiasm, knowledge and wit, he has come to embody ESPN in its dedication to entertaining and informing sports fans across the country. He is best known for his signature delivery of highlights in every sport, most notably on NFL Sundays.

Six times the versatile Berman has been selected National Sportscaster of the Year (1989, 1990, 1993, 1994, 1996 and 2001) by the members of the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association (now the National Sports Media Association). Berman, who in 1989 became the first cable sportscaster to win National Sportscaster of the Year, ranks second among sportscasters in winning this award. Berman and his various shows have won 10 Emmy Awards and 12 CableACEs.

Berman received the distinguished Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award from the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2010 for his longtime exceptional contributions to radio and television in professional football, an unexpected and humbling honor which Berman cherishes most among a career of achievements. In 2024, his long list of honors grew when he received the Lamar Hunt Award for Professional Football, recognizing him as “individual that has helped shape the NFL into the preeminent professional sports league in America.”

His coverage of baseball for ESPN spans almost four decades, with Berman’s most significant contribution coming on Sept. 6, 1995. He handled play-by-play for the Emmy Award-winning telecast of Cal Ripken’s 2,131st consecutive game, which surpassed the record held by the immortal Lou Gehrig. President Bill Clinton was among the guests in the broadcast booth that night.

In 2001, Berman was named winner of the prestigious Reds Bagnell Award from the Maxwell Football Club of Philadelphia for “contributions to the game of football.” Previous recipients include Pete Rozelle, Don Shula, Joe Paterno, and Eddie Robinson, among others. In January 2009, Berman was honored with the Pat Summerall Award at the annual Legends for Charity dinner in recognition of his longtime excellence in football broadcasting. Berman also received the Walter Camp Football Foundation’s Distinguished American award in January 2020.

In December 2017, Berman was inducted into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame. In 2016, he was honored with the Newseum Institute’s Al Neuharth Award for Excellence in Media – the first sportscaster ever honored. He was also inducted into the National Sports Media Association (formerly NSSA) Hall of Fame. In 2015, Berman was just the fifth on-air personality to be inducted into the Cable Hall of Fame.

It’s hard to imagine NFL Sundays before Berman. The 2016 season marked his 31st consecutive as studio host of Sunday NFL Countdown, having more than doubled Brent Musburger’s 15-year record as the longest-running host of a weekly pro football studio show. The weekly Sunday morning pre-game show has won seven Sports Emmy awards for Outstanding Studio Show – Weekly (1988, 1991, 1994, 1995, 2001, 2003 and 2007 seasons). Sunday NFL Countdown has also garnered five CableACEs (1989, 1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995).

Berman – a veteran of 42 Super Bowls, beginning with the 49ers’ first NFL Championship in Super Bowl XVI – began working alongside Tom Jackson on Sunday NFL Countdown in 1987 when ESPN first acquired the rights to carry the NFL. The 2015 NFL season was their 29th consecutive year working together, and they reunited for their 30th year together in 2019. The unheard of in TV mark is just one year shy of the longest duo – 31 years – Johnny Carson and Ed McMahon.

Berman and Jackson teamed together every Sunday night in the fall from 1987-2005 to host the critically-acclaimed NFL PrimeTime, which still holds the record as cable television’s highest-rated sports studio show. From 2006-2015, they delivered all the NFL highlights to fans during both the 7 p.m. edition of the Sunday night SportsCenter (with the late John Saunders and Trent Dilfer) and on “The Blitz” on the 11 p.m. SportsCenter (as PrimeTime moved to Mondays). From 2018-19, Berman and Jackson reunited on Championship Game editions of NFL PrimeTime. Then, in September 2019, they shepherded a triumphant return of the iconic highlights show to ESPN+. Berman continues to host NFL PrimeTime on ESPN+, since 2020 with Booger McFarland, and hosts editions airing on ESPN after the NFL conference championship games and the Super Bowl.

When Monday Night Football moved to ESPN in 2006, so did Berman’s signature weekly halftime highlights trip through the NFL, “The Fastest Three Minutes in Television.” It was a staple on Sunday Night Football for all 19 years (1987-2005), and continued on Monday Night Football and Monday Night Countdown through 2016. Then, during the 2019 NFL season, Berman and the “The Fastest Three Minutes” returned to Monday Night Football halftimes and remain a fundamental part of ESPN’s NFL game presentation.

In 2006, Berman traveled to the MNF city each week to host the Monday Night Countdown pre-game, halftime and post-game shows. For the next 10 years, he continued in a similar role from the ESPN studios. He also served as play-by-play announcer for MNF’s opening week doubleheader game with Hall of Fame quarterback Steve Young (2016) and Dilfer (2012-15). In two election years, Berman had the honor of conducting the final interviews with then-presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain (2008) and President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney (2012) during the MNF halftimes on election eve.

Berman was the halftime host for ABC Sports’ MNF from 1996-1999, and he served as host of the Monday Night Blast pre-game show in 1998. He also anchored ABC’s Wild Card Saturday from 1996-2005 and fulfilled the same role for ESPN when the network televised its first Wild Card playoff game in 2015. Berman also hosted special editions of Postseason NFL Countdown before the 2016 and 2017 Wild Card games on ESPN, which were simulcast on ABC.

In 2000, 2003 and 2006, Berman anchored ABC’s Super Bowl XXXIV, XXXVII and XL pre-game shows working alongside the likes of Young and Jackson, two of his regular ESPN partners.

The pre-eminent NFL host, Berman serves as Master of Ceremony for the prestigious Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinement Ceremony, spanning more than two decades, starting in 1999. The only one he missed was 2009 when he enjoyed the rare and distinguished honor of presenting Buffalo Bills owner Ralph Wilson, Jr. during the enshrinement ceremony, an experience surpassed only by being honored himself with the Rozelle Television-Radio Award in Canton in 2010. He considers these events to be among the most precious and unexpected opportunities of his distinguished pro football broadcasting career. Four others rank with them: being ESPN’s lone reporter at the historic 1981 NFC Championship game when Dwight Clark and Joe Montana authored “The Catch”; serving as master of ceremonies at Hall of Fame 49ers coach Bill Walsh’s public remembrance in 2007, also at Candlestick Park, per the Walsh family’s wishes; having emceed Don Shula’s retirement gala in 1996 per Coach Shula’s wishes; and providing the impetus for Patriots’ coach Bill Belichick to allow quarterback Doug Flutie to convert a drop-kick in the 2005 season finale. It was the NFL’s first drop-kick since 1941.

Berman anchored ESPN’s annual NFL Draft telecast for 30 years (1987-2016) and took part in the overall coverage of the draft from 1981-2016. He also hosted ESPN’s two-hour documentary presentation in 2009 of The Greatest Game Ever Played highlighting the legendary 1958 NFL Championship Game between the Colts and Giants.

The “Swami,” Berman’s prognosticating alter-ego, provided weekly NFL predictions and observations on SportsCenter since ESPN’s very first year in 1979. He is proud to say that in 2016, the final full season of “The Swami,” he registered his best regular season record ever, finishing 51-32. To cap it off, Berman’s Super Bowl LI prediction of New England by 6 over Atlanta ended up exactly right, as the Patriots’ epic comeback resulted in a 34-28 win in overtime.

In January 2017, following the final Sunday NFL Countdown show Berman hosted in Bristol, Conn., ESPN fittingly renamed the NFL studio in its Digital Center 2 “The Chris Berman-Tom Jackson studio.” Recognizing their mark of 29 consecutive years together, a plaque displayed outside the studio reads in part: “Their 29-year on-air partnership is a sports television record that has earned them a special place in the hearts and minds of football fans everywhere.”

In addition to his wide-ranging role in ESPN’s NFL coverage, Berman also served as a play-by-play commentator for ESPN Major League Baseball games from 1990-2006, including division playoff coverage from 1996-2006. For 31 years (1986-2016), Berman was the play-by-play voice for the Home Run Derby. He covered 31 All-Star games and 30 World Series for ESPN, including the 1989 San Francisco Earthquake. He also hosted Baseball Tonight since its inception, the network’s nightly compendium of Major League Baseball highlights, news and features that won a Sports Emmy in 2003.

Additionally, ESPN’s NFL Voices of the Game series in 1995 afforded Berman the chance to announce a game with Curt Gowdy and another with Ernie Harwell. He regards these games as career high-water marks.

From 1986-2014, Berman covered the U.S. Open, a role that he relished, including the “NFL PrimeTime of golf,” the nightly U.S. Open highlights show. In 2003, he added play-by-play duties for ESPN’s coverage of the first and second rounds of the U.S. Open to his host role.

Always looking to broaden his reach, Berman brought his passion and appreciation for hockey to the 2003 and 2004 Stanley Cup Playoffs as co-host of telecasts on ESPN and ABC with his good friend, the late John Saunders.

As a studio host, anchor and commentator, Berman is known for balancing in-depth reporting with ample amounts of humor and ebullience. “Sports should be fun, and I want viewers to share in the enjoyment I get from the games. But I also owe it to those same viewers to be thoroughly prepared and to know what I’m talking about,” Berman said, “or not talking about.” Berman received perhaps his most praise when he and analyst Buck Martinez chose not to speak during the 22-minute celebration in the Ripken game.

Berman is famous for his use of nicknames while voicing over Major League Baseball highlights. Throughout his career, he has been praised by the media, viewers and players across the country for his lighthearted and humorous approach. Berman’s personal favorites from the more than 1,000 monikers he has coined include: Roberto “Remember the” Alomar, Bert “Be Home” Blyleven, Jim “Two Silhouettes On” Deshaies, and Fred “Crime Dog” McGriff, just a sampling of names that often reflect his interest in history and music. Some of his favorite NFL nicknames are: Andre “Bad Moon” Rison, Curtis “My Favorite” Martin, Steve “I’ve Got You Babe” Bono and Chris Fuamatu “Bad” Ma’afala.

Berman regularly hosted SportsCenter in ESPN’s first 11 years, culminating in the network’s first SportCenter Emmy Award in 1990. Berman established his craft working the overnight shift during ESPN’s first four years, often teaming with his good friend, the late Tom Mees. Berman also appears on ESPN Radio during the football and baseball seasons.

“I want to be George Brett, Cal Ripken, the late Tony Gwynn and the late Walter Payton. I want to retire with the team I came in with. Once I go anywhere else, I’m a mercenary. I’m so proud to be one of the folks who helped lay the foundation here.” To that end, Berman has signed multi-year extensions in January 2017 and May 2021.

Shortly after the company announced Berman’s current role in 2017, ESPN aired a one-hour special – Chris Berman: He Did Go All The Way – to celebrate his myriad achievements and highlight the grand imprint he has had at ESPN, throughout the media industry and among sports fans all over the world.

Berman’s role keeps him as a strong presence on ESPN’s NFL coverage. He hosts NFL PrimeTime on ESPN+ and “The Fastest Three Minutes” during Monday Night Football halftimes. In 2019, Berman selected and counted down his top 50 plays of all time in celebration of the NFL’s 100th season. Berman also files interviews and features for Sunday NFL Countdown. He also previously did play-by-play of MLB divisional playoffs on ESPN Radio, takes part in the ESPYS and has other assignments of note.

Other Honors
In addition to the NSSA Awards, Berman was honored in 1990, 1992, 1994 and 1996 with CableACE Awards as cable’s best sports host. Also, he was part of the SportsCenter team that won the CableACE in 1990. In 1995, 1996 and 1997, Berman was named “Sportscaster of the Year” in the Studio Host category by the American Sportscasters Association. The Cable Guide readers voted him “Best Cable Sportscaster” in 1987, 1988 and 1990; TV Guide chose him as one of the “Top Stars of the 90s”; People magazine named him one of “TV’s Most Fascinating Stars” of 1997; and he was profiled by 60 Minutes Sports in 2013. He has also received 11 Emmy nominations as best sports host in 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2008 and 2010. Berman was named in 2008 to the CableFAX Hall of Fame as a member of the inaugural class of inductees. In 1992, the syndicated “NFL Pre-Season Special” surveyed NFL players on their favorite football commentator and 43 percent, an overwhelming majority, selected Berman. He was also listed on The Sporting News’ Top 100 Most Powerful People in Sports in 1995 and 2005. In 2005, the readers of SI for Kids chose Berman second as most favorite sportscaster, behind only John Madden.

On May 24, 2010, Berman was honored by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame as a tribute for his more than 30 years contributing to the sports television industry.

A long-time aficionado of rock and roll, Berman has appeared on stage singing with Huey Lewis and the News more than a dozen times. In addition, he sang twice with the late Eddie Money, appeared in a video with Hootie and the Blowfish, and was joined by the late Glenn Frey of the Eagles for a special “Hotel California” Super Bowl edition of “The Swami.” He was blown away when he was twice summoned on stage by Doors’ guitarist Robby Krieger to sing “Light My Fire” with Krieger’s all-star band.

Berman is also a golf enthusiast and has played many Pro-Ams on the PGA Tour. Through the years, his professional partners have combined to win 46 majors.

Berman has played himself in 15 motion pictures: The Longest Yard, Little Big League, Necessary Roughness, Draft Day, The Waterboy, Grown Ups 2, Tracktown, Eddie, The Garbage Picking Field Goal Kicking Philadelphia Phenomenon, Big Daddy, Second String, Even Steven, Kingpin, The Program, Celtic Pride – and on several television shows including Sesame Street, Spin City, The Jersey and Arli$$.  He has also appeared on Late Night with David Letterman, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Jimmy Kimmel Live.

In 1986, while working at ESPN, Berman also provided daily weekday sports commentaries for KFRC-Radio in San Francisco and, in 1987, for WFAN-Radio in New York.

In September of 1999, Berman was honored by his boyhood team, the San Francisco Giants, with the privilege of throwing out the first pitch at one of the final games ever at historic Candlestick Park. He also hosted ESPN’s coverage of the final 49ers game at Candlestick Park, including a post-game ceremony on December 23, 2013. Berman is proud to say he’s the only guy East of the Rockies to have a patch of outfield grass from both Candlestick Park and Oracle Park growing in his backyard. In March of 2018, the Giants extended a rare invitation to Berman to guest manage an entire spring training game, which he did, albeit in a hard-fought loss to their archrival Dodgers. He was invited back in March 2019, and this time “his” Giants beat the Royals in a reprise of their last World Series championship. Berman gives full credit to his “bench coach” Bruce Bochy.

Berman is also honored to have a tree statue carved in his likeness along with 30 others closely identified with Buffalo. It stands near statues of Jim Kelly and Andre Reed in front of The Big Tree Inn near New Era Field, proving that no one circles the wagons like the Buffalo Bills.

Before ESPN
Berman graduated from Brown University in 1977 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history. His first broadcasting position came while he was a student at Brown as sports director for WBRU Radio and commentator for basketball, football, ice hockey and baseball games. He also assisted with NBC Sports telecasts in New England – including the memorable Game 6 of the 1975 World Series – and served as a correspondent for WEAN, a Providence, R.I. news radio station. In November 1991, he was inducted into the Brown University Athletic Hall of Fame, and in May 2007 he received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from his alma mater.

Berman began his career as a disc jockey at WERI in Westerly, RI, hosting a news-oriented talk show and covering high school football and basketball games. One year later, he joined WNVR Radio in Waterbury, Conn., broadcasting high school football games, co-hosting a sports talk show and doing traffic reports.

Berman’s first television exposure came in 1979 when he joined WVIT-TV, an NBC affiliate in Hartford, Conn., as a weekend sports anchor.

Berman, born May 10, 1955, resides in his native Connecticut. Tragically, his wife of almost 34 years, Kathy, was killed in an automobile accident on May 9, 2017. They have two grown children, Meredith and Doug, and two grandsons, Kit and Wyatt.

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