Jim Gray (sportscaster)

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Gray at the Boardwalk Hall on June 4, 2011

Jim Gray is an American sportscaster. He is currently with Showtime, Fox, and Westwood One radio network. He has previously worked as a reporter with ESPN, NBC Sports and CBS Sports. He provided NBC with commentary during the 2008 Summer Olympics.

Biography

Notable events covered and athletes interviewed

Gray has worked on many major sporting events including the live network broadcast of numerous Super Bowls, World Series, NBA Finals, NCAA Final Fours, Olympics, The Masters and World Boxing Title Fights. Gray has broken numerous sports stories and has scored a number of exclusive interviews with Muhammad Ali, John Elway, Julius Erving, Mike Tyson, Kobe Bryant, Joe Montana, Eric Dickerson, Carl Lewis, Michael Phelps, Ron Artest, Dennis Rodman, Tom Brady, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Floyd Mayweather, Jr., Barry Bonds, LeBron James and others. Gray has won 11 National Emmy Awards and has twice been named the Sports Reporter of the Year by the ASA. He was awarded the Sports Broadcast of the Year in 1997 by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association (NSSA). Outside of sports, Gray has interviewed U.S. Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, G.W. Bush, Obama, and other world figures such as Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, U.S. Secretaries of State Madeleine Albright, Condoleezza Rice, and John Glenn. Gray has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Gray was named as one of the 50 Greatest Sports Broadcasters of All-Time by David Halberstam.

Gray was the sideline reporter for the Pacers–Pistons brawl in 2004. He was also the reporter on the air for Showtime for the Tyson/Holyfield fight in 1997 in which Tyson bit off Holyfield's earlobe. Gray also reported on the Olympic bombing from the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

Gray served as a reporter for NBC Sports coverage of Boxing at the 2008 Summer Olympics.[1]

Notable interviews

Gray has been known for his close relationship with Kobe Bryant, which showed in the immediate aftermath of Bryant's sexual assault case (the night when the news broke, Gray appeared on SportsCenter in defense of Bryant's character)[2] and in several sideline interviews. It was Gray whom Bryant called to vent about teammate Shaquille O'Neal in October of that year (a phone call that started one of O'Neal and Bryant's worst disagreements).[3] Gray's interviews with maligned baseball player Barry Bonds in 2006 and 2007 were the only one-on-one interviews Bonds granted after breaking both Babe Ruth's and Hank Aaron's home run records. In both interviews, he denied using steroids or other performance-enhancing drugs.

During the 1997 NBA Finals, Gray interviewed Dennis Rodman during an NBA on NBC segment. After repeatedly questioning Rodman about his comments about the Mormon religion when (the Chicago Bulls were in Salt Lake City to play the Jazz during the Finals), Rodman finally had enough of the questions, walked off the interview set with tears in his eyes and removed the microphone without assistance. NBC showed the ending of the interview as it happened during the NBA Finals pre-game show.

On June 24, 2000 in Glasgow, Scotland, Gray did the interview with Mike Tyson after his swift knockout of Lou Savarese where Tyson proclaimed he "wanted to eat (Lennox Lewis's) children."

On July 8, 2010, Gray interviewed LeBron James[4] when he revealed his 2010 decision to sign with the Miami Heat as a free agent on a live ESPN special called The Decision.

On August 13, 2011, following the Abner Mares vs. Joseph Agbeko boxing match for the WBC Silver and IBF Bantamweight championships, Gray interviewed match referee Russell Mora and confronted him about how he allowed Mares to get away with numerous low blows throughout the match, including a left hook to Agbeko's cup during the 11th round, which Mora ruled as a knockdown even though the blow was clearly visible to him.

The Pete Rose interview

The most notable interview of Gray's sportscasting career occurred with former baseball player Pete Rose. During Game 2 of the 1999 World Series, Rose was introduced as a member of the Major League Baseball All-Century Team. After the ceremony, Gray (who was covering the series for NBC) asked Rose about the Dowd Report's allegations that he had gambled on major league baseball games, which he repeatedly denied:

Jim Gray: Pete, let me ask you now. It seems as though there is an opening, the American public is very forgiving. Are you willing to show contrition, admit that you bet on baseball and make some sort of apology to that effect?

Pete Rose: Not at all, Jim. I'm not going to admit to something that didn't happen. I know you're getting tired of hearing me say that. But I appreciate the ovation. I appreciate the American fans voting me on the All-Century Team. I'm just a small part of a big deal tonight.

Gray: With the overwhelming evidence in that report, why not make that step...

Rose: No. This is too much of a festive night to worry about that because I don't know what evidence you're talking about. I mean, show it to me...

Gray: Well, the Dowd Report says- but we don't want to debate that, Pete.

Rose: Well, why not? Why do we want to believe everything he says?

Gray: You signed a paper acknowledging the ban. Why did you sign it if you didn't agree with it?

Rose: It also says I can apply for reinstatement after one year, if you remember correctly. In the press conference, as a matter of fact, my statement was "I can't wait for my little girl to be a year old so I can apply for reinstatement". At my press conference. So you forgot to add that clause that was in there.

Gray: Well, you have reapplied. ... You've applied for reinstatement in 1997. Have you heard back from Commissioner Selig?

Rose: No, and that kind of surprises me. It's only been two years, though, and he's got a lot of things on his mind. But I hope to some day.

Gray: Pete, it's been 10 years since you've been allowed on the field. Obviously, the approach that you have taken has not worked. Why not, at this point, take a different approach?

Rose: Well, when you say it hadn't worked, what do you exactly mean?

Gray: You're not allowed in baseball. You're not allowed to earn a living in the game you love. And you're not allowed to be in the Hall of Fame.

Rose: Well, I took that approach and that was to apply for reinstatement. I hope Bud Selig considers that and gives me an opportunity. I won't need a third chance. All I need is a second chance.

Gray: Pete, those who will hear this tonight will say you have been your own worst enemy and continue to be. How do you respond to that?

Rose: In what way are you talking about?

Gray: By not acknowledging what seems to be overwhelming evidence.

Rose: Yeah, I'm surprised you're bombarding me like this. I mean I'm doing an interview with you on a great night, a great occasion, a great ovation. Everybody seems to be in a good mood. And you're bringing up something that happened 10 years ago.

Gray: I'm bringing it up because I think people would like to see ... Pete, we've got to go, we've got a game.

Rose: This is a prosecutor's brief, not an interview, and I'm very surprised at you. I am, really.

Gray: Some would be surprised that you didn't take the opportunity.[5][6][7]

After conducting the interview, Gray offered no apology for his line of questioning toward Rose:

I stand by it, and I think it was absolutely a proper line of questioning. . . I don't have an agenda against Pete Rose . . . Pete was the one who started asking me questions. I definitely wouldn't have gone (that) direction if he had backed off. My intent was to give Pete an opportunity to address issues that have kept him out of baseball. I thought he might have had a change of heart. . . . He hadn't had an opening in 10 years. . . . If I had let that go, all of you (reporters) would have had me on here today for a totally different reason.[8]

However, after the heavy criticism heaped onto Gray and NBC, Gray did offer the following apology on-air prior to the start of Game 3:

(I) thought it was important to ask Pete Rose if this was the right moment for him to make an apology. If in doing so the interview went on too long and took some of the joy of the occasion, then I want to say to baseball fans everywhere that I am very sorry about this.[9]

Despite Gray's pre-game apology, New York Yankees outfielder Chad Curtis snubbed Gray's request for an on-field interview with him right after hitting the game-winning walk-off home run:

Jim Gray: Tell us about that pitch.
Chad Curtis: I can't do it. As a team, we kind of decided, because of what happened with Pete, we're not going to talk out here on the field.[10]

Curtis claimed it was a team decision not to speak with Gray, but Yankee manager Joe Torre later suggested that Curtis had acted independently.[11]

On January 8, 2004, more than four years after the interview, Rose's autobiography My Prison Without Bars was published. In that book, he finally admitted publicly to betting on baseball games.

CBS Sports and NBC Sports

Gray worked for CBS as a sideline reporter for coverage of the NFL, NBA, NCAA, and Major League Baseball. He also worked on the NFL Today studio show, and the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, and the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer. Prior to working at CBS, he worked for NBC Sports. His assignments included the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, and NFL Live. He returned to NBC Sports in 1994 working on the NFL, NBA, MLB, and the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, and the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.

Since 2000 Gray is the studio host for NFL Monday Night Football on Westwood One and the Super Bowl and a college basketball sideline reporter and host for the NCAA Final Four and National Championship for the network. Gray has also worked on the live radio broadcast coverage of The Masters for CBS Radio Sports and Westwood One since 1989.

References

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External links