Al Michaels’ play-by-play as sharp as ever

Roger Goodell exposed as a hypocrite with Jon Gruden mess

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If you were making a case for the greatest NFL TV play-by-player of all time, a good way to do it would be to call a record-tying 11th Super Bowl at age 77 — and pretty much nail it.

Al Michaels has outlasted everybody in NFL broadcasting history, outperformed them at this age and on the biggest stage.

Michaels has Tom Brady’d the competition with longevity and success. He’s been on the No. 1 prime-time game for more than three decades and now has tied Pat Summerall, having called 11 Super Bowls.

While Brady famously hasn’t seemingly eaten much of anything outside of avocados during his career, Michaels’ claims to have never consumed a vegetable. Whatever works when you are facing off with Father Time.

Michaels is losing his “Sunday Night Football” job to Mike Tirico, beginning next year. The plan has been in the offing, but Michaels has kept going and going.

And, even though NBC will mostly move on — there is a chance Michaels will still do a few games a year on the network, but not the biggest ones — Michaels plans to continue calling the NFL. He showed why Amazon and possibly ESPN want him still.

Al Michaels, play-by-play voice for NBC's Sunday Night Football, works on the sideline before a game between the Los Angeles Rams and the Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Dec. 8, 2019, in Los Angeles.
Al Michaels
AP

In the Rams’ 23-20 victory over the Bengals, Michaels’ words were on point from the first quarter through the fourth.

On the opening score of the game, Michaels said, “Third and three … Stafford … going to the end zone … reaching up and making the grab … Odell Beckham Jr.! … Halfway through the season, they showed him the door in Cleveland, they basically said, ‘Get out of here.’ The Rams took him and he scores the first touchdown of the Super Bowl.”

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