List of NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament Final Four broadcasters

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Since 2010, the NCAA has had a joint contract with CBS and Warner Bros. Discovery. The coverage of the tournament is split between CBS, TNT, TBS, and truTV.[1]

Broadcasters from CBS, TBS, and TNT's sports coverage are shared across all four networks, with CBS' college basketball teams supplemented with TNT's NBA teams, while studio segments take place at the CBS Broadcast Center in New York City and TNT's studios in Atlanta. In the New York–based studio shows, CBS' Greg Gumbel and Clark Kellogg are joined by Kenny Smith, and Charles Barkley of TNT's Inside the NBA while Seth Davis and Jay Wright of CBS assist with Inside the NBA's Ernie Johnson, as well as Adam Lefkoe and Candace Parker of TNT's Tuesday night NBA coverage. While three of TNT's NBA voices, Kevin Harlan, Ian Eagle, and Spero Dedes are already employed by CBS in other capacities, TNT also lends analysts Stan Van Gundy, Jim Jackson, Grant Hill, and Steve Smith, secondary play-by-play man Brian Anderson, and reporters Allie LaForce and Lauren Shehadi, the latter being from TBS's MLB coverage, to CBS. In turn, CBS announcers Brad Nessler, Andrew Catalon, and Tom McCarthy appear on WBD network broadcasts along with analysts Jim Spanarkel, Bill Raftery, Dan Bonner, Steve Lappas, Brendan Haywood, and Avery Johnson, as well as reporters Tracy Wolfson, Evan Washburn, A. J. Ross, and Jon Rothstein, and rules analyst Gene Steratore. Announcers from other networks like Lisa Byington and Robbie Hummel from Fox, the latter also working for Peacock and Big Ten Network, Debbie Antonelli from ESPN, Jamie Erdahl from NFL Network, and Andy Katz from NCAA.com are also lent to CBS and TNT.

The current contract runs through 2032 and, for the first time in history, provides for the nationwide broadcast each year of all games of the tournament. All First Four games air on truTV. A featured first- or second-round game in each time "window" is broadcast on CBS, while all other games are shown either on TBS, TNT or truTV. The regional semifinals, better known as the Sweet Sixteen, are split between CBS and TBS. CBS had the exclusive rights to the regional finals, also known as the Elite Eight, through 2014. That exclusivity extended to the entire Final Four as well, but after the 2013 tournament Turner Sports elected to exercise a contractual option for 2014 and 2015 giving TBS broadcast rights to the national semifinal matchups.[2] CBS kept its national championship game rights.[2]

Since 2015, CBS and TBS split coverage of the Elite Eight. Since 2016, CBS and TBS alternate coverage of the Final Four and national championship game, with TBS getting the final two rounds in even-numbered years, and CBS getting the games in odd-numbered years. March Madness On Demand would remain unchanged, although Turner was allowed to develop their own service.[3]

Television[edit]

Date Network Location Play-by-play announcer Color commentator(s) Sideline reporter(s) Rules analyst(s) Studio host Studio analyst(s)
1963 SNI[4][5] Freedom Hall (Louisville, Kentucky) Bill Flemming
1964 SNI Municipal Auditorium (Kansas City, Missouri) Bill Flemming Keith Jackson
1965 SNI Memorial Coliseum (Portland, Oregon) Bill Flemming
1966 SNI Cole Field House (College Park, Maryland) Bill Flemming Frank Sims
1967 SNI Freedom Hall (Louisville, Kentucky) Bill Flemming Frank Sims
1968 SNI Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (Los Angeles, California) Bill Flemming Frank Sims
1969[6][7] NBC[8] Freedom Hall (Louisville, Kentucky) Curt Gowdy Jim Simpson
1970 NBC Cole Field House (College Park, Maryland) Curt Gowdy Jim Simpson
1971 NBC Astrodome (Houston, Texas) Curt Gowdy Tom Hawkins
1972 NBC Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (Los Angeles, California) Curt Gowdy Tom Hawkins
1973 NBC St. Louis Arena (St. Louis, Missouri) Curt Gowdy Tom Hawkins Jim Simpson
1974 NBC Greensboro Coliseum (Greensboro, North Carolina) Curt Gowdy Tom Hawkins
1975 NBC San Diego Sports Arena (San Diego, California) Curt Gowdy Billy Packer Jim Simpson Tim Ryan Al McGuire
1976 NBC Spectrum (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) Dick Enberg Curt Gowdy John Wooden Bryant Gumbel and Lee Leonard Billy Packer
1977 NBC The Omni (Atlanta, Georgia) Curt Gowdy and Dick Enberg Billy Packer Bryant Gumbel
1978 NBC The Checkerdome (St. Louis, Missouri) Dick Enberg (Kentucky vs Arkansas and Duke vs Kentucky)
Curt Gowdy (Duke vs Notre Dame)
Billy Packer and Al McGuire Bryant Gumbel
1979 NBC Jon M. Huntsman Center (Salt Lake City, Utah) Dick Enberg Billy Packer and Al McGuire John Wooden Bryant Gumbel
1980 NBC Market Square Arena (Indianapolis, Indiana) Dick Enberg Billy Packer and Al McGuire John Wooden Bryant Gumbel
1981 NBC Spectrum (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) Dick Enberg Billy Packer and Al McGuire John Wooden Bryant Gumbel
1982[9] CBS Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Gary Bender Billy Packer Brent Musburger
1983 CBS University Arena (Albuquerque, New Mexico) Gary Bender Billy Packer Brent Musburger
1984 CBS Kingdome (Seattle, Washington) Gary Bender Billy Packer Brent Musburger
1985 CBS Rupp Arena (Lexington, Kentucky) Brent Musburger Billy Packer Dick Stockton
1986 CBS Reunion Arena (Dallas, Texas) Brent Musburger Billy Packer Jim Nantz
1987 CBS Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Brent Musburger Billy Packer James Brown Jim Nantz
1988 CBS Kemper Arena (Kansas City, Missouri) Brent Musburger Billy Packer James Brown Jim Nantz
1989 CBS Kingdome (Seattle, Washington) Brent Musburger Billy Packer Lesley Visser and James Brown Jim Nantz and James Brown
1990 CBS McNichols Sports Arena (Denver, Colorado) Brent Musburger Billy Packer Lesley Visser Jim Nantz Mike Francesa
1991[10] CBS Hoosier Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Lesley Visser and James Brown Pat O'Brien Mike Francesa
1992 CBS Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Lesley Visser and James Brown Pat O'Brien Mike Francesa
1993 CBS Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Lesley Visser and Jim Gray Pat O'Brien John Thompson (Semifinals only) and Mike Krzyzewski
1994 CBS Charlotte Coliseum (Charlotte, North Carolina) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Jim Gray Pat O'Brien Rick Pitino (Semifinals only) and Dean Smith
1995 CBS Kingdome (Seattle, Washington) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Michele Tafoya Pat O'Brien Mike Krzyzewski, Quinn Buckner and John Wooden
1996 CBS Continental Airlines Arena (East Rutherford, New Jersey) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Michele Tafoya and Andrea Joyce Pat O'Brien Quinn Buckner, Mike Krzyzewski and Jim Harrick
1997 CBS RCA Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Michele Tafoya and Andrea Joyce Pat O'Brien Clark Kellogg and Mike Krzyzewski
1998 CBS Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Michele Tafoya and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Dean Smith
1999 CBS Tropicana Field (St. Petersburg, Florida) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Bonnie Bernstein and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Rick Majerus
2000 CBS RCA Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Bonnie Bernstein and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Bobby Cremins
2001 CBS Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Bonnie Bernstein and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Bill Walton
2002 CBS Georgia Dome (Atlanta, Georgia) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Bonnie Bernstein and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg
2003 CBS Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Bonnie Bernstein and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Tom Izzo
2004 CBS Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Bonnie Bernstein and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis
2005 CBS Edward Jones Dome (St. Louis, Missouri) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Bonnie Bernstein and Armen Keteyian Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis
2006 CBS RCA Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Dan Bonner Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis
2007 CBS Georgia Dome (Atlanta, Georgia) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Sam Ryan Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis
2008 CBS Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) Jim Nantz Billy Packer Sam Ryan Greg Gumbel Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis
2009 CBS Ford Field (Detroit, Michigan) Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel Greg Anthony and Seth Davis
2010 CBS Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana) Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel Greg Anthony and Seth Davis
2011 CBS Reliant Stadium (Houston, Texas) Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg and Steve Kerr Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel Greg Anthony, Seth Davis, Kenny Smith, and Charles Barkley
2012 CBS Mercedes-Benz Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg and Steve Kerr Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel Greg Anthony, Seth Davis, Kenny Smith, and Charles Barkley
2013 CBS Georgia Dome (Atlanta, Georgia) Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg and Steve Kerr Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel Greg Anthony, Doug Gottlieb, Kenny Smith, and Charles Barkley
2014 CBS (championship game)
TBS (national semifinals)
AT&T Stadium (Arlington, Texas) Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg and Steve Kerr Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Grant Hill, and Reggie Miller
2015 CBS (championship game)
TBS (national semifinals)
Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Grant Hill, and Reggie Miller
2016 TBS NRG Stadium (Houston, Texas) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Steve Smith, and Reggie Miller
2017 CBS University of Phoenix Stadium (Glendale, Arizona) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Steve Smith, and Jay Wright
2018 TBS Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Brendan Haywood, Candace Parker, Christian Laettner, Danny Manning, and Kris Jenkins
2019 CBS U.S. Bank Stadium (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Gene Steratore Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Candace Parker, Wally Szczerbiak, and Jay Wright
2020 Not held because of the COVID-19 pandemic
2021 CBS Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Gene Steratore Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Candace Parker, and Jim Jackson
2022 TBS
TNT
truTV
Caesars Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Gene Steratore Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Candace Parker, and Bobby Hurley
2023 CBS NRG Stadium (Houston, Texas) Jim Nantz Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Gene Steratore Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Jay Wright, Seth Davis, and Candace Parker
2024 TBS
TNT
truTV
State Farm Stadium (Glendale, Arizona) Ian Eagle Bill Raftery and Grant Hill Tracy Wolfson Gene Steratore Ernie Johnson and Adam Lefkoe Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, Jay Wright, Seth Davis, and Candace Parker

Notes[edit]

1960s[edit]

  • In 1962, ABC showed the NCAA Championship Game on a one-day delayed basis, as part of Wide World of Sports.
  • From 1969 to 1972, both the Consolation (3rd place) Game and the Championship Game were televised on Saturday afternoon as a doubleheader. In 1969 and 1970, Curt Gowdy and Jim Simpson reversed roles for the telecast; Gowdy called the title game and Simpson earlier called the "consy." In 1973, the final was moved to Monday night,[11] and the consy was no longer televised. In 1982, the consy game was dropped altogether.
  • Prior to 1969, the NCAA Championship was never on live network television. However, the one-time rival NIT tourney had been on CBS for many years in the 1960s and well into the 1970s. Before the NCAA allowed conferences to receive multiple bids in 1975, the NIT fielded some high-quality tournaments.

1970s[edit]

1980s[edit]

  • 1982 marked the first year that the Selection Show was broadcast.
  • 1987 marked the first year that CBS used the song "One Shining Moment" for its tournament epilogue.
  • In 1989, Lesley Visser became the first woman to cover the Final Four.

1990s[edit]

  • The 1990 Championship Game marked Brent Musburger's final assignment for CBS Sports as he was dismissed (under great controversy) just a day earlier (April 1).
  • CBS did not use a sideline reporter for the 1994 Championship Game.

2000s[edit]

2010s[edit]

2020s[edit]

  •  †  Expected announcer, subject to change.

See also[edit]

Radio[edit]

National[edit]

Date Network Location Play-by-play announcer Color commentator(s) Sideline reporter(s) Studio host Studio analyst(s)
1979[21] NBC Radio Special Events Center (Salt Lake City, Utah) Cawood Ledford Bobby Knight Jack O’Rourke
1982 CBS Radio Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Cawood Ledford Curt Gowdy
1983 CBS Radio University Arena (Albuquerque, New Mexico) Cawood Ledford Curt Gowdy Jim Kelly
1984 CBS Radio Kingdome (Seattle, Washington) Dick Stockton (semifinal and championship)
John Rooney (semifinal)
Dave Gavitt and Curt Gowdy
1985 CBS Radio Rupp Arena (Lexington, Kentucky) Cawood Ledford (semifinal and championship)
John Rooney (semifinal)
Dave Gavitt and Curt Gowdy
1989 CBS Radio Kingdome (Seattle, Washington) Cawood Ledford (semifinal and championship)
John Rooney (semifinal)
Ron Franklin (semifinal)
Quinn Buckner (semifinal and championship)
Ron Franklin
1990 CBS Radio McNichols Sports Arena (Denver, Colorado) Cawood Ledford (semifinal and championship)
John Rooney (semifinal)
Ron Franklin (semifinal)
Quinn Buckner (semifinal and championship)
Ron Franklin
1991 CBS Radio Hoosier Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) Cawood Ledford (semifinal and championship)
John Rooney (semifinal)
Ron Franklin (semifinal)
Quinn Buckner (semifinal and championship)
1992 CBS Radio Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Cawood Ledford (semifinal and championship)
John Rooney (semifinal)
Quinn Buckner
1993 CBS Radio Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) John Rooney Bill Raftery
1994 CBS Radio Charlotte Coliseum (Charlotte, North Carolina) John Rooney Bill Raftery
1995 CBS Radio Kingdome (Seattle, Washington) John Rooney (UCLA-Oklahoma State and Championship Game)
Marty Brennaman (Arkansas-North Carolina)
Bill Raftery (UCLA-Oklahoma State and Championship Game)
Ron Franklin (Arkansas-North Carolina)
1996 CBS Radio Continental Airlines Arena (East Rutherford, New Jersey) John Rooney (semifinal and championship)
Marty Brennaman (semifinal)
Bill Raftery (semifinal and championship)
Ron Franklin (semifinal)
1997 CBS Radio RCA Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) John Rooney (semifinal and championship)
Marty Brennaman (semifinal)
Bill Raftery (semifinal and championship)
Ron Franklin (semifinal)
1998 Westwood One Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) John Rooney (semifinal and championship)
Marty Brennaman (semifinal)
Bill Raftery (Semifinal and Championship)
Ron Franklin (Semifinal)
1999 Westwood One Tropicana Field (St. Petersburg, Florida) John Rooney (Duke-Michigan State and Connecticut-Duke)
Marty Brennaman (Connecticut-Ohio State)
Bill Raftery (Duke-Michigan State and Connecticut-Duke)
Ron Franklin (Connecticut-Ohio State)
Ron Franklin
2000 Westwood One RCA Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) John Rooney (semifinal and championship)
Marty Brennaman (semifinal)
Bill Raftery (semifinal and championship)
Dave Gavitt (semifinal)
Tommy Tighe
2001 Westwood One Metrodome (Minneapolis, Minnesota) John Rooney (semifinal and championship)
Marty Brennaman (semifinal)
Bill Raftery (semifinal and championship)
Dave Gavitt (semifinal)
Tommy Tighe
2002 Westwood One Georgia Dome (Atlanta, Georgia) John Rooney (semifinal and championship)
Marty Brennaman (semifinal)
Bill Raftery (semifinal and championship)
Ron Franklin (semifinal)
Jim Gray Dave Sims
2003 Westwood One Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Kevin Harlan John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray
2004 Westwood One Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) Kevin Harlan John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray
2005[22] Westwood One Edward Jones Dome (St. Louis, Missouri) Kevin Harlan John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray John Tautges
2006[23] Westwood One RCA Dome (Indianapolis, Indiana) Kevin Harlan John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray John Tautges
2007[24] Westwood One Georgia Dome (Atlanta, Georgia) Kevin Harlan John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray Tommy Tighe
2008 Westwood One Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray Tommy Tighe
2009 Westwood One Ford Field (Detroit, Michigan) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray Tommy Tighe
2010 Westwood One Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray John Tautges Bill Walton
2011 Westwood One Reliant Stadium (Houston, Texas) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray John Tautges Bill Walton
2012 Dial Global Mercedes-Benz Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray John Tautges Bill Walton
2013 Dial Global Georgia Dome (Atlanta, Georgia) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray John Tautges Bill Walton
2014 Westwood One AT&T Stadium (Arlington, Texas) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Jim Gray Jason Horowitz Bill Walton
2015 Westwood One Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana) Kevin Kugler Clark Kellogg Jim Gray Jason Horowitz Bill Walton
2016 Westwood One NRG Stadium (Houston, Texas) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Clark Kellogg Jim Gray Jason Horowitz Bill Walton
2017 Westwood One University of Phoenix Stadium (Glendale, Arizona) Kevin Kugler Clark Kellogg Jim Gray Jason Horowitz Bill Walton
2018 Westwood One Alamodome (San Antonio, Texas) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Clark Kellogg Jim Gray Jason Horowitz Bill Walton
2019 Westwood One U.S. Bank Stadium (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Clark Kellogg Jim Gray Jason Horowitz Bill Walton
2020 Not held because of the COVID-19 pandemic
2021 Westwood One Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, Indiana) Kevin Kugler Jim Jackson and P. J. Carlesimo Jim Gray Jason Horowitz
2022 Westwood One Caesars Superdome (New Orleans, Louisiana) Kevin Kugler P. J. Carlesimo and Clark Kellogg Andy Katz Jason Horowitz Bill Walton and Doug Gottlieb
2023 Westwood One NRG Stadium (Houston, Texas) Kevin Kugler Jim Jackson and Clark Kellogg Andy Katz Jason Horowitz Bill Walton, P. J. Carlesimo, and Doug Gottlieb
2024 Westwood One State Farm Stadium (Glendale, Arizona) Kevin Kugler Jim Jackson and Clark Kellogg Andy Katz Jason Horowitz P. J. Carlesimo and Doug Gottlieb

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "CBS Sports, Turner Broadcasting, NCAA Reach 14-Year Agreement" (Press release). National Collegiate Athletic Association. April 22, 2010. Archived from the original on 2013-11-09. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
  2. ^ a b DeCourcy, Mike (May 7, 2013). "Putting Final Four games on cable saved college hoops from 96-team mess". Sporting News. Retrieved May 13, 2013.
  3. ^ "CBS, Turner win TV rights to tourney". ESPN. 22 April 2010. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
  4. ^ SNI endeared itself forever to basketball fans when it covered the NCAA final from Louisville in 1963, the year Loyola of Chicago rallied in the second half to upset presumably invincible Cincinnati. This telecast came up with an upset of its own. It went on against Have Gun, Will Travel and Gunsmoke and beat them both in the ratings. Archived October 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Mar 20, 1963 – nament for the national basketball championship Saturday night will be telecast nationally for the first time since 1954. A spokesman for the said Sports Network Inc an independent company which bought package telecast rights for the 1963 tournament expects up to 140 television ...
  6. ^ "TV coverage history of the NCAA Tournament (1969–present)". Classic Sports TV and Media. 18 March 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  7. ^ "Chronology of NCAA Tournament TV coverage (1969–1981)". Classic Sports TV and Media. 19 February 2012. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  8. ^ O'Malley, Kevin (April 4, 2021). "How CBS snared the NCAA Tourney rights from NBC 40 years ago – in a competitive world of 3 networks". Sports Broadcast Journal.
  9. ^ "Chronology of NCAA Tournament TV coverage (1982–1990)". Classic Sports TV and Media. 26 February 2012. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  10. ^ "Chronology of NCAA Tournament TV coverage (1991–2011)". Classic Sports TV and Media. 11 March 2012. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  11. ^ "The first NBC prime time NCAA basketball title game". Classic Sports TV and Media. 26 March 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  12. ^ Sports Media Watch: National Championship numbers game.
  13. ^ "Magic vs. Bird – the 1979 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship". NBC Sports History Page.
  14. ^ The Associated Press: Packer out, Kellogg in as CBS lead hoops announcer [dead link]
  15. ^ ESPN to snag the Final Four? Don Surber, Charleston Daily Mail (West Virginia)
  16. ^ NCAA Mens Basketball Tournament Expands To 68 Teams; CBS Adds Turner To Television Team (press release via TV by the Numbers) Archived 2010-05-01 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ "CBS/Turner Announces 2014 NCAA Men's Final Four Broadcast Plans ☆". Fangs Bites. April 1, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  18. ^ "The Final Four Teamcasts Will Return In 2015". Awful Announcing. February 9, 2015. Retrieved February 9, 2015.
  19. ^ "TNT/truTV Final Four Teamcasts To Be Branded "Team Stream by Bleacher Report"". Awful Announcing. March 26, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  20. ^ "This Year's Team Stream Final Four Announcers Are Revealed". Awful Announcing. March 31, 2015. Retrieved March 31, 2015.
  21. ^ "Great Games in NCAA Tournament History by Westwood One: 1979 National Championship". Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  22. ^ "Radio Ink Magazine". Archived from the original on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 2009-02-05.
  23. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-10-27. Retrieved 2009-02-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  24. ^ http://images.westwoodone.com/images/pdf/2007%20NCAA%20Announcers.pdf[permanent dead link]