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Peter Kostis and Gary McCord have been axed by CBS

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end of an era. A friend of mine was "retired" from that network months ago..(audio-visual) after over 30 years with CBS..robotics the main cause..I did learn a few things from him...over 140 microphones are placed around the course.. you could be at a golf tournament one week and the middle east with a news crew the next..Johnny Miller was a favorite..talked to everyone..
 
end of an era. A friend of mine was "retired" from that network months ago..(audio-visual) after over 30 years with CBS..robotics the main cause..I did learn a few things from him...over 140 microphones are placed around the course.. you could be at a golf tournament one week and the middle east with a news crew the next..Johnny Miller was a favorite..talked to everyone..
I hate to hear it....the part about someone liking Johnny Miller. That guy is insufferable.

Will either really be missed?
 
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From Golf.com today: depending if he's subject to any kind of non-compete......which seems hard to believe if he indeed was fired/not renewed.....it won't surprise me in the least if he gets a call from Fox Sports (and assume TGC would hire him in a New York second if his salary demands were "reasonable").

Gary McCord explains why he is upset by how CBS Sports fired him

By Alan Bastable
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OCTOBER 28, 2019

Gary McCord has never been shy about his speaking his mind. That’s what helped make him a staple of the CBS Sports golf commentary team for more than 30 years.

That is, until last week when CBS dismissed McCord and two of his colleagues, Peter Kostis and Bill Macatee, from their duties.

Now, McCord is speaking his mind about how it all went down.

In an interview on the Gravy and The Sleeze show on SiriusXM PGA Tour radio Monday afternoon, McCord said two things most disappointed him about the network’s decision to not renew his contract.

First, McCord said he resents the reason that CBS Sports chairman Sean McManus cited for the shakeup. McCord said McManus told him in a phone call that CBS’s golf coverage had grown “stale.” McCord, who is known for his colorful personality and gregariousness, said he was miffed by that characterization, joking that he has been called many things over the years but “stale” has never been among them. When contacted by GOLF.com, CBS said the network has no comment.

“Stale did not work for me,” McCord told the show’s hosts, Drew Stoltz and former PGA Tour pro Colt Knost. “That kind of got me riled up a bit. … I didn’t like that at all.”

Secondly, McCord said that he was upset that his deal had been terminated without him having a chance to say goodbye to his CBS team. “I don’t like the fact that kind of set my balloon on fire without me going to back to my colleagues,” he said. McCord said that CBS did offer him the chance to work CBS’s first two tournaments of 2020, but “I felt that was for them and not for me.”

McCord, who has a home in Scottsdale, Ariz., said that in February he plans to attend the Waste Management Phoenix Open, where he’ll bid adieu to his former colleagues.

McCord said he first felt a sense of unease about his future with CBS when he heard from Kostis last Wednesday that the network was not renewing Kostis’ deal. Later that evening, McCord saw a message from the New York City area code.

“I look down and see voice message from 212,” he said. “Uh oh! Oh boy! I got stressed.”

It was McManus. McCord called him back.

“Gary,” McManus said, as McCord recalls the conversation, “this is the hardest thing I’ve had to do in a long, long time.”

After processing McManus’s explanation, McCord, who is 71, says he believes the network wants to bring in younger talent, in part to help facilitate the PGA Tour’s stated interest in attracting new audience via gambling. “The Tour can’t exist with a 1. 2 rating on Saturday and a 1.8 on Sunday,” he said. “They’ve got to find another direction and gambling is it. Who do you hire?”

That is the question CBS must now address, if it hasn’t already.

In the meantime, McCord said he’s going to “sit back and have some fun and not get in an airplane for the first time in 51 years.”

Which isn’t to say that doing nothing is a long-term option for a guy like McCord.

“No one wants to be around me a lot,” he joked. “I’ve got to find something to do.”

McCord stressed that despite being caught off guard by CBS, he is appreciative of the opportunities the job has afforded him: “I cannot tell how lucky I am to work for CBS Sports for all these years and watch the best golfer in the business, Tiger Woods, go about his work for all these years.”

 
From Golf.com today: depending if he's subject to any kind of non-compete......which seems hard to believe if he indeed was fired/not renewed.....it won't surprise me in the least if he gets a call from Fox Sports (and assume TGC would hire him in a New York second if his salary demands were "reasonable").

Gary McCord explains why he is upset by how CBS Sports fired him

By Alan Bastable
svg-divider.png

OCTOBER 28, 2019

Gary McCord has never been shy about his speaking his mind. That’s what helped make him a staple of the CBS Sports golf commentary team for more than 30 years.

That is, until last week when CBS dismissed McCord and two of his colleagues, Peter Kostis and Bill Macatee, from their duties.

Now, McCord is speaking his mind about how it all went down.

In an interview on the Gravy and The Sleeze show on SiriusXM PGA Tour radio Monday afternoon, McCord said two things most disappointed him about the network’s decision to not renew his contract.

First, McCord said he resents the reason that CBS Sports chairman Sean McManus cited for the shakeup. McCord said McManus told him in a phone call that CBS’s golf coverage had grown “stale.” McCord, who is known for his colorful personality and gregariousness, said he was miffed by that characterization, joking that he has been called many things over the years but “stale” has never been among them. When contacted by GOLF.com, CBS said the network has no comment.

“Stale did not work for me,” McCord told the show’s hosts, Drew Stoltz and former PGA Tour pro Colt Knost. “That kind of got me riled up a bit. … I didn’t like that at all.”

Secondly, McCord said that he was upset that his deal had been terminated without him having a chance to say goodbye to his CBS team. “I don’t like the fact that kind of set my balloon on fire without me going to back to my colleagues,” he said. McCord said that CBS did offer him the chance to work CBS’s first two tournaments of 2020, but “I felt that was for them and not for me.”

McCord, who has a home in Scottsdale, Ariz., said that in February he plans to attend the Waste Management Phoenix Open, where he’ll bid adieu to his former colleagues.

McCord said he first felt a sense of unease about his future with CBS when he heard from Kostis last Wednesday that the network was not renewing Kostis’ deal. Later that evening, McCord saw a message from the New York City area code.

“I look down and see voice message from 212,” he said. “Uh oh! Oh boy! I got stressed.”

It was McManus. McCord called him back.

“Gary,” McManus said, as McCord recalls the conversation, “this is the hardest thing I’ve had to do in a long, long time.”

After processing McManus’s explanation, McCord, who is 71, says he believes the network wants to bring in younger talent, in part to help facilitate the PGA Tour’s stated interest in attracting new audience via gambling. “The Tour can’t exist with a 1. 2 rating on Saturday and a 1.8 on Sunday,” he said. “They’ve got to find another direction and gambling is it. Who do you hire?”

That is the question CBS must now address, if it hasn’t already.

In the meantime, McCord said he’s going to “sit back and have some fun and not get in an airplane for the first time in 51 years.”

Which isn’t to say that doing nothing is a long-term option for a guy like McCord.

“No one wants to be around me a lot,” he joked. “I’ve got to find something to do.”

McCord stressed that despite being caught off guard by CBS, he is appreciative of the opportunities the job has afforded him: “I cannot tell how lucky I am to work for CBS Sports for all these years and watch the best golfer in the business, Tiger Woods, go about his work for all these years.”

My friend who had worked all those years covering golf actually sucked at it... lucky to break 100. according to him his crew was dedicated and they had the broken marriages to prove it...
 
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end of an era. A friend of mine was "retired" from that network months ago..(audio-visual) after over 30 years with CBS..robotics the main cause..I did learn a few things from him...over 140 microphones are placed around the course.. you could be at a golf tournament one week and the middle east with a news crew the next..Johnny Miller was a favorite..talked to everyone..
Sad to hear liked Kostas and McCord. Evolution of TV Sports coverage and decline in talent across the board. Golf we went from Summerall/Venturi to Nance/Faldo, We've went from Frank, Howard and Dandy Don on MNF to the shit I've muted right now in Booger and Tess. CBS Football from Summerall/Madden to Nantz/Idiot Romo and so on. I won't even touch that f*cktard Joe Buck hopefully Jack had a paternity test to make sure it was his kid cause I would wonder myself.
 
Sad to hear liked Kostas and McCord. Evolution of TV Sports coverage and decline in talent across the board. Golf we went from Summerall/Venturi to Nance/Faldo, We've went from Frank, Howard and Dandy Don on MNF to the shit I've muted right now in Booger and Tess. CBS Football from Summerall/Madden to Nantz/Idiot Romo and so on. I won't even touch that f*cktard Joe Buck hopefully Jack had a paternity test to make sure it was his kid cause I would wonder myself.

Even though I'm not always bananas about Sir Nick's typical Euro-always-rooting-for-the-Euro bias, I myself happen to think Nance and Faldo are pretty good together. But of course, everyone is entitled to whatever opinion they choose on talking heads they like/don't like (though we happen to be perfectly aligned on Joe Buck).

This issue with McCord does make me wonder if a guy like Dave Feherty might now view his future at NBC at some question (though I don't know what his contract status is after only couple or three years at NBC/TGC). Of course, McCord is a full 10 years older than Feherty; so maybe the comparison isn't the best.
 
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