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Al Michaels sent Jim Nantz a text to congratulate him on handling CBS of the exciting victory of Rory Mcilroy’s masters.
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It is possible that no two men have witnessed more iconic sports moments than Al Michaels AND Jim Nantz.
Until a few years ago, Michaels held the title of voice of American sports after calling everything from Super Bowl to The miracle on the ice with its unique mix of genuine ingenuity and fascination. When Michaels withdrew from NBC to join Amazon Thursday evening football The coverage, he handed over the Nantz stick, whose most syrup style to call NFL, NCAA and Pro Golf replaced Michaels Schtick “Uncle Fun” with a “Voice of God” sensitivity.
These changes are small. Both transmitters share A unique gift to transmit The biggest moments in American sports with perfect step. They also share another similarity: a love affair with masters.
Michaels never had the opportunity to call the first Golf Major, which CBS has aired for the last seven decades. Nantz has been calling for 40 years. But in a layout in Rich Eisen Show On Monday, Nantz admitted that Michaels is a beloved viewer of events in Augusta National.
“Our good friend Al Michaels is a follower and great fan of masters,” Nantz Eisen told. “He writes to me after these masters’ telekastras when they are really good (as it was this year), and he says,” there is no sports event like her. There is nothing in terms of coverage of television that can be compared. “”
Of course, THIS The Masters TV coverage of the year proved particularly memorable. Not only CBS cameras captured Grand Slam’s exciting victory in Rory Mcilroy’s real -time, they also do so with the touch of an artist, with director Steve Milton who headed a Telekast This produced some of the most sustainable images of the eventLike the full six-minute Mcilroy walk of the 18th green to the marking room.
Michaels was looking at an expert with an eye. In his decades working on some of the most prominent broadcasting teams in the world sports, he learned what it takes to turn an extraordinary moment into an iconic image – and he know Mcilroy’s victory was much more than a moment.
“He called it” cinema, “Nantz said. “Cinematographic cinema.”
In his interview with Eisen, Nantz admitted that he was affected by the feeling of Michaels.
“I think this is the way we all try to approach it,” he said. “We keep our words to a minimum, and hopefully they have a fist and power. We try to allow this to have the air and space and spirit that it must play all the shooting. We have that wonderful melody and implication, the theme of Augusta. It adds almost as a sequence of dreams disguised as a sports event.”
Indeed, Mcilroy’s last round in Augusta National was every sequence of dreams. Even Nantz’s final call – “The long journey is over … Mcilroy has his masterpiece! “ – spoke about essential distrust at the center of Mcilroy’s masters.
This, says Nantz, is the secret sauce that makes the masters: CINEMA. Sports are much more than the sum of their parts, as Michaels and Nantz know well. At best, our favorite games come to represent something much bigger. And to masters, well, all feels bigger.
“Events my favorite event,” Nantz said. “It’s been asked this question for years, and it’s always a difficult thing to (give the perception of) doing something else, but there is nothing like that. And when you combine it with a story as big as Rory going for Grand Slam career and Odyssey Crazy Odyssey/The journey he took to close all that we were clean, we are clean, Talking about it.
To hear the integrity of Nantz with Eiseni interview, you can see the link below – and to read more about the history of Nantz masters, you can see Golf The man’s profile here.
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James Colgan
Golfit.com editor
James Colan is a news editor of news and features in Golf, writing stories on the website and magazine. He manages the hot germ, golf media vertical and uses his experience on camera across brand platforms. Before entering Golf, James graduated from Siracuse University, during which time he was a caddy scholarship receiver (and Astuta Looper) in Long Island, where he is. He can be reached on James.colgan@golf.com.