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Bob Costas


 

Robert Quinlan Costas (born March 22, 1952 in Queens, New York) was a guest on the television series Space Ghost Coast to Coast and is an American sportscaster, on the air for the NBC network since the early 1980s. Costas is known for his knowledge of sports and his quick wit. His mother was of Irish Catholic extraction, and his father was of Greek extraction. He was raised as a Roman Catholic.

Trivia

  • Costas once jokingly promised that if Kirby Puckett was batting over .350 by the time his child was born he would name his kid Kirby. True to his word, since Kirby was hitting better than .350, Bob gave his son, Keith Costas, whose first name comes from Bob's first wife's brother, the middle name Kirby. Bob also has a daughter named Taylor, who was born three years later (1989).
  • For his 40th birthday, Oakland Athletics manager Tony La Russa allowed Costas to manage the club during a spring training game.
  • Bob's father, John Costas, was a Greek electrical engineer, baseball fan, and gambler.
  • While calling the 1989 American League Championship Series between Oakland and Toronto for NBC, Costas unexpectedly came under fire by many Blue Jay fans. After the A's won the first two games, Costas said the Blue Jays had better win Game 3 (which they did, as it turned out) or "Elvis has a better chance of coming back than the Blue Jays." The Blue Jay fans decided to retaliate by displaying signs reading "Nuke Bob Costas" around the SkyDome.
  • Costas moved from being NBC's studio anchor for NBA telecasts to the lead play-by-play man after Marv Albert's unexpected dismissal due to personal issues. Costas made his debut on Christmas Day of 1997 for a game against the Chicago Bulls and Miami Heat. Perhaps as a way to return the favor to Costas (for agreeing to step in for Marv Albert), NBC allowed Costas to front a weekly sports interview series (which would ultimately become On the Record with Bob Costas) for HBO.
  • The first time Costas visited baseball legend Stan Musial's St. Louis eatery, he left a $3.31 tip in homage to the Musial's lifetime batting average (.331).
  • To fulfill a deal he made on The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn, as coverage of a game resumed he sipped a glass of pink lemonade and said "Ah, that's restaurant quality lemonade."
  • Bob Costas has been impersonated several times by Darrell Hammond on Saturday Night Live.
  • Costas appeared as himself along with his rival/counterpart Al Michaels from ABC in the movie Baseketball.
  • Costas delivered the eulogy at Mickey Mantle's funeral. In eulogizing Mantle, Costas described the baseball legend as "a fragile hero to whom we had an emotional attachment so strong and lasting that it defied logic." Costas has even carried a 1958 Mickey Mantle baseball card in his wallet.
  • Apart from his normal sportscasting duties, Costas also announced periodic dogsled and elevator races on Late Night with David Letterman.
  • Costas filled in for Tom Hammond at the hosting desk during the 2002 Breeders' Cup when Hammond had to undergo open-heart surgery.
  • Bob Costas anchored the pre and post-game shows for numerous World Series and Major League Baseball All-Star Games during the 1980s (the first being for the 1982 World Series). Costas didn't get a shot at doing play-by-play (as the games on NBC were previously called by Vin Scully) for an All-Star Game until 1994 and a World Series until 1995 (when NBC split the coverage with ABC). It wasn't until 1997 when Costas finally got the chance to do play-by-play for a World Series from start to finish. Costas ended up winning a Sports Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Personality, Play-by-Play.
  • Costas is a regular critic of the raunchier side of pro wrestling. He condemed Karl Malone during a live NBA broadcast for participating periodically in WCW matches. Ironically, Costas participated in Baseketball, an equally raunchy movie that same year.
  • The doomed football league the XFL (which ironically, was half owned by Costas' employer, NBC) featured a pre-game show in some league cities hosted by shock radio jocks Opie & Anthony. During an interview with XFL founder Vince McMahon on his HBO program On the Record with Bob Costas, Costas called the pregame show an "abomination", which Opie & Anthony later mocked on their nationally syndicated radio show. When Costas' interview with McMahon turned ugly, Opie & Anthony played clips of McMahon verbally blasting Costas.
  • When Costas was first hired by NBC, Don Ohlmeyer, who at the time, ran NBC Sports sarcastically told the then 28 year old Costas that he looked like a 14 year old. Ohlmeyer presumably based his reaction on Costas' diminutive size and boyish, babyfaced appearance.
  • Costas was name checked in a Ludacris song after he had mentioned being a fan on the late night talk show Last Call with Carson Daly.