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Bob Costas Biography

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Date of Birth: 1952, March 22
Years: 68 years
Nation of birth: United States of America
Height: 5 feet 7 inches
Name bob shores
birth name Robert Quinlan Costas
nick’s name ‘beto’
Dad john george shores
Mother jayne quinlan
Nationality American
Place of birth / city Queens, New York
ethnicity white ethnicity
Profession Sportscaster
Working for NBCNews
Net worth $45 million dollars
eye color Brown
Hair color Dark brown
face color White
Married Yes
Married to Jill Sutton (d. 2004), Carole Krumenacher (d. 1983)
Kids Keith and Taylor
Divorce Jill Sutton
Education syracuse university
Awards Primetime Emmy Awards
online presence Facebook, Twitter, Lifestylepedia
tv show football night in america
sisters Jayne Costas

Bob Costas is a household name in the hosting business as he has been continuously hosting and presenting as a sportscaster since the early 1980s. He is a controversial personality liked by millions of viewers around the world. He has hosted nine Olympic Games and is the host of NBC Sports and also hosts the Studio 42 talk show with Bob Costas.

Early life, biography and education of Bob Costas

Bob was born on March 22, 1952 in the New York borough of Queens to Jayne and John George Costas. Bob is of Irish and Greek descent and grew up in Commack, New York. He graduated from Commack High School South and then majored in communications at Syracuse University. He belongs to the American nationality and regarding his ethnicity, he is white.

While attending Syracuse University, he served as a broadcaster for the Syracuse Blazers hockey team for the Eastern Hockey League and North American Hockey League, thus beginning his broadcasting career.

He then went to KMOX and began calling play-by-plays for the Spirits of St. Louis of the American Basketball Association. He also co-hosted the KMOX call-in show Open Line and asked for Missouri Tigers basketball.

From 1976 to 1979 he was hired by CBS Sports as an announcer for the NFL and NBA. He also did play-by-play for the Chicago Bulls broadcast on WGN-TV.

Bob Costas’s career and lifestyle

Costas then moved to NBC and hosted NBC’s coverage of the National Football League and the NBA for several years. He has teamed up with several other personalities to do broadcasts for the NBA and baseball. He also played play-by-play for NFL games and later became the studio host of The NFL on NBC.

Beginning in 2001, he began co-hosting the Kentucky Derby and also hosted the US Open golf tournament. He also covered the 2009 Kentucky Oaks and became the host of the Costas Tonight talk show hosting NBC Sports Network.

Costas has covered various Olympic broadcasts, including the Barcelona, ​​Atlanta, Sydney, Salt Lake City, Athens, Turin, Beijing, Vancouver, London Olympics and most recently Sochi in 2014 for NBC.

Costas commented on the extensive use of drugs by Chinese teams during the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, which led to a great uproar and criticism of him in the media. However, with the suspension of a Chinese swimming coach in 1994 after his swimmers were found to be using steroids, the media uproar died down.

Subsequent investigations and the finding of extensive use of steroids, somatropin and triamterene by the Chinese players, found his suspicions to be true and his denied image regained the popularity it always had.

Costas has always been surrounded by controversy, not least his commentary on the Opening Ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics, where he was criticized for making jingoistic, ignorant and banal remarks.

His only opportunity to cover the Olympics since 1988 was the start of the 2014 Winter Olympics, where he suffered an eye infection, filling in for four nights with Matt Lauer and two nights with Meredith Vieira.

Bob Costas has also broadcast Major League Baseball, the most memorable being the broadcast that occurred on June 23, 1984. A controversy arose during Game 4 of the 1988 Baseball World Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Athletics. for Oakland in which he commented before the game began, the Dodgers will be building the weakest hitting lineup in World Series history. This comment drew widespread criticism and sarcasm its way, as the Dodgers won 4-1.

Costas also called the 1989 ALCS and also Game 2 of the 1989 NLCS for NBC. He was also the host of NFL pre-game and post-game shows and Major League Baseball’s All-Star Games during the 1980s. He was only able to play play-by-play for one World Series from start to finish in 1997, for which he earned a Sports Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Personality, Play-by-Play. He also hosted ESPN’s late-night broadcasts in 1999.

As for the National Basketball Association, Costas hosted telecasts and also the Showtime studio show, including the all-star game of the 1991 All-Star Game. Since 1997, Costas began playing play-by-play for the NBA on NBC, which was interrupted in the 2000 NBA Finals. His tenure as host of the NBA on NBC ended in the 2002 NBA Playoffs.

Bob hosted NFL (National Football League) telecasts for NBC until 1992 and then resumed in 2006. Starting with the NHL (National Hockey League), Costas has hosted NBC’s coverage of 2008 , 2009, 2010 NHL Winter Classics, the pre-game coverage of the 2011 event and the 2012 post-game coverage as well.

Costas has hosted talk shows such as Costas Coast to Coast (1986-1996), a radio show, Later with Bob Costas (1988-1994) on NBC, a Larry King Life stand-in for a year, Rock Center correspondent with Brian Williams and is currently the host of the Costas Tonight talk show that airs on NBC Sports Network. His show Later with Bob Costas has been nominated twice and won an Emmy once for Outstanding Informational Series in 1993.

As for HBO Sports, Costas has hosted a 12-week series, On the Record with Bob Costas and co-hosted Inside the NFL through the end of the 2007 NFL season. He then joined MLB Network in February 2009 and hosted the premiere episode of All Time Games and now hosts a talk show titled MLB Network Studio 42 with Bob Costas.

He has also appeared in the miniseries Baseball and a PBS movie A Time for Champions. His other appearances include starring in Late Night with David Letterman, The War to Settle the Score on MTV, Cheers, on the television show NewsRadio and as a guest on the cartoon talk show Space Ghost Coast to Coast.

Other endeavors include playing himself in the movies The Scout, BASEketball, Pootie Tang, and voicing the movie Cars. He has also appeared on the television series Monk and has voiced an episode of The Simpsons and the movie Legendary: When Baseball Came to the Bluegrass.

Other than this, he appeared as himself in the 2013 episode of Go On and also provided the voice of God in the Monty Python musical Spamalot.

It was announced on January 15, 2019 that Bob has officially left NBC Sports after a long career.

Bob Costas Net Worth and Salary

Bob Costas net worth is $45 million at present. He earns an annual salary of $7 million from his successful career. He has received nearly 20 Emmy Awards and four ‘National Sportscaster of the Year’ awards.

Bob Costas and his wife Jill Sutton also bought a $4.7 million home in Newport Beach, California. His 4,534-square-foot mansion has a total of four bedrooms and six bathrooms, plus a guest house and a few ‘bonus’ rooms.

Over the years, he proved equally comfortable with performers, filmmakers, artists, writers, and political figures, making his visibility and credibility so substantial that he even ran as a possible candidate for Major League Commissioner. Baseball Leagues.

Bob Costas wife, son, romance and relationship

Bob Costas was married from 1983 to 2001 to Carole Randall Krummenacher and had two children, Keith and Taylor. Keith is the holder of two Sports Emmys as associate producer on MLB Networks MLB Tonight and Taylor also won as associate producer on the 2012 Summer Olympics covered by NBC.

Costas married Jill Sutton on March 12, 2004, and they have been together ever since. Rumors of him having some kind of romance have not surfaced and the couple lives happily in New York.

This legendary 62-year-old sportscaster is an avid baseball fan. He has won eight National Sportscaster of the Year Awards, four American Sportscaster Association Sportscaster of the Year Awards, twenty Sports Emmy Awards for Outstanding Sportscaster, Curt Gowdy Media Award, TV Guide Award for Favorite Sportscaster, Dick Schaap Award for Outstanding Journalism and the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Broadcast Journalism among many others.

Bob Costas has been serving the entertainment business for over three decades and continues to amaze audiences with his tenacity and charm. He is a respected personality who is sometimes surrounded by controversy regarding his comments on some topics, but his following is never less.

His official fan pages can be found on Facebook and Twitter and his detailed bio can be found on his lifestyle page. Certainly Costas has honed his presentation and reporting skills to the max over many years and will continue to wow his audience for a long time to come.

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