Chris Berman will stay with ESPN during his 50th anniversary in 2029

Chris Berman saw ESPN growing from a new network that publishes the American Slow Pitch Softball World series to the world leader in sports. Since 1979, the Berman has been a basis – and now “back, back, back”.
70-year-old Berman put a pencil on a pencil paper on a pencil paper until 2029 and the 50th anniversary of Espn’s 2027 Super Bowl in Los Angeles.
“I could never go 70 years old in my craziest dreams and imagine that I was still here, which has become a symbol of sports broadcasting.” He said. “We are approaching our first Super Bowl, and now I can be a part of it.”
Berman, known as “boomer” with love, joined ESPN a month after the network launched in September 1979. Although he served the table in the early days of Sportscenter, he has been home to NFL Primetim again since 1987 and 2019.
Berman also contributed to ESPN’s 31 MLB All-Star game and the 30-world series, and many of them are familiar with the host call, especially Home Run Derby: “Back, back, back … Gone!”
“For an extraordinary half a century, Chris, ESPN, embodied ESPN with its smart and fun style,” ESPN President Jimmy Pitaro said. He said. “Boomer’s enjoyment of the sport liked to be on the screen and for the driving of fans of generations.”
Berman said, “Now it is mindless to think that I have the opportunity and chance to work here for 50 years, Ber Berman said,” This would be two -thirds of my life! “
-FELD level media