Joe Buck is likely getting the last laugh on this one. The ESPN sportscaster had some fun with an online troll Sunday during the Chiefs’ AFC Championship win over the Bills, even as the critic missed the mark where facts are concerned.
Joe Buck was a fairly divisive broadcaster when he first started calling NFL games, but most fans have come to appreciate what he brings to the broadcast
The game being on CBS also means the great Joe Buck is not calling the game, because he works for ESPN and has never worked for CBS. One Chiefs fan didn't realize that and thought
ESPN NFL play-by-play man Joe Buck has been watching the NFL playoffs from the comfort of his own home since ESPN's final broadcast of the season concluded in last weekend's Chiefs-Texans game. But if you ask one internet troll,
During a press conference shortly after the Bears hired Ben Johnson as their next head coach, McCaskey was asked to share his thoughts about Las Vegas Raiders minority owner Tom Brady calling a divisional-round matchup Saturday between the Detroit Lions and Washington Commanders on Fox Sports alongside play-by-play announcer Kevin Burkhardt.
Football commentator Joe Buck caught strays from Bears chairman George McCaskey on an unrelated topic about Tom Brady.
Las Vegas parted ways with the first-year coach-GM tandem of Antonio Pierce and Tom Telesco earlier this month, and the “allure” of Brady, a seven-time Super Bowl champion, was said to have helped the Raiders become an enticing option for Johnson, 38.
At that point, announcers Troy Aikman and Joe Buck started openly questioning the officials. A frustrated Aikman, who is usually pretty open about the players, audibly said, “Oh come on!” while the ref was announcing the call, and he later got even ...
Max Bowden and Paul Jacob French are set to headline the world premiere of 'Midnight Cowboy - A New Musical' at London's Southwark Playhouse Elephant.
Bears chairman George McCaskey made his feelings known about Joe Buck, and Tom Brady's Lions-Commanders broadcast amid Ben Johnson rumors.
"Troy has won, lost, bled, sweated, and he's earned his opinion," Buck said. "That's what makes for great, honest TV."
The game being on CBS also means the great Joe Buck is not calling the game, because he works for ESPN and has never worked for CBS. One Chiefs fan didn't realize that and thought Buck was calling ...