logo
For Super Bowl broadcasters, game 'boards' are an indispensable booth secret

For Super Bowl broadcasters, game 'boards' are an indispensable booth secret

Yahoo08-02-2025
The story of Super Bowl LIX is in the cards.
And by cards, think of a large sheet of heavy-stock paper loaded with information — player names, numbers, statistics and sometimes annotated trivia — always within reach of the broadcasters calling the game.
They're called 'boards' and they're usually created from scratch by the play-by-play announcers and color analysts in the days leading up to a game, a meticulously organized study sheet that provides a commentator with detailed information in a pinch.
Fox is broadcasting Sunday's game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs, and although the network will offer every conceivable camera angle, not one of the more than 100 million viewers will get a clear glimpse of the boards used in the booth by Kevin Burkhardt and Tom Brady.
Exactly what those boards look like is unclear because Fox did not make Sunday's game announcers available to The Times.
But it's likely that their boards are similar to those of other Super Bowl announcers, who rely on the sheets as more safety net than script.
'None of it is read,' said legendary CBS play-by-play man Jim Nantz, who has worked seven Super Bowls, including the most recent one in New Orleans when Baltimore beat San Francisco. 'You don't read your broadcast. They're little reminders.
'During a commercial, I'll go back and look just to see if there's anything that might steer me toward a story line should this next series of plays lead me there — oh yeah, I want to get this in.'
Like his game calls, Nantz is steeped in nostalgia. So at his home in Pebble Beach he keeps the boards from every football and basketball game he has ever called, all neatly organized even though some might have ring-shaped coffee stains or maybe a smudge of ketchup from his halftime hot dog. He has called 502 NFL games, including last month's AFC championship between Kansas City and Buffalo.
'It's like having every term paper, every piece of homework that you accumulate from first through 12th grade and in college,' he said. 'I have them all in order, their own stack based on each year. They look fresh and crisp, mint condition like I'd just put them together a few hours earlier.'
Read more: Dick Vermeil, who coached Eagles and Chiefs, says Super Bowl LIX will be one for ages
Some boards are neater than others. Troy Aikman's handwriting, for instance, is so precise it almost looks like calligraphy. And Dick Vermeil's boards? They were suitable for framing.
'If there was a Michelangelo of boards, it was Dick,' said Fred Gaudelli, longtime producer of "Sunday Night Football." 'They were like works of art.'
Vermeil's boards were as colorful as a Bourbon Street king cake. First, they featured the team colors — so the Eagles would be in green — then last season's stats were in red, this season's stats were in black, and blue for career stats. Academic stats were written in purple, and injury status was in pink. Filling out a board would take him an entire day.
Whereas Nantz built every board from scratch at the start of a week, Vermeil would use small pieces of white tape to cover outdated stats, and write on that to update them. What's more, he would have one smaller board for every team in the league — say one for the Eagles, one for the Chiefs — then conjoin those two halves when those teams were playing each other. It was all about efficiency for him.
'I think there are a lot of people still using them, because I gave them out to anybody who ever asked for them,' Vermeil said. 'I had them printed off at about 100 at a time.'
Joe Buck's first Super Bowl board was written in blue — as in, blue language. He wrote a cruder version of 'Forget it' all over his first one just to remind himself not to get too serious and that it was only a game, even if the whole country was tuned in.
'I started to get a little cleaner with my personal reminders just because I would end up inevitably just giving the board to somebody,' said Buck, now play-by-play man for "Monday Night Football." 'If it's to some school auction, I don't want '[forget] it' written on there.'
NBC's Mike Tirico doesn't use paper for his boards anymore, but instead relies on a digital tablet that allows him to scroll to any information he needs. He has a backup tablet, too, just in case one goes dark.
But back when he was using paper, he would type the information and go to a nearby copying store to have his boards printed on card stock. If he was working in an open-air press box and there was a threat of rain, he would take the extra step of having the boards laminated.
Once, his ornate spreadsheet sparked the curiosity of a person asked to print it.
'He looked at me and said, `Are you some sort of a high-end gambler or something?'' asked the guy working the copier. 'I said, `Nah, I'm just a nerd. I like to follow the game closely.' After they saw me five or six times they kind of figured out I must have had something to do with the broadcast.'
Nobody is more experienced at calling ballgames than Al Michaels — Do you believe in sphericals? — but he doesn't construct his own boards. He relies on 'Malibu' Kelly Hayes, who has been his spotter for every football game since 1978.
(A spotter uses a different board than the announcer and acts as another set of eyes, standing next to the person on air and, on a given play, tapping names to identify, say, the intended receiver, a defender who knocked the ball away and the defensive end pressuring the quarterback.)
'I have access to other forms of information that will come to me either by talking to our research team, I can go back and forth with them in the middle of a game, and also I have other printed material I can get to if I need to,' said Michaels, a fixture for four decades on variously Sunday, Monday and Thursday nights.
'So on the board it's essentials. Where a guy went to school. What year he is in the league. Height and weight, and maybe a certain highlight in his career. You can't put too much on there, because for the most part, for Kelly, it's pointing out who made the tackle, who created a fumble, the guys who are coming in and out of the game. ... We've kind of thinned it out to the essentials. There's not a lot of time to look at it and read a lot of the information that's on there.'
Curt Menefee, Fox studio host, had a rudimentary method in his early days as an NFL Europe play-by-play announcer.
Read more: Tom Brady played in 10 Super Bowls. The road to first one as a broadcaster has been challenging
'I showed up in Amsterdam, and I literally had a brown paper bag that I had torn in half and opened up and just kind of wrote names and numbers on that,' he said. '[Color analyst] Brian Baldinger said, `You know that's not how it works, right?' It was a process, but I started off from scratch.'
Former NFL running back Daryl Johnston, a Fox color analyst, knows how to put a good board together.
But once… fumble!
'I was doing a Giants game and we were staying at the W in Hoboken,' he said. 'We went down for breakfast and I put my board off to the left side and left it. Got up, paid the bill, went out, got in the car and drove all the way out to the stadium. I had to have a runner go all the way back, crossing my fingers that it was there.
'I've left them at home one time and had to have my wife FedEx it.'
For some, that's the stuff of nightmares.
'I guard my boards very carefully,' Nantz said. 'It's like, my phone, my wallet, my Rolex watch and my football boards. They're under full protection. And not necessarily in that order.'
Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

We hit 24 in our Raiders countdown to kickoff. Who wore it best and who's wearing it now
We hit 24 in our Raiders countdown to kickoff. Who wore it best and who's wearing it now

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

We hit 24 in our Raiders countdown to kickoff. Who wore it best and who's wearing it now

We've reached 24 days until the Raiders season opener at Foxboro against the Patriots, With our countdown at 24 days we take a look at who currently dons the number in Silver & Black and who has brought it the most distinction. No. 24 Who's wearing it now: No one Marcus Peters was the last to wear it in 2023, which was his final season in the NFL. Who wore it best: CB Willie Brown Brown joined the Raiders in 1967 having already gone to two Pro Bowls. He had seven interceptions that season and the Raiders made their first Super Bowl. And Brown made his third Pro Bowl to begin a string of seven straight Pro Bowls, four times named an All Pro. In 1976, the Raiders would go back to the Super Bowl. This time they would win it. And in epic style, with 'Old Man Willie' intercepting a Fran Tarkenton pass and returning it 75 yards for the score. In his 12 years in a Raider uniform, Willie had 39 interceptions in the regular season and seven more in the playoffs. He was a no-brainer first ballot Hall of Famer. Honorable Mention: DB Charles Woodson Only in a world where someone like Willie Brown wore the same number would Woodson take a backseat to anyone. And, quite honestly, had he not spent seven years in Green Bay in the middle of his career, he'd take the top spot here. Woodson was the Raiders pick at number four overall in the 1998 NFL Draft as the only ever primarily defensive player to win the Heisman. He didn't miss a beat, winning AP Defensive Rookie of the Year and starting his career with four straight Pro Bowls. Then he would six seasons without making the Pro Bowl, including two in Green Bay. It was with the Packers that Woodson would reach his greatest heights, including getting a Super Bowl ring and winning NFL Defensive Player of the Year. In 2013, at the age of 37, he would rejoin the Raiders this time as a safety and play his final three seasons in Oakland, making the Pro Bowl in his final season and riding off into the sunset on his terms. A truly legendary career.

NFL teams will again stencil messages in the end zone

timean hour ago

NFL teams will again stencil messages in the end zone

The NFL is continuing its on-field social justice messaging for a sixth straight season. All 32 teams will feature an end zone message of their choice at each home game throughout the season, selecting from four options: 'End Racism,' 'Stop Hate,' 'Choose Love,' or 'Inspire Change.' Once again, 'It Takes All of Us' will be stenciled in the opposite end zone for all games. The only change from 2024 is that 'Inspire Change' replaces 'Vote.' These messages will complement the league's other cause campaigns such as Salute to Service and Crucial Catch, which will also appear in end zones during select weeks this season. 'We're working hand-in-hand with players, and alongside our clubs, to amplify player voices and underscore what is most important to them,' Anna Isaacson, the NFL's senior vice president of social responsibility, told The Associated Press. 'For decades, the NFL and its players have been a unifying force in American culture and society that brings people of all cultures and backgrounds together to enjoy America's most popular sport. 'This is an honor and responsibility that the league takes seriously, which is why we actively invest in off-field programs and on-field initiatives that promote unity.' The league will use 'End Racism' along with 'It Takes All of Us' in the back of end zones for all international games for the second straight season. The reigning Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles will feature 'Choose Love' for their season opener against the Dallas Cowboys that kicks off the NFL schedule on Sept. 4. They will rotate all four league-approved end zone messages throughout the season. 'Choose Love' was first introduced in 2022 and has been embraced by the Bills following a shooting that killed 10 people at a Buffalo supermarket. 'Choose Love continues to resonate across the league,' Isaacson said. 'It has become a unifying message of healing and hope, one that many players continue to wear voluntarily on helmet decals.' Players will again have the option to display one of the five messages on their helmets this season. Since 2017, the NFL has provided more than $460 million to dozens of grant partners and hundreds of grassroots organizations through its Inspire Change initiative, helping benefit communities in need. Inspire Change has supported more than 650 nonprofits and 2,100 players and alumni, matching grants focused on mentorship, workforce development, and food insecurity. ___

Jon Gruden Predicts Super Bowl Winner Before NFL Season Without Hesitation
Jon Gruden Predicts Super Bowl Winner Before NFL Season Without Hesitation

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Jon Gruden Predicts Super Bowl Winner Before NFL Season Without Hesitation

Jon Gruden Predicts Super Bowl Winner Before NFL Season Without Hesitation originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The NFL season is still a few weeks away, but with training camp in full swing and the preseason already through one week, anticipation for football's return is palpable. And there may not be anyone more fired up than former Super Bowl–winning head coach Jon Gruden. Since departing from coaching in 2021, Gruden has found a home at Barstool Sports, staying well-connected and highly involved in football at both the professional and collegiate levels. In a recent interview with Peighton Tubre, Gruden participated in a rapid-fire Q&A. When asked for his 'sleeper' team for the 2025 NFL season, he didn't just give a name—he flat-out predicted that team would win the Super Bowl. Jon Gruden Predicts Super Bowl LX Winner That team? The Tampa Bay Buccaneers—the same franchise he led to its first Lombardi Trophy in 2003. 'Sleeper team for this year,' Gruden was asked. Without hesitation, he replied, 'Tampa Bay Buccaneers are gonna win the Super Bowl.' Commanding the Buccaneers' offense for a third straight season is former No. 1 overall pick Baker Mayfield. While Tampa Bay has remained competitive in the NFC and dominated the NFC South in recent years, they have often fallen short when it comes to delivering in the playoffs. However, with Mayfield coming off a career year, Mike Evans entering his 12th season, and the continued progression of running back Bucky Irving in his second year—along with rookie wide receiver Emeka Egbuka out of Ohio State, who has taken training camp by storm—the Bucs have a real chance to be a force once again in a winnable division after finishing 10-7 last story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Aug 12, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store