BRISTOL. Conn. (AP) 鈥 Mike Patrick, ESPN’s first play-by-play announcer for its NFL coverage, has died. He was 80.
ESPN remembers play-by-play commentator Mike Patrick
Patrick served as a voice on the network for 36 years (1982-2018) & called some of the most significant events in ESPN’s history
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鈥 ESPN PR (@ESPNPR)
Patrick’s physician and longtime friend sent a text to friends of the longtime announcer that Patrick passed away in Fairfax, Virginia, on Sunday due to natural causes.
Patrick joined ESPN in 1982, and was with the network for 35 years.
鈥淢ike Patrick called countless significant events over decades at ESPN and is one the most influential on-air voices in our history. In addition to calling ESPN鈥檚 first-ever regular season NFL game and voicing the 鈥楽unday Night Football鈥 franchise, Mike鈥檚 work on college sports was exceptional,” said Burke Magnus, president of content for ESPN. “For 36 years, he called football and men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 basketball, including the Women鈥檚 Final Four and so many historic matchups between ACC rivals Duke and UNC. Our deepest condolences to Mike鈥檚 family and his many friends throughout the industry.鈥
Even though he called countless college football and basketball games, he is best known for his work on ESPN’s 鈥淪unday Night Football鈥 from 1987 through 2005.
Patrick was teamed with Roy Firestone for the first season in 1987, before Joe Theismann became the lead analyst the following season. Paul Maguire came aboard in 1998 to make it a three-man booth. Patrick missed most of the 2004 season due to open heart surgery.
NBC took over the Sunday night package in 2006 when ESPN became the home of 鈥淢onday Night Football.鈥
Dick Vitale called Patrick 鈥淢r. ACC鈥 because of his love for doing big games from the conference.
鈥淢ike had great energy and a keen knowledge of ACC basketball, and I truly enjoyed sitting next to him calling so many special games over the years,鈥 Vitale said in a statement.
Patrick also did play-by-play for the women’s Final Four from 1996 through 2009 and the College World Series from 2003-14.
Before joining ESPN, Patrick worked in radio in Somerset, Pennsylvania, and was the sports director at television stadiums in Jacksonville, Florida, and Washington, D.C.
In the D.C. area, Patrick was a sports reporter and anchor at WJLA and served as the voice of Maryland football and basketball from 1975-78. He also called preseason NFL games for Washington from 1975-82.
Patrick grew up in Clarksburg, West Virginia. He graduated from George Washington University with a bachelor of arts degree in speech.
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