Terry Gannon

Sportscaster

Birthday November 1, 1963

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Joliet, Illinois

Age 60 years old

Nationality United States

#56118 Most Popular

1963

Terrance Patrick Gannon (born November 1, 1963, in Joliet, Illinois) is a sportscaster for NBC Sports and the Golf Channel, currently announcing golf, gymnastics, and figure skating.

1983

Gannon played basketball for North Carolina State University, and under coach Jim Valvano, he was a member of the 1983 Wolfpack "Cardiac Pack" national championship-winning team.

He was recognized as an Academic All-American twice, was NC State's all-time leading free throw shooter in 1983, and was ranked the second all-time Wolfpack player in career free throw accuracy.

Gannon began his early broadcasting career announcing for a variety of sports, mostly on cable outlets.

In 1983, he was a part of the "Cardiac Pack", which upset the Houston Cougars for the NCAA title.

He hit 85.4 percent of his free throw attempts and was ranked the second all-time Wolfpack player in career free throw accuracy.

1985

After graduating with a degree in history from NC State in 1985, he worked as a graduate assistant for Valvano for a year, intending to become a basketball coach.

He briefly played professional basketball in Europe, but on the advice of Valvano, left the sport for broadcasting.

1986

In 1986, Gannon began broadcasting on Valvano's TV and radio shows for regionally televised basketball games.

1987

He served as a regular college basketball game analyst for Raycom Sports, Prime Network, Jefferson-Pilot Sports, Sports South, and Home Team Sports between 1987 and 1994, and as a play-by-play announcer for Prime Sports and Jefferson-Pilot's coverage of college baseball.

Gannon credits Valvano for his career, noting that the coach had told his players that basketball "shouldn't be your entire life, it shouldn't consume you".

1990

From 1990 to 1994, Gannon was the announcer for the Charlotte Knights, a Minor League Baseball team in Charlotte.

Starting in the early 1990s, after being asked to travel to Tokyo, Japan, to cover a professional figure skating event, Gannon served as host for ABC's figure skating coverage, teaming with former Olympic skaters Peggy Fleming and Dick Button at most major competitions.

As sports reporter Barry Jacobs stated, figure skating was "a sport he had not followed", but like every new sport, he approached it with "scholarly zeal" and "as if it was a history project".

He would learn a sport's rules, key figures from its past and present, and for the purpose of sounding authentic to its fans, its "idiosyncratic language".

Gannon told reporter Barry Wilner that he would also talk about what he knew about the new sport and avoid unfamiliar topics until he learned more about it.

Eventually, although he was most closely associated with figure skating and golf, with what Jacobs called "his warm, authoritative voice and understated manner", Gannon has announced for a wide variety of sporting events.

1991

In 1991, he began working for ABC; in the early 1990s, he started announcing for figure skating.

In 1991, Gannon started working for ABC as a commentator for college basketball.

He also was an announcer on the weekly show Wide World of Sports.

While working at Wide World of Sports, Gannon said that his biggest broadcasting influences were Harry Caray and Al Michaels.

1993

In 1993, Gannon began broadcasting for ESPN and ABC (which was merged with ESPN), covering play-by-play coverage for college basketball and football; by 2001, he had covered three post-season bowl games.

He was an announcer on ABC's coverage of the PGA Tour and the Champions Tour and announced the Tour de France, which Jacobs called Gannon's "perhaps his greatest challenge", three times.

2001

In 2001, ABC reported that Gannon hosted the Belmont Stakes once and three times called the play-by-play at the Little League World Series.

By the time he left ABC, Gannon had also covered the NBA, WNBA, horse racing, tennis, beach volleyball, skiing, supercross motorcycle racing, mountain biking, and golf.

2002

He announced for the 2002 FIFA World Cup, the 2003 FIFA Women's World Cup, WTA professional tennis, the 2004 Indianapolis 500, 2006 Belmont Stakes, the Special Olympics, the Goodwill Games, and hosted ABC's college football studio show.

For six years, he hosted the Tournament of Roses Parade.

2010

In 2010, he began working for the Golf Channel; by 2016, he had become the lead play-by-play announcer for figure skating at NBC.

2018

In 2018, he began calling gymnastics and was a commentator for the sport during the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

Gannon was born and raised in Joliet, Illinois, to Jim Gannon and Mary Gann.

Upon his father's recommendation, he took four years of tap dancing lessons from his mother, who had taught tap dancing for 30 years, because he thought it would be good for his son's coordination.

Gannon began his basketball career at Joliet Catholic High School, where his father was a coach.

Gannon attended North Carolina State University (NC State) in Raleigh, North Carolina, where he played college basketball as part of the Wolfpack team under coach Jim Valvano, where he was recognized as an Academic All-American twice and NC State's all-time leading free throw shooter.

In 2018, on the 35th anniversary of their win, NC State inducted the entire 1983 men's basketball team into its Athletic Hall of Fame.

Gannon has announced a wide variety of sporting events and has been called one of the "most versatile" announcers in TV sports and "the man who knows every game".

Fellow commentators Tara Lipinski, Johnny Weir, and Nastia Liukin credit Gannon with their development as analysts.

Lipinski stated that Gannon's depth of knowledge, experience, and "the way he brings natural, genuine conversation into the booth" made his style "compelling".

Gannon's focus as a commentator for the Olympics was exposing general fans to sports they viewed rarely, only every four years.

In 2018, Gannon told sports reporter Helen Ross that out of all the sports he has called, he found golf the hardest, even though he played it and had been a fan of the sport since childhood.

He played golf in clubs near his home in Los Angeles, but most of his golf was played on the road, with former golf pros and fellow broadcasters like his Golf Channel broadcast partner, six-time major champion Nick Faldo, as well as with Craig Perks, Billy Kratzert, Matt Gogel, Jim Gallagher Jr.., and Curt Byrum.