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The Anti-Sparty.UConn has reached 6 Final Fours and won the championship 5 times. That seems pretty efficient.
Jim Nantz's dream 32-year Final Four run wraps as iconic voice of March Madness soaks in final moments
Nantz became a legend because of his start in college basketball and his 36-year connection to the NCAA Tournamentwww.cbssports.com
Jim Nantz's dream 32-year Final Four run wraps as iconic voice of March Madness soaks in final moments
Nantz became a legend because of his start in college basketball and his 36-year connection to the NCAA Tournament
In early January 1986, a 26-year-old with joyful ambition and bottomless optimism took a flight out to Seattle to call a men's basketball game.
It wound up being the formal initiation of a legendary broadcasting career.
Jim Nantz's first play-by-play assignment for CBS was a USC-Washington affair on January 11 of that year, working the game alongside former Kentucky standout Larry Conley.
One week later: a proper introduction to a lifelong friendship. Nantz catty-cornered to Coral Gables, Florida, to call Arizona at Miami. As fate would have it, he was partnered with the one and only Bill Raftery. An eager-to-please Nantz got taken out to an extravagant Miami Beach dinner, and as is Raftery's wont, young Jim got more than he bargained for that night.
"You walk out of one dinner with Raft and you feel like you've known him for 37 years, which is the actual case now," Nantz told CBS Sports in his final sit-down interview before his final basketball call after 37 years and 354 NCAA Tournament broadcasts.
On Monday night, Nantz will toss on the headset for one final basketball call next to Raftery, working CBS' broadcast with Grant Hill and Tracy Wolfson. It's No. 4 UConn vs. No. 5 San Diego State — a national title game almost nobody saw coming as recently as two weeks ago.