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Paul Keels (Voice of the Buckeyes)

jwinslow;1800458; said:
Every other radio play-by-play guy I've heard lags way behind the action, including the ESPN & CBS radio guys. To keep up with the action with polish and clarity is a great gift.

Absitively. I've listened to a bunch of clowns via satellite radio, and Keels is fantastic, particularly at basketball. It's so nice to be able to know what's going on instead of having to guess. He may not be the most exciting guy to listen to, but for following the game, he's great.
 
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Sounds like he has emotion to me:
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Y1dFu6zV8M"]YouTube - The Buckeyes Three Interceptions Against Illinois[/ame]

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYC3KzPgvzs"]YouTube - Evan Turners Buzzer Beater - Radio calls from Ohio and Michigan[/ame]
 
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Keels embraces football, radio
By Ryan Bisesi
[email protected]
Posted: Sunday, June 9, 2013

bilde

PJ WARD-BROWN/SALISBURY POST Paul Keels is a Sportscaster with the Ohio State/IMG Sports Network. Paul is the Sportscaster winner from Ohio at the 54th Annual National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Awards Weekend.

SALISBURY ? In a football-proud state, Ohio State sportscaster Paul Keels embraces his roots, not only in Columbus but from his hometown, Cincinnati.

Everybody boasts about the Buckeyes in Ohio, where the action on fall Saturday afternoons in Ohio Memorial Stadium is top priority for many. After all, The Buckeye state is the cradle of big-time football and where legends like Jim Brown, Woody Hayes and Paul Brown perfected their craft. NFL brother/coach tandem John and Jim Harbaugh brought their teams to the Super Bowl last year and are Ohio natives.

But Keels still has a spot in his heart for prep football and Moeller High in Cincinnati. On the air, he represents the scarlet and gray but off it, he?s a ardent supporter of his high school that?s won multiple state titles in football.

?Being from the southwest Ohio, I brag about that part of the state,? Keels said. ?We have great traditions. When you look at a lot of coaches collegiality and in the pros, a lot of them have been in the state of Ohio. We like to blow our horn about that.?

Keels just finished his 15th year as the Buckeyes? radio play-by-play man and won the Ohio Sportscaster of the Year Award for the fourth time overall and third in a row. Although Keels is a big guy, the imposing physical figure has brought more success to Columbus despite not donning a jersey.

?What makes our job fun is great teams and great fan support,? Keels said.

Keels is fond of athletic excellence at OSU, who?s coming off a 12-0 year in football. A Bowl Ban prohibited the Buckeyes from postseason play, hindering what could have been a special season. Despite that, coach Urban Meyer surpassed expectations and restored honor to a proud program.

?It was an exciting but a strange year,?

Keels said. ?People thought it could be a good year with a favorable schedule. I don?t know realistically anyone thought they?d be undefeated.?

Quarterback Braxton Miller leads the Buckeyes as a redshirt junior and is a Heisman candidate entering the season.

The men?s basketball team won the Big Ten Tournament in a highly competitive league and reached the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.

? I don?t know that Thad Matta gets the credit he deserves,? Keels said. ?To get one game from the final four was really a tribute to Thad and his staff.?

OSU President Gordon Gee announced his retirement Thursday after some off-the-cuff jabs at Notre Dame and Roman Catholics. Keels says Gee?s words were poorly chosen, but will remember Gee as a positive role model for the school and even helped him through a tough time.

?About three years ago, I was in the hospital for abdominal surgery and all of a sudden he comes in to see me for five minutes,? said Keels. ?He?s that kind of person.?

As a youngster, radio influences came to Keels through the car or a transistor radio underneath his pillow at night. He listened to Dom Valentino describe the Cincinnati Royals, now in Sacremento. As a Reds fan, he listened to Al Michaels calling the action.

Keels called games for his hometown Bearcats before joining OSU. He started his career at WLW radio in Cincinnati as a news reporter before moving to Detroit to call Detroit Pistons games for WJR. Ironically, the next stop came in Michigan from 1981 to 1987 where Keels saw the other side of the conference?s most intense rivalry. Decades ago when the conference got one bowl bid, the game was rife with postseason implications.

?Starting as a kid growing up in Ohio you knew Ohio State-Michigan was something big,? Keels said. ?It was for the Big Ten championship.?

Now Keels and the rest of his colleagues deal with the changing landscape of college athletics. The Big Ten gains Maryland and Rutgers in 2014. Nebraska joined in 2011 when conference expansion was starting to gain momentum.

?Some people are stretching their head about that,? Keels said. ?People felt that Rutgers or Syracuse would be targeted because the Big Ten wanted a New York TV market. ?I understand why it happened but I don?t know people are crazy about the fact that it?s Rutgers and Maryland.?

http://www.salisburypost.com/article/20130609/SP02/130609675/1009/keels-embraces-football-radio
 
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SKULL SESSION: THE BEST USE OF MIKE WEBER, CURTIS SAMUEL INVESTS IN HIS HANDS, AND THE VOICE OF THE BUCKEYES


PAUL KEELS ON BUCKEYE FOOTBALL.
I've talked to Buckeye fans that criticize Paul Keels' local calls. None of it holds water with me.

I covered a Luke Fickell presser in 2011 (if that tells you how far Eleven Warriors has come since then). I heard a guy talking behind me in dulcet tones and thought to myself, "That's Paul Keels, baby." It was.

That's a #brand, and it's one he's built over two decades.

From landgrantholyland.com:

Every big moment in the last 20 years of Buckeye football has been narrated by Paul Keels, and his voice is the first thing that many Buckeye fans associate with Ohio State football games. No one would know the feeling of Saturday mornings in Columbus better than him, and we spent some time talking to him about that feeling, and about what makes college football special.
...

“It’s not across the board the talent level you see at the professional level but it’s something that allows for more opportunities for the unknown. For the upset that nobody sees coming. For the 16 vs 1 upset that we finally saw in the NCAA tournament this year. I think that college sports really allows people to see some things that, maybe you have a pretty good idea of what’s gonna happen but much more in college sports than in professional sports there’s still the possibility and the atmosphere of a major upset. I think there’s something collegial about it.” - Paul Keels

Upsets can happen in any sport. It's why we love sports.

College football isn't perfect, and I'll be the first to admit it. It's still superior to the NFL because it features state institutions and soul, and it's not controlled by a borderline criminal cartel that could snuff me just for typing that.

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/skul...muel-jugs-machine-paul-keels-college-football
 
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Perhaps we have two different desires; Keels is the play by play guy, so when I listen and something big happens, I want enthusiasm, but more importantly I want to know what just happened (read: understand what the announcer says not a bunch of screaming apes).


[ame="[MEDIA=youtube]uYC3KzPgvzs[/MEDIA]"]YouTube - Evan Turners Buzzer Beater - Radio calls from Ohio and Michigan[/ame]

I love the "Oh No" right from tsun's announcers

Maybe not my favorite Paul Keels call, but I love it. (Also because of the "oh no!".)

I don't know why your link doesn't work.

 
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I love listening to Paul Keels and have since his days in Cincinnati calling UC football and basketball (the 92 final four year in particular.). Always professional. Always in control no matter how pressure packed the situation and paints the action so well that you feel like you’re watching the game not listening to it.


i like Keels but IMIMHO he is better as a bball play by play guy than football. im a homer so give me Terry Smith any day for the football games
 
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i like Keels but IMIMHO he is better as a bball play by play guy than football. im a homer so give me Terry Smith any day for the football games
His calls of UC games were special. I will agree that he is probably better for basketball. I can still hear him in my head “Van Exel between the circles, right wing pass to Gibson. Baseline to Jones. 15 to shoot top of the key to Buford for threeeee. Got it!”
Very smooth for basketball and always very even and discreptive.
 
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His calls of UC games were special. I will agree that he is probably better for basketball. I can still hear him in my head “Van Exel between the circles, right wing pass to Gibson. Baseline to Jones. 15 to shoot top of the key to Buford for threeeee. Got it!”
Very smooth for basketball and always very even and discreptive.
I've never heard anyone on national radio that is within miles of his speed. Most football guys can't finish telling you what happened until 3-5 seconds after the crowd cheers. The MSU guy is particularly bad and takes 5-10 seconds longer than that.

Paul typically finishes his extremely descriptive play by play before the shot reaches the hoop.
 
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