Tim Kurkjian

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Tim Kurkjian
Tim Kurkjian.jpg
Kurkjian in March 2011
Born (1956-12-10) December 10, 1956 (age 64)
Bethesda, Maryland
Education
  • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Walter Johnson High School
OccupationSports columnist
Author
Television personality
Spouse(s)Kathy Kurkjian
Children2

Timothy Bell Kurkjian[1] (/ˈkɜːrkən/; born December 10, 1956) is a Major League Baseball analyst on ESPN's Baseball Tonight and SportsCenter. He is also a contributor to ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com.

He guests on Golic and Wingo on Thursdays at 7:45 a.m., discussing the latest in happenings in Major League Baseball. He is a frequent contributor to Buster Olney's podcast. He also appears regularly on The Dan LeBatard Show and The Tony Kornheiser Show.

Family and early life[]

Kurkjian was born in Bethesda, Maryland, to Badrig "Jeff" Kurkjian, a mathematician, and Joyce "Joy" Kurkjian. Badrig's parents settled in Watertown, Massachusetts, after the Armenian genocide, while Joyce was born in England.[2] Badrig was a statistician who earned degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, George Washington and American Universities, taught at the University of Alabama, was the chief mathematician for the United States Army Materiel Command and was a fellow with the American Statistical Association.[3] He was also an avid baseball fan who instilled in his son his love of both the sport and of statistics from a young age.[2] According to Kurkjian, his family constantly talked and thought about baseball.[4] Both of Kurkjian's older brothers played college baseball for the Catholic University Cardinals and were inducted into that school's athletics hall of fame.[5] In his youth, in addition to playing baseball, young Kurkjian collected baseball cards, played tabletop baseball games and read anything baseball-related that he could.[6]

Kurkjian attended Walter Johnson High School in Bethesda, where he played on the school's basketball and baseball teams.[4] At the suggestion of his basketball coach,[7] Kurkjian began writing for the student newspaper, The Pitch, and the school's yearbook, "The Wind-up."[6] He eventually became the sports editor of The Pitch and realized that journalism would be the surest means of fulfilling his childhood dream of making a living in professional sports. He graduated from the school in 1974.[7]

Journalism career[]

In 1974, Kurkjian enrolled at the University of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism. While at Maryland, Kurkjian covered high school sports for his hometown newspaper, the Montgomery Journal. Immediately after graduating from Maryland with a B.A. in journalism in 1978, Kurkjian took an entry-level position with the Washington Star. By 1981, he became a staff writer. When the Star folded that year, he took a position with the Baltimore News-American. That paper also went out of business within two months of Kurkjian's arrival.[7] He began covering baseball as the Texas Rangers beat writer for The Dallas Morning News[8] where he worked from 1981 to 1985. Kurkjian then covered the Baltimore Orioles for The Baltimore Sun beginning in 1986. He was a senior writer for Sports Illustrated from 1989 to 1997.[7] In 1997, Sports Illustrated reassigned him to covering basketball. He served in this capacity for six months before accepting a job at ESPN as a baseball writer and television journalist in 1998 at 40 years old.[6]

He authored his first book, America's Game, in 2000 and released his second book, Is This a Great Game, or What?: From A-Rod's Heart to Zim's Head—My 25 Years in Baseball in May 2007. In 2016, he published his book I'm Fascinated by Sacrifice Flies: Inside the Game We All Love. He was the 1999 and 2007 Commencement speaker at his alma mater, Walter Johnson High School, the 2008 speaker at Seneca Valley High School, and also delivered the winter commencement speech at the University of Maryland on December 19, 2007.

In 2012, while Kurkjian and fellow ESPN analyst John Kruk were on their annual bus tour around the spring training facilities, a new craze was created called Kurkjianing where players would impersonate Tim Kurkjian during interviews.[9] Some of the players that did this were Tim Dillard[10] of the Brewers, J. P. Arencibia[11] of the Rangers, and Elliot Johnson[12] of the Rays.

Kurkjian is a regular correspondent on ESPN Radio; he was frequently featured on the former SVP & Russillo show hosted by Scott Van Pelt and Ryen Russillo. One element of this that has proved popular with listeners is when Van Pelt reads out names of American sports stars in a comedic Baltimore accent, often making Kurkjian crease with laughter. Examples can be found on the ESPN website.[13] Since Van Pelt's departure from his radio slot to anchor the late night SportsCenter show, the mantle of making Kurkjian laugh has been taken up by The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz, which uses its meme of people in the sports world, be they players, coaches or officials, who look like non-sporting people in mundane or ridiculous situations.

On September 29, 2020, Kurkjian helped commentate the American League Wild Card Series postseason game between the Houston Astros[14] and Minnesota Twins[15] alongside play-by-play announcer Karl Ravech and analyst Eduardo Pérez. Airing on ABC, the game marked the first time that the network broadcast a Major League Baseball game since Game 5 of the 1995 World Series.[16]

Personal life[]

On November 26, 1983, Kurkjian married Kathleen Patrick.[1] Kathy is a lawyer.[2] The couple has one daughter, Kelly, a creative director at a marketing agency, and one son, Jeff, who hosts Jeff & Aimee in the Morning on KCYE radio in Las Vegas. Both Kelly and Jeff graduated from Syracuse University.[7] His cousins are Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Stephen Kurkjian and Bob Kurkjian, an engineering teacher at the Learning Prep School in West Newton, MA.[17]

On every day of the Major League Baseball season, from 1990 until 2010, Kurkjian cut every MLB box score out of a newspaper and taped them into a spiral notebook. Kurkjian estimates that this daily task, at 15 minutes per day over 20 seasons, consumed 40 days of his life. He stopped doing this due to the lack of newspapers printing box scores.[18]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Tim Kurkjian – Biography". IMDb. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Akopyan, Manouk (May 2011). "In a League of His Own" (PDF). Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  3. ^ "Mary Teresa Lau Office Manage ..." Washington Post. October 18, 2003. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Kurkjian, Tim (October 25, 2019). "Senators, Nationals and the Big Train: Why this World Series is special". ESPN. Retrieved October 25, 2019.
  5. ^ Steiner, Brandon. "8 Questions with Tim Kurkjian". Steiner Sports. Archived from the original on 14 July 2015. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c Martin, Maria (April 4, 2012). "ESPN's Tim Kurkjian Strikes Balance Between Baseball and Home". North Potomac-Darnestown Patch. Patch Network. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Reed, Jimmy. "About Tim Kurkjian". The Shirley Povich Center for Sports Journalism. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  8. ^ Shaughnessy, Dan; Grossfeld, Stan (2003). Spring Training: Baseball's Early Season. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 43. ISBN 0-618-21399-6. Retrieved 12 November 2010. Tim Kurkjian.
  9. ^ Wolfley, Bob (June 20, 2014). "Tim Kurkjian will report on Brewers vs. Nationals Monday on ESPN, plus enter Sausage Race". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved April 26, 2015.
  10. ^ "Baseball Tonight: Tim Dillard imitates Tim Kurkjian – YouTube". ESPN. Retrieved 2012-04-03.
  11. ^ "ESPN MLB Analyst Tim Kurkjian Imitated". ESPN. March 1, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2015 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ "Who Has The Best Tim Kurkjian Impression?". MLB.com. March 6, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2015.
  13. ^ "Timmy's Laugh". ESPN.com. April 22, 2014. Retrieved April 26, 2015.
  14. ^ Kalibat, Natalie (September 28, 2020). "Game 1 of Astros-Twins to lead off MLB playoff coverage on ABC". WRIC.
  15. ^ Brown, Maury (September 28, 2020). "MLB Postseason Games Returning To ABC For First Time In 25 Years". Forbes.
  16. ^ Fisher, Eric (September 28, 2020). "MLB to be seen on ABC for first time since 1995". SportsBusiness.
  17. ^ Gregorian, Alin K. (January 2, 2011). "Armenian Mirror-Spectator Celebrates 78th with Gala". Armenian Mirror-Spectator. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  18. ^ Kurkjian, Tim (August 15, 2010). "Sad end to a man's quest for knowledge". ESPN. Retrieved 13 July 2015.

External links[]

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