Danh ngôn của Joe Buck (Sứ mệnh: 4)

Broadcasting is a brutal, often unfair business, where looks are valued more than skill.
I learned as my dad's kid that unless you physically can't get there, unless you physically can't do it, you need to show up for work.
I just consider Boston and New England incredible sports fans. If they give me trouble, think I'm rooting for other side, it's mainly because they're living and dying with every pitch and every play and think I'm rooting for the other side. I'd much rather that than apathy.
My dad was not good at saying no. I'm trying to be better at saying no.
I don't know who had a more tiresome, wall-to-wall schedule than my father, and I know what it's like to be a kid in that situation. He was gone a lot. He needed to be. I understood it. So did my mom.
My dad worked so hard. He slept in his own bed maybe half the nights of the year because of road assignments, but even when he was home, he was covering games. It put a lot of pressure on my mom. She brought in her parents to help out, and it took a village to raise us. I was lucky.
I don't know that I've ever looked at baseball like a purely casual fan. That's just realistic when you grow up with it putting food on your table, and with it taking your dad out of town.
NBC Sports does a great job with golf.