Re: Faulk as an announcer
I agree, he's been very impressive in the booth. I'd love to hear his commentary during every Rams game, but I imagine that's probably asking too much, given his television commitments and the possible cost of hiring him full-time for that job.
Re: Faulk as an announcer
Faulk is the reason I started watching football. I wasn't a big fan of football till I saw this guy run. Sad part is this was in 2003 so he wasn't even in his prime. I just loved the way he ran the ball. Nowwe get to here him breakdown our rams now? What more could we ask for? O wait one of our best lineman is sitting beside him? That's pretty cool even though Idk id pace will be there after this year. Faulk is doing great. Seeing him on Sundays will always cheer me up.
Re: Faulk as an announcer
He started his TV career awkwardly, but Faulk has made himself into a polished, articulate announcer. Dedication and work ethic transcends all fields.
Re: Faulk as an announcer
He really is an extremely talented and gifted person. I think that man could pretty much excel at whatever he put his mind to. I loved his commentary.
Re: Faulk as an announcer
:helmet:
As a Rams fan I of course think that Faulk is excellent doing "Rams" games.
Now as far as him doing this full-time - I would be more of a critic.
Re: Faulk as an announcer
Quote:
Originally Posted by
R8rh8rmike
He started his TV career awkwardly, but Faulk has made himself into a polished, articulate announcer. Dedication and work ethic transcends all fields.
Agreed. The Marshall man is a professional and he's probably taking this announcer business with entire commitment, same as on the field sans uniform / pads / helmet / ball.
I think at first Faulk still had a stuttering obstacle to hurdle but I suppose the NFLN experts might have even gotten a speech therapist to help him get through that natural fault. Similar to NBA's great Bill Walton who had a worse stuttering difficulty than MF.
Re: Faulk as an announcer
Really no surprise, Marshall was a coach on the field during his days so that kind of knowledge translates easier to the booth. As long as a former player can deliver his expertise in a coherent and succinct manner, and approaches everything professionally, they can do well. Sadly, Marshall is more of an exception than the rule, too many of those guys just love to hear themselves talk.