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As a sports broadcaster, Kevin Harlan has a whopping $1 million net worth
CelebrityNetWorth.com says an American sportscaster for radio and TV has earned $1 million over the course of his 30-year career in the sports industry.
In 1982, he began his career in radio and TV broadcasting as the voice of the NBA team Kansas City Kings.
Until 2008, Harlan was the voice of Westwood One Radio’s coverage of the Final Four. After calling Super Bowl XLV, he became the lead commentator for Westwood One’s Monday Night Football in 2010.
He has covered Super Bowls XLV through XLVI for Westwood One in a streak of 12 broadcasts, the longest in the history of the TV and radio networks.
Harlan also presented the HD stream of the Super Bowl XXXV game from CBS in 2001. Since 2003, he has also called preseason games for his hometown team, the Packers, on the team’s statewide TV network.
In 2017 and 2019, his colleagues gave him the National Sportscaster of the Year award. Harlan appeared in both the Final Four and the Super Bowl 13 times.
He is one of only three sportscasters, along with Dick Stockton and Marv Albert, to be on more than 3,000 national network broadcasts during their careers.
Harlan makes $400,000 a year as a sportscaster
Clutchpoint says Harlan makes $400,000 a year as a sportscaster.
Everyone knows Kevin Harlan as the voice of Monday Night Football and for his analysis of the Super Bowl. Harlan is the play-by-play announcer for the NFL and NCAA Men’s Basketball tournaments on CBS Sports today.
He may also make a good living as a broadcaster for Tuner Sports, where Charles Barkley, another NBA expert, is said to be earning around $1.5 million per year.
Even though Kevin may not earn as much as Barkley, his salary and other earnings may be close to a million dollars.
Barkley, on the other hand, has a long list of impressive accomplishments that show just how hard he works on and off the court. He used to play professional basketball and won awards. Now, he is a well-known NBA analyst.
Harlan’s first radio job was at his high school radio station
Harlan began calling Our Lady of Premontre High School boys’ basketball, football, and ice hockey games when he was in high school. He did it on WGBP-FM, the school’s radio network. He was recently given a place in the school’s Hall of Fame.
Harlan worked as a ball boy for the Green Bay Packers when he was a teenager. His father, Bob Harlan, was an executive for the team.
Kevin plans to earn a degree in communications or mass media from either the University of Notre Dame or the University of Wisconsin-Madison. However, broadcaster Gary Bender asked Kevin’s father, Bob, to enroll Kevin in the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of Kansas.
When the Jayhawks’ primary basketball play-by-play announcer, Tom Hedrick, met Harlan, he could tell right away that the young man loved sports broadcasting and had a lot of potential.
In Harlan’s first year, Hedrick gave him work on the sidelines and then promoted him to be his assistant and fill-in announcer when he had other things to do. Likewise, Harlan earned a degree in broadcast journalism in 1982.
The radio sports announcer became the voice of the NBA’s Kansas City Kings
Harlan joined the radio and TV team for the Kansas City Kings (now the Sacramento Kings) in 1982, when he was 22 years old and fresh out of college.
After calling basketball games for his alma mater, the University of Kansas, for a year, he spent several years as an undergraduate hosting and producing programs for before and after games. After that, he called games for the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs from 1985 to 1993.
Harlan also called University of Missouri basketball and football games from 1986 to 1989 and was the play-by-play announcer for the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves for nine years (1989–98).
Harlan called NFL football games on NBC in 1991, college football games on ESPN from 1992 to 1993, and NFL games on Fox from 1994 to 1997.
His broadcast studio in his basement in 2020
Kevin Harlan spent a lot of time in his renovated basement in 2020, when COVID was spreading like wildfire.
The Turner Sports announcer used to be courtside in places like the American Airlines Arena in Miami or the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Today, Harlan announces NBA games from the basement of his century-old home in Mission Hills, Kansas. It is 15 feet by 8 feet.
The Athletic said there was an eight-foot “NBA on TNT” banner behind Harlan when he was calling games.
Then there are two 32-inch monitors on a rectangular folding table in front of Harlan, who sits on a Pottery Barn chair his wife Ann bought for a basement table.
During the games, a laptop computer was set up in front of Harlan so he could see the official score of his match right from the arena.