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Lee Corso's final appearance on ESPN's College GameDay will be in Week 1 of the 2025 season. It would be fitting for his ...
It’s the end of an era as legendary sports broadcaster Lee Corso is set to retire from College GameDay after nearly four ...
ESPN college football analyst Lee Corso announced his retirement Thursday. Here's a look at his most memorable moments on ...
Many of those friends took time to celebrate Corso upon hearing news of his retirement, including Rece Davis, who has served as the host of GameDay since 2015.
A 38-year career with ESPN “College GameDay” is ending as host Lee Corso announces he is retiring. Corso will retire in ...
As the legendary coach plans to step away from his commentary job on ESPN's College Gameday program after 38 years, we take a ...
Oh, and earlier this week, the Pelicans fired executive VP David Griffin, swiftly replacing him with Hall of Famer Joe Dumars ...
Corso, the longtime ESPN analyst, will retire from “College GameDay” after Week 1 of the 2025 season, ending a 38-year run.
Fox Sports swung big in an attempt to shake up the college football pregame landscape—and nearly pulled off a game-changer.
When the show made its first trip to Philly for an Ivy League showdown against Harvard, the Quakers cruised to a 44-9 win.
There will only ever be one Lee Corso. College football Saturdays didn’t start until Corso put a mascot head on and heard the cheers (or boos) from the thousands of students and onlookers ...
College GameDay announcers (L-R) Chris Fowler, Lee Corso and Kirk Herbstreit comment during the NCAA football game between Notre Dame and Florida State at Doak Campbell Stadium on October 26, 2002 in ...