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"He was so consistently entertaining
-- that guy you really wanted to have on the couch with you, but larger than life," Ebersol said. "I think people stayed with a rout or a bad game that Madden might have to broadcast in the second half (more) than they ever would have stayed with anybody else." For the last several years, Madden said, he waited until two months after the season to determine whether to continue, not wanting to rush into a decision. "The last game I did was the Super Bowl, which was pretty good," Madden said. "But, again, that wasn't planned. I didn't say,
'I want to go out on a high note.'" He surprised Ebersol when he told him last week he was retiring. Ebersol flew to California on Wednesday morning and spent 11 hours with Madden, trying to persuade him to change his mind. Ebersol even offered to allow Madden to call games only in September and November and to take October and December off. His longtime agent, Sandy Montag, said Madden won't change his mind now that his retirement is official. Madden didn't want a dramatic farewell
-- he didn't even appear on a conference call Thursday with Ebersol and Montag. "It wouldn't have been me to say the week of the Super Bowl, 'This is my last game,'" Madden said during his brief radio appearance. Summerall said he knew Madden would be something special the first time they worked together. "He didn't talk down to people," Summerall said. "He talked as if he was sitting next to you and explaining things to you."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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