Tommy Edwards is a retired American public address announcer for the Chicago Bulls of the National Basketball Association.
Edwards was the arena voice for the Bulls at Chicago Stadium from 1976 to 1990.[1] During his first tenure with the team, Edwards is credited with originating the Bulls' famous signature style of introducing the starting lineups with "And now..."[1]
Edwards was also the first stadium announcer to play Gary Glitter's Rock and Roll (which became one of America's most popular sports anthems).[1]
In 2006, Edwards returned to the Bulls, replacing Steve Scott as the United Center arena voice.
Tommy Edwards was also a DJ and program director at several Chicago area radio stations, including WLS, WCFL and WKQX. He was part of the famous "Animal Stories" (as Little "Snot-Nosed" Tommy) with Larry Lujack on WLS and WRLL. Edwards programmed WODS in Boston from 1990 to 1992, then moved to KCBS-FM in Los Angeles, where he created the "Arrow" (All Rock & Roll Oldies) format. He most recently worked at 104.3 K-Hits, an oldies station broadcasting out of Chicago.[2] Edwards retired from radio on September 12, 2014, after a 54-year career.[3][4]
Edwards was born in Topeka, Kansas and lives in Lake Forest, Illinois. He began in radio at KTOP in Topeka and worked at WEAM in Washington DC and WOR-FM in New York City before moving to Chicago.
Tommy announced that the Chicago Bulls game against the Houston Rockets on November 9, 2019, would be his last as a PA announcer. He retired and moved to the West Coast to be closer to his children.
References
edit- ^ a b c Tommy Edwards | Bulls Archived January 3, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Tommy Edwards Biography - 104.3 K-Hits[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Feder, Robert "Tommy Edwards signing off on a legendary career", RobertFeder.com. September 5, 2014. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
- ^ "Chicago Radio Personality Tommy Edwards Set To Retire After Five Decades Of Broadcasting", CBS 2 Chicago. September 5, 2014. Retrieved January 22, 2019.