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In Milwaukee Buzz
Milwaukee Talks: Packers radio announcer Wayne Larrivee
Larrivee worked for Kansas City and Chicago before landing to Green Bay.
By Dennis Krause
Special to OnMilwaukee.com

E-mail author | Author bio
More articles by Dennis Krause

Published Sept. 5, 2006 at 5:25 a.m.
Tags: larrivee, wtmj, radio, powell

Fall weekends are prime time for play-by-play man Wayne Larrivee.

He's in his eighth season as the radio voice of the Packers and continues to call Big Ten football on ESPN Regional television. Winter just adds to Larrivee's busy schedule as he calls Chicago Bulls games on WGN-TV and does Big Ten basketball on ESPN Regional.

Did we mention that Larrivee also does morning drive-time sports on WTMJ Radio and hosts the nationally syndicated Pro Football Weekly radio show?
Larrivee, 51, grew up in Lee, Mass., and attended Emerson College in Boston. He broke into the NFL in 1978 with the Kansas City Chiefs before
becoming the radio voice of the Chicago Bears in 1985. He has been calling Packers games since taking over for Jim Irwin in 1999.

With the regular-season opener slated for Sunday afternoon against Chicago, Larrivee took a few moments to chat with OnMilwaukee.com about his varied and successful career.

OMC: Is this Packers team better than the 4-12 squad of a year ago? Why?

Wayne Larrivee: It will be a much younger team than a season ago. It has a little more talent but is, as Brett Favre said, one of the most inexperienced teams we have seen in quite some time in Green Bay. In pro sports, inexperience does not lead to many victories. I will say this. They will be better than 4-12, but how much better depends on a lot of young guys growing up quickly.

OMC: Before coming to Green Bay, you did play-by-play with the Kansas City Chiefs and the Chicago Bears. Can you compare those experiences to doing the Packers games?

WL: Soldier Field was and still is one of the worst stadiums for a play-by-play announcer to work (physically). But Chicago is far and away the best sports town in America. Kansas City's Arrowhead Stadium to this day is still one of the best places to work or see an NFL game. When I was there the Chiefs were the bottom-feeders and the Royals were riding high. But that was my first NFL stop and Kansas City will always be special. No place comes close to Green Bay in terms of history, tradition, and passion. If you have to work an NFL game on a Sunday afternoon or Monday night, there is no place better than Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. It is absolutely the ultimate experience no matter how many games or years one has the opportunity to work at that fabled place. In short, nothing comes close to the Packers experience for me!

OMC: You've told me before that because of team and network contracts that you never called play-by-play of a Bulls playoff game during all of those
championship years. For that reason, is the Bears Super Bowl your most memorable game as a broadcaster?

WL: That is the biggest game I have ever broadcast, but the best broadcast and most exciting game I have ever done was Christmas Eve, 2004,
Packers-Vikings in the Metrodome. That was the one game regular season championship for the division and first round home playoff game won by the
Packers, 33-31. Of course, everyone here has forgotten about that game because two weeks later the Vikings came to Green Bay and won in the playoffs.

OMC: You have been around Walter Payton, Michael Jordan and Brett Favre on a regular basis. Can you talk about the three different personalities? Is there a common thread to their greatness?

WL: Great ability, love of the game, tremendous heart and the work ethic of a free agent just trying to make the team.

OMC: Looking at your schedule--Packers, Big Ten football and basketball, Bulls, morning drive sports on WTMJ Radio -- how in the world do you balance all of that?

WL: It is not easy because of the prep that goes into all of those games. Remember when you were in college and it was exams week? That is my fall -- every week!

OMC: I imagine the actual games are the best part of your job. The homework has to be difficult. What kind of preparation do you do, let's say for a
Packers game?

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