I like parades.

I don't like scripts.

To me, I'm a storyteller.

I love being a part of CBS.

The Masters is poetry to me.

I have a pretty good memory.

I treasure all my friendships.

I loved Tom Landry and Roger Staubach.

I love stone crabs. And I love popcorn.

I wake up every day and give my thanks.

Alzheimer's is such an insidious disease.

I would like to work 50 Masters Tournaments.

I'm loyal to CBS. They have been loyal to me.

As a storyteller, dates and time equal context.

Jim Murray's greatest writings were golf writings.

I live every day the job that I dreamed of as a boy.

I don't like hot takes any more than I like hot cakes.

Nothing in golf is certain, especially on the PGA Tour.

I'm looking at the world through a very positive prism.

Augusta National... an oasis of career-defining moments.

I think I shot 78 one time. My golf game is so overrated.

They say time heals all wounds, but sometimes you wonder.

The 'mecca of college basketball is in Storrs, Connecticut.

The job I wanted before I was in college was to work for CBS.

I like stories. I like to figure out how history ties to the present.

Lance Barrow's a great producer and we work together exceptionally well.

I could care less about identifying who the MVP is in a championship game.

As we all know, the concept of the gimme putt is anathema to the PGA Tour.

I have always been true to the people who have influenced me as a young boy.

I got to live through the Tiger Woods era and who knows who's still to come.

One of Tiger's trademarks in his prime was his ability to fight for every stroke.

I'm not an agate type ESPN Sports Center highlight, in-your-face kind of a sports fan.

My father passed away due to Alzheimer's disease, and many things I do are nods to him.

The Masters is the one tournament with a timeless quality, where legends are celebrated.

I had first-hand experience watching my father's health decline over the stretch of 13 years.

The Masters isn't about Jim Nantz and his storytelling. It's about golf's greatest tournament.

A man's word and his intestinal fortitude are two of the most honorable virtues known to mankind.

I'm blessed to have great friends, and there are a lot of men in my life who've been more than just friends.

People think I can just walk out and shoot 75 without taking a warm-up shot. But believe me, it's not that easy.

Chemistry's a word that people who make hires and decisions say, 'Hey, you guys go out and work on your chemistry!'

When Jack Nicklaus won the Masters in 1986, it was mind-blowing. How in the world could a 46-year-old win the Masters?

I'm more likely to quote the golfer George Burns than the legendary late comedian by the same name who lived to be 100.

Since 1934 every accomplished player in golf has come to the Augusta National looking for an introduction into history.

I see so many people in our industry, in my own network, who throw little tantrums about things that they can't control.

How can we grow the game? It's a conversation in every sport, how do you tap into the millennials? Golf is no different.

The Masters runs deep in my heart; it's a love affair that I've had since I was a little boy with that tournament, that club.

I was just overcome with the idea that one day I wanted to be one of those voices at the Masters and work for CBS and cover the NFL.

I call golf with my head and my heart. I don't have any notes in front of me - it's different from basketball and football in that feel.

The dream for me was always the Masters and after my freshman season on the Houston golf team I knew CBS was the only way I'd get there.

In 2011, my wife, Courtney, and I, with my amazing mother and sister, opened the Nantz National Alzheimer Center at Houston Methodist Hospital.

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