Fox’s Mike Joy refutes ‘clickbait’ rumor he was fired
"Anonymous BS clickbait"
"Anonymous BS clickbait"
"We lost a lot of that young fanbase that we really need to covet if we're going to grow this sport again."
"It's been interesting watching y'all try to operate up here."
"I said the Xfinity Series was a dumpster fire, it's not. A dumpster fire is contained, and that series is not right now."
"Here we are, our very first broadcast, and we're being baptized by fire."
"There's now a common thread of people saying that I've lost my fastball. And you know, maybe so. I can't argue that."
Joy called his record-setting 45th Daytona 500 in February.
Host Brandon Contes interviews legendary Fox NASCAR play-by-play commentator Mike Joy. Brandon and Mike discuss a wide range...
"They went completely dark on us. We knew something bad had happened."
"It's the toughest thing you do in sports broadcasting, having to turn that corner from broadcasting a sports event to being at the center of a news story like that."
"It's really cool to see how kind of each person authors their opportunity to talk about the race and the competition."
"The great thing is that instead of these cars just sitting in a dusty museum, somewhere, the fans get to come out and see them where they belong, on a track and running at full song."
Four members of Fox's original Daytona 500 broadcast team spoke to AA about how that broadcast has changed over the years.
Joy has been calling NASCAR for Fox since 2001, and will be working his 43rd Daytona overall Sunday. He said the race is highly different each year though.