If you thought Mike Francesa’s retirement tour from radio was too long, wait until you hear about Dan Patrick’s.
In Jan. 2016, Francesa went on Garbage Time with Katie Nolan and announced he was going to retire from WFAN Dec. 2017, jumpstarting a near two-year retirement tour only for him to ceremoniously return in May 2018. Patrick saw Francesa’s premature retirement announcement and raised him.
Four more years! Patrick shared the “breaking news” on his radio show Wednesday morning, casually revealing plans to step away from the microphone in Dec. 2027.
While ogling the prospect of winning the $1 billion Powerball jackpot and the possibility of splitting the money amongst the show’s cast, Patrick noted, “but we’re all going to continue working.” Which prompted the question, how much longer is the 66-year-old Patrick planning to work?
Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio
Download audio“Four more years,” Patrick said definitively. “No, I’m like the Supreme Court. I’m just gonna stay here forever. I’m like Clarence Thomas, I’m just getting gifts,” he joked.
Dannette Marvin Prince wasn’t buying Patrick’s claim of four more years, “I didn’t believe you, not one bit because in four more years, you’ll be like, ‘Guys, just four more years. And then that’s it!’” Which is probably what most of their audience was thinking. Four years is a lot of time for Patrick to decide he’s not ready to retire.
“Here is the breaking news. So, four more years in December, that’s how long I’m gonna do this for,” Patrick reiterated. “Four and a half years, I’m gonna do this…by January of 2028 I will be on The Golden Bachelor. That’s it. That’s all I’m doing. That’s when the microphone gets turned off for the final time.”
Four years is still a lot of time for someone to change their mind about whether or not they want to retire. But Patrick will be 70 years old at that point, which sounds like a good round number for someone to target retirement. The four-year retirement tour should be fun. And while it’s longer than Francesa’s, it still pales in comparison to Jim Nantz who has repeatedly stated he will retire from The Masters in 2036.
About Brandon Contes
Brandon Contes is a staff writer for Awful Announcing and The Comeback. He previously helped carve the sports vertical for Mediaite and spent more than three years with Barrett Sports Media. Send tips/comments/complaints to bcontes@thecomeback.com
Recent Posts
Former Ohio State, WVU president calls for media rights centralization in college football
Gordon Gee claims college football is leaving billions of dollars on the table.
Steve Gelbs: Aaron Glenn ‘doesn’t have to act this way’ with the media
"I don't know if there's any deeper intent behind it or if he's just a guy that doesn't feel like he has to share anything with the media and so he's going to make a thing out of it."
Jameis Winston calls out reporter for not listening during media scrum
"Are you just not listening to me talk this entire time?"
Kirk Ferentz delivers surprise tribute to longtime Gazette columnist Michael Hlas
Saturday marked Hlas's last game at Kinnick Stadium for The Gazette.
Lincoln Riley calls reporter’s question ‘dumbest’ he’s been asked, tells him to be embarrassed
"This is a professional thing. You ought to try it."
Andre Ware says Tommy Castellanos, Diego Pavia could have long CFL careers
"I don't know what his aspirations are, in terms of the NFL, but he and Diego Pavia at Vanderbilt can play a long time up north."