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ESPN's Lee Corso is retiring from GameDay this year, and he's played a role in some of the Auburn Tigers' most legendary wins.
Retiring Lee Corso represents the soul of college football, which USA TODAY Network explores in a new book our fall passion.
What will life be like for ESPN's College GameDay without Lee Corso? You have already seen it, says Richard Deitsch in his ...
ESPN broadcaster Lee Corso will retire after week one of the 2025 college football season, ending a 38-year run on ESPN’s ...
Corso, who spent 28 years as a college and professional coach and made his debut on the very first episode of "College GameDay" in 1987, announced that the Week 1 episode of ESPN's pregame show on ...
Lee Corso has been a staple in millions of households every Saturday of every college football season since the inception of ESPN’s College GameDay in 1987. Corso has essentially given his life ...
It was unfortunate in this country, at this time, that the narrative of 89-year-old Lee Corso’s retirement Thursday from college football’s flagship kickoff show, ESPN’s “College GameDay ...
Lee Corso, the unintended glorious gift to America’s obsession with televised football, will retire from ESPN’s "College GameDay" after the first week of the 2025 season. Maybe we can get him to turn ...
Corso was a standout on both sides of the ball during his time at Florida State, as both a defensive back and a quarterback. Corso, who went by the nickname “Sunshine Scooter” on campus, was also a ...
Lee Corso’s nearly four-decade run on ESPN’s “College GameDay” is coming to an end. Corso, the longtime ESPN broadcaster and former coach widely known for his endearing expressions and elaborate ...
For the first time in 12 years, Texas football won't play at home in October. And the Horns will go 42 days in one stretch ...