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Lon McEachern

Lon McEachern
Born 1956/1957 (age 59–60)
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Residence Santa Clara, California, United States
Nationality American
Education University of California, Santa Barbara (B.A. 1980)
Occupation Sports commentator
Known for Coverage of World Series of Poker
Style Play by play
Home town Corte Madera, California, United States
Television ESPN
Spouse(s) Carol McEachern (m. 1981)
Children 2
Relatives Matthew Wood (nephew)

Lon McEachern (pronounced "ma-CAIR-en", born 1956/1957) is an American sports commentator most known for his hand-by-hand commentary of the World Series of Poker on ESPN. He is known as the "voice of poker".

McEachern was born in Memphis, Tennessee, one of four children. His family later relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area and McEachern was raised in Corte Madera in Marin County until the age of 19. He attended Redwood High School and played baseball while a student. He was teammates with Buddy Biancalana in his senior year and graduated in 1975.

McEachern attended Santa Barbara City College and was a baseball teammate of future-MLB player Jesse Orosco. He later attended the University of California, Santa Barbara and graduated in 1980 with a B.A. in communications. While enrolled at UC Santa Barbara, he worked at the campus radio station KCSB-FM.

Out of college, McEachern worked radio at KTMS, the former home of another UCSB graduate in Jim Rome, before entering the television industry with KCOY-TV. He moved back to the San Francisco Bay Area in the early 1990s to work at KGO-TV and KPIX-TV. He also freelanced for ESPN, including covering play-by-play of the X Games. By 2002, McEachern had left the television industry.

In 2002, ESPN reached out to McEachern, who was working as a mortgage banker at the time, to cover poker. He was brought back in 2003 alongside Norman Chad for the 2003 World Series of Poker. The tournament was won by Chris Moneymaker and led to the Moneymaker effect and a corresponding surge in poker's popularity. McEachern continued as a mortgage banker for nearly five years, doing poker coverage for ESPN on the side. He's covered every World Series of Poker event since ESPN acquired the broadcasting rights as of the 2002 WSOP.


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