Randy Pedersen (born 1962) is a professional bowler and color analyst for ESPN's coverage of the PBA Tour. During the present season, he has worked alongside play-by-play announcers Dave Ryan and Mike Jakubowski. Pedersen grew up in Southern California, but relocated to Clermont, Florida in the early 1990s, where he has resided ever since. He and his wife Becky have two children: a son, Chad and a daughter, Savannah.
As a bowler, Pedersen has won 13 PBA titles, with his last coming at age 40 in the 2002 Pepsi Open. That title pushed him over the $1 million career earnings mark, making him the 24th millionaire in PBA history at the time. Most dominant from the mid-1980s to early 1990s, Pedersen captured the prestigious PBA National Championship crown in 1987 for his first and only major title.
At the same time, he is also known for two of the worst breaks in PBA Tour history. He lost the 1995 Touring Players Championship to veteran Ernie Schlegel when, needing a strike on the first ball of the tenth frame to win, he left a single 8-pin standing on what appeared to be a perfect shot. (The match is also well remembered for Schlegel's spirited, but unprofessional reaction to his win.) Pedersen also lost the 2003 Tournament of Champions (and the PBA Tour exemption that would have come with it) by leaving a single 10-pin standing in the last frame.
Randy was ranked #35 on the PBA's 2008 list of 50 Greatest Players of the last 50 years. He was elected to the PBA Hall of Fame in October, 2010, and was inducted with the 2011 class on January 22, 2011.
Randy joined the PBA50 Tour (formerly PBA Senior Tour) in 2013, and on May 16 of that year he won the very first tournament he entered: the PBA50 Dayton Classic.
Off the lanes, Pedersen has had great success behind the microphone as a TV analyst since joining ESPN in 2001; Pedersen earned the position after getting his start in broadcasting as a lane-level reporter on ABC's Pro Bowlers Tour. He also worked for Fox Sports Net for a brief time in 2000.