John Ireland
Bryce Alderton
From covering news in Monroe, La. to interviewing Shaquille O’Neal
and Kobe Bryant of the Los Angeles Lakers as a sideline reporter,
John Ireland has it made, at least in his eyes.
“If you would have told me I would be paid to go on the road with
the Lakers and watch basketball games, I would have thought you were
nuts,” said the Corona del Mar High and UCLA graduate, who now lives
in Hollywood Hills. “Anybody who complains about this job is an
idiot. You get paid to go to the games. It’s a great life.”
Ireland has taken on the role of the Lakers’ sideline reporter for
36 of the teams’ 41 road games televised on KCAL Channel 9 this
season.
The 39-year-old sports anchor interviews players and coaches
before and after every game for a segment on either the station’s
weeknight sports show (Sports News Tonight) that airs Monday through
Friday or the 30-minute weekend edition for Saturdays and Sundays.
The role of a sideline reporter was created this year following
the death of legendary Lakers announcer Chick Hearn and commentators
Paul Sunderland and Stu Lantz gave their OK, said Ireland.
“No one wanted to take any time away from Chick when he was
there,” Ireland said. “(Sunderland) and (Lantz) thought a sideline
reporter would add to the broadcast this season.”
Covering the Lakers has been a joy for Ireland, who said it helps
that Bryant and O’Neal -- the teams’ superstars -- are a “godsend to
the media.”
“They are very fun guys who are fun to cover and have a great
sense of humor,” Ireland said. “When your best player is a jerk it
affects the rest of the team but (O’Neal) and (Bryant) are genuinely
nice people.”
Ireland, who played on CdM’s 1981 CIF championship basketball
team, typically arrives at the arena three hours before the game and
won’t leave until the team boards the bus following the contest.
Last week, when the Lakers played an 8 p.m. game against the
Philadelphia 76ers, Ireland arrived at the arena at 5 that night and
didn’t leave until midnight.
“It runs into a much longer day on the road,” Ireland said. “But
it’s a small price to pay for covering the Lakers.”
December presents a busy time for Ireland, who is married and has
a 1-year-old son.
When the Lakers played the Sacramento Kings in Los Angeles on
Christmas Day, Ireland anchored Sports News Tonight like he does each
weeknight. He also hosts a show on Fox Sports Radio each Sunday
during the NFL season titled “We Are There” that can be heard in 110
cities nationwide.
In the fall, Ireland spends five days each week reporting on the
UCLA football team.
CBS Channel 2 just bought Channel 9, which means a more
comprehensive approach to covering sports in Los Angeles, according
to Ireland.
“In the past we’d have to pick between UCLA or USC in the NCAA
basketball tournament, but now we’ll have one perspective to USC and
one to UCLA,” Ireland said. “We can ping-pong between each other on
TV.”
Now in his eighth year at KCAL, Ireland knows his tenure there is
a special case.
“The challenge is there’s a lot of turnover in this business,” he
said. “This is my fourth station so things have gone well for me.”
While at UCLA -- where Ireland graduated with a history degree in
1985 -- he took a sports television class that piqued his interest
toward broadcasting.
“I really wanted to be a newspaper reporter because I thought it
was more fun to write something than say it,” Ireland said. “But then
I took the sports TV class and saw that (television) is where sports
was heading so I decided to make a career of it.”
Before landing the KCAL position, Ireland spent less than a year
as a news reporter with the ABC affiliate in Louisiana followed by a
3 1/2-year stint in Beaumont, Texas, and five years at a television
station in San Diego.
While working in Monroe, Ireland filled in for the sports anchors
when they had time off and made a tape recording of his segments that
he used to land future jobs.
Ireland’s parents still live in Corona del Mar and he has become
good friends with Fox Sports News’ Bill MacDonald, also a CdM High
graduate and current resident. MacDonald interviews Lakers’ players
and coaches along with members of the National Hockey League’s Los
Angeles Kings when both teams play home games at the Staples Center.
Ireland appreciates the ascent to his current position.
“I’m living a dream,” Ireland said. “It gets better every year
because I get to know the people close to the team, which means more
stories.”
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