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Gene Deckerhoff: Buccaneers’ Voice Retires | Analysis by Brian Moineau
Last Call for an Icon: Gene Deckerhoff Retires After the 2025 Season There are voices that become part of a place — not just sound, but memory. For Tampa Bay f…

Last Call for an Icon: Gene Deckerhoff Retires After the 2025 Season

There are voices that become part of a place — not just sound, but memory. For Tampa Bay football, Gene Deckerhoff’s is one of those voices. On December 31, 2025 the Buccaneers announced that after 37 seasons behind the microphone, Deckerhoff will retire at the end of the 2025 NFL season. His signature calls — most famously “Touchdown, Tampa Bay!” and the rallying cry “Fire the Cannons!” — have been the soundtrack for generations of Bucs fans.

Why this matters beyond a broadcast booth

  • A team’s identity is shaped as much by the rituals and sounds around it as by players and coaches. Deckerhoff narrated three-quarters of Tampa Bay’s games since 1989 — through expansion growing pains, two Super Bowl championships, and countless local legends — and his cadence and enthusiasm helped seal those moments in memory.
  • Radio play-by-play remains intimate and immediate. For many fans (commuters, road-trippers, older fans, and anyone who grew up with AM/FM on a Saturday night), the radio voice is the primary connection to the team. Gene’s retirement is, in part, the end of an era for that way of experiencing football.
  • His career is historically significant for the NFL: 37 seasons with one club ranks among the longest-tenured announcers in league history, trailing only a couple of legendary contemporaries.

The arc of a long career

  • Joined the Buccaneers radio network in 1989 and completed 37 seasons by the end of 2025.
  • Called more than 800 Buccaneers games and delivered over 1,100 touchdown calls for the franchise (team announcement, Dec 31, 2025).
  • Narrated both Super Bowl runs (2002 season/Super Bowl XXXVII and the 2020s Super Bowl season), plus countless playoff runs and franchise-defining moments.
  • Honors include multiple Florida Sportscaster of the Year awards, the Chris Schenkel Award (2013), and induction into the Florida Sports Hall of Fame.

Memorable calls that live on

  • “There it is! The dagger’s in! We’re going to win the Super Bowl!” — Derrick Brooks’ pick-six sealing Super Bowl XXXVII.
  • “Gone! Coast to Coast, Rondé Barber!” — Rondé Barber’s 92-yard interception return in the 2002 NFC Championship.
  • Simple, human moments like “You go, Joe!” (Joe Jurevicius) that capture emotion as much as the play itself.

These lines aren’t just radio copy; they are part of how fans recall and retell the team’s history.

Transition questions and what comes next

  • Who will succeed a voice so closely tied to the franchise? Replacing Deckerhoff won’t be just about finding someone who can call plays — it will mean finding a broadcaster who can connect with the same breadth of fans and become a steady presence across decades.
  • How will the team honor this legacy? The Buccaneers will likely create tributes during the remaining 2025 games, and there’s potential for hall-of-fame style recognition given his state- and college-level honors.
  • What does this mean for radio-listening culture? Deckerhoff’s retirement highlights how broadcast traditions shift — streaming, TV, and social media shifts audiences, but the appetite for a memorable play-by-play voice endures.

A few takeaways for fans and the franchise

  • Gene’s retirement is both a celebration and a milestone: it closes a chapter that began in 1989 and stretches across the modern rise of the Buccaneers.
  • Emotional continuity matters. Teams that preserve continuity in their audio and visual identities often keep stronger cross-generational fan bonds.
  • The role of a lead play-by-play broadcaster is more than describing action — it’s about framing context, emotion, and lore. Whoever takes over inherits a storytelling mantle.

Final thoughts

It’s tempting to reduce a broadcaster’s value to a list of awards or the tally of games called. The truer measure of Gene Deckerhoff’s impact is in the way entire households and car rides still snap to attention at the cadence of his lines. Retirement is a quiet, graceful curtain call for someone who spent decades turning plays into stories. As the Buccaneers and their fans finish the 2025 season, the last “Touchdown, Tampa Bay!” called by Deckerhoff will feel like the final page of a long, beloved chapter — and the echo of that voice will live on in highlight reels and living-room recollections for many years.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

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