Kirk Gibson on leaving Tigers’ TV booth after 15 years: ‘I didn’t fit’
BLOOMFIELD HILLS ― The question was pretty simple: Do you miss broadcasting?
The answer, well, that’s more complicated.
“I mean, I enjoyed some of the things, but I didn’t fit,” said Kirk Gibson the other day in an interview with The Detroit News, his first public comments about his departure from the Tigers’ TV team since the press-release announcement went out in March. “All things considered, I did what was right.
“One thing I learned through many people, mentors of mine along the way, was to take the high road … going back to Sparky (Anderson, former manager). He called me out when I was young and said, ‘Can you take it!?’ I said, ‘Take what?’ He said, ‘Can you take it!?’ I said, ‘What are you talking about?’ He said, ‘Can you take it?’ … ‘Yeah, bring it on, I can (bleeping) take it.’ He gave me many examples of taking it, just keeping your mouth shut for the team.”
Gibson, 68, spent 15 years on the Tigers’ television broadcasts, first from 1998-2002, shortly after his retirement as a player, working with Josh Lewin and then Mario Impemba.
He then returned to the booth in 2015, working as an analyst to Impemba, Matt Shepard and, last year, Jason Benetti.
In February, the Tigers announced Gibson would be part of the Tigers’ television team on FanDuel Sports Network Detroit in 2025, working alongside Benetti, the play-by-play man, and fellow analysts Andy Dirks and Dan Petry, among others.
But in mid-March, less than two weeks before the season, the Tigers and Gibson issued a joint statement saying Gibson would not return to the broadcast booth. At the time, it was portrayed as a mutual decision.
Shortly after Gibson began his second stint as a Tigers broadcaster in 2015, he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, and he’s made his fight against the degenerative disease very public ― including on the air, broadcasting more than half the regular-season games for a decade ― even as it clearly took its toll physically. Where his delivery at times might have suffered, the quality of his preparation and analysis did not.
When the announcement was made in March, the Tigers and FanDuel Sports Network Detroit said in a joint statement: “Gibby is a shining example of what we all embody. His grit, tenacity, and dedication to the Olde English ‘D’ are unmatched qualities that have connected him so deeply with generations of Tigers fans.”
The Tigers declined comment on Gibson’s remarks this week.
Gibson remains an adviser to Tigers president Scott Harris and continues to watch almost every Tigers game, though his appearances at Comerica Park have dwindled. He was at Comerica Park in April when the Tigers held Parkinson’s Awareness Day, and he was there in June when he was presented a lifetime achievement award by the Major League Baseball Players Alumni Association. The Tigers continue to support Kirk Gibson’s Foundation for Parkinson’s; each ticket sold through his foundation’s website earns a donation to his foundation.
Stepping away from the broadcast booth has allowed Gibson more time to focus on his foundation, which in October will officially open the Kirk Gibson Center for Parkinson’s Wellness on Northwestern Highway in Farmington Hills.
Of his former broadcast partners, Gibson called Lewin “a genius” (they were affectionately known as Gibby and the Geek), “Mario was good, too,” and “nobody tried harder” than Shepard.
Before the 2024 season, Shepard was fired and replaced with Benetti, who came over from the Chicago White Sox. Benetti, like the Tigers, declined to comment.
“Things change over time, you know? You get older, you’ve gotta change if you’re going to be partners. You’ve gotta change if you’re going to make it work,” said Gibson, who is arguably the most popular living former Tiger. “I’ll just leave it at that.”
On if he wishes he still was in the booth, Gibson added, “If things are right, you do it. It wasn’t a good fit.”