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Pierre Houde

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pierre Houde
Houde in 2024
Born (1957-07-14) 14 July 1957 (age 67)
Alma materHEC Montréal
Years active1989–present
AwardsFoster Hewitt Memorial Award
Sports commentary career
TeamMontreal Canadiens
GenrePlay-by-play
SportNational Hockey League
EmployerRéseau des sports

Pierre Houde (born 14 July 1957) is a Canadian play-by-play sports announcer for Réseau des sports (RDS). He has announced broadcasts of Montreal Canadiens games since 1989, and received the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award in 2024, in recognition from the Hockey Hall of Fame for his broadcasting career.

Early life

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Houde started his broadcasting career at CKOI-FM as a weekend DJ when he was 20 years old and still going to HEC Montréal. His first sports broadcasting was doing half-time NFL broadcasts in French as a freelancer. Houde was one of the original staff at RDS when it started in September 1989.[citation needed]

Hockey broadcast career

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Houde has announced broadcasts of Montreal Canadiens games since 1989. Over the years he was partnered with Pierre Bouchard and Yvon Pedneault.[1] From 2007 to 2011, his partner was former Canadiens' player Benoît Brunet. In 2009, Joël Bouchard was his and Brunet's partners, but when Bouchard left for the Blainville-Boisbriand Armada in 2011, he was replaced by former NHL goaltender Marc Denis. Houde also broadcasts Formula One Races at the same station along with Bertrand Houle.[citation needed]

Houde's goal call is "Le tir, et le but!" ("The shot, and the goal!") after every Canadiens goal, though depending on the moment he stretches "but" out for as long as ten seconds.[2] Other calls are "Eh bien, coup de théâtre, ma parole!" which he often uses when unbelievable situations occur and "Les rouges s'éteignent... et on roule!!" at the start of a Formula One Grand Prix.[citation needed]

Houde does hockey play by plays on Le Hockey Du Samedi Soir, Le Hockey Du Mardi Soir, Le Hockey Du Jeudi Soir and any other days the Canadiens play.[citation needed]

Houde is fluently bilingual in both English and French. However, he has only called two games in English. When Dino Soto, the English play-by-play announcer for the Canadiens on CJAD, was unable to get back to Montreal from a party to celebrate the station's 50th anniversary, he asked Houde to step in and to call CJAD's broadcast of the Canadiens' game against the Detroit Red Wings on December 2, 1995. Houde reluctantly agreed, as no other experienced anglophone broadcaster was available. The Canadiens lost that game in an 11–1 rout that proved to be Patrick Roy's last game with the team before being traded to the Colorado Avalanche. The second came when he called a Canadiens game against the Pittsburgh Penguins on RDS' anglophone sister, The Sports Network.[3] Houde had previously been considered for the play-by-play spot with the Avalanche.[citation needed]

Honours and reputation

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Houde has acquired a fairly large following among the Canadiens' anglophone fans, many of whom watch his telecasts rather than those on Hockey Night in Canada.[4][2] According to a 2020 poll by The Athletic, 44.5 percent of Canadiens fans watch Houde's broadcasts, a figure that The Athletic attributed to large Anglophone viewership.[5]

Houde received the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award in 2024, in recognition from the Hockey Hall of Fame for his broadcasting career.[6]

Personal life

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Houde is from Saint-Laurent, Quebec, now a borough in the city of Montreal. He has shared his life with Lyne Couture since summer 2018.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ "Too little, too late for Toronto Broadcasting Corp". Montreal Gazette. 9 April 2009. Archived from the original on 30 April 2008.
  2. ^ a b "Three little words break linguistic ice". Montreal Gazette. 17 April 2008. Archived from the original on 21 June 2008.
  3. ^ "Patrick Roy's last Habs game 20 years ago was a night one broadcaster will never forget". 7 May 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  4. ^ Lefebvre, Médérick (1 May 2020). "RDS est l'endroit par excellence des fans pour regarder le CH (même chez les anglophones)". danslescoulisses.com.
  5. ^ Arpon Basu; Marc Antoine Godin (1 May 2020). "The people have spoken: Part two of our Canadiens fan survey results". The Athletic.
  6. ^ Cowan, Stu (31 May 2024). "Hockey Hall Fame honours Canadiens announcer Pierre Houde of RDS". The Gazette. Montreal, Quebec. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
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