Marv Albert retiring after NBA playoffs

Albert, who will turn 80 next month, has been calling professional games for nearly 60 years

Marv Albert will retire at the conclusion of the NBA playoffs, The Post has learned.

Albert, who will turn 80 next month, has been calling professional games for nearly 60 years and is considered by most the greatest NBA play-by-player of all-time.

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A Brooklyn native and Basketball Hall of Famer revered for his signature "Yes!" call, Albert worked his first Knicks game as a 21-year-old in 1963, filling in for another New York sportscasting giant, Marty Glickman, on WCBS Radio.

Sources said TNT, where Albert has been the lead play-by-player for more than two decades, recently began contacting NBA personnel to pay tribute to Albert during the playoffs.

TNT and Albert are expected to formally announce his retirement plans soon.

Marv Albert will retire at the conclusion of the NBA playoffs, The Post has learned.

Albert, who will turn 80 next month, has been calling professional games for nearly 60 years and is considered by most the greatest NBA play-by-player of all-time.

A Brooklyn native and Basketball Hall of Famer revered for his signature "Yes!" call, Albert worked his first Knicks game as a 21-year-old in 1963, filling in for another New York sportscasting giant, Marty Glickman, on WCBS Radio.

Sources said TNT, where Albert has been the lead play-by-player for more than two decades, recently began contacting NBA personnel to pay tribute to Albert during the playoffs.

TNT and Albert are expected to formally announce his retirement plans soon.

It’s still being determined who will be Albert’s partner for the playoffs, as he will call his last game in the Eastern Conference Finals.

TNT has Reggie Miller, Grant Hill and Jim Jackson on its roster of analysts. In terms of future replacements for the No. 1 play-by-play position, Turner has Kevin Harlan, Ian Eagle and Brian Anderson on its roster.

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Albert was the voice of the Knicks for nearly four decades over two separate runs. He first had to resign from the position in 1997 after a very public trial that featured details about his sex life. He eventually pled guilty to assault and battery. He lost all of his broadcasting jobs, including as the voice of the NBA Finals on NBC.

A year later, he came back and eventually regained his Knicks TV job, as well as the top seat on NBC. He would stay on with the Knicks until a run-in with team owner James Dolan led to his exit in 2004.

Though Albert’s career has been legendary on a national level, even crossing over into entertainment with his recurring appearances on David Letterman’s late night programs, his staccato delivery was the soundtrack of Madison Square Garden.

It could be fitting, with the Knicks back in the playoffs, for Albert to call at least one more game of the team where he began his legendary NBA career in 1963.

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