Education
Randorf graduated from Seaquam Secondary located in the Sunshine Hills neighborhood of North Delta, a suburb of Vancouver, British Columbia.
Randorf graduated from Seaquam Secondary located in the Sunshine Hills neighborhood of North Delta, a suburb of Vancouver, British Columbia.
He is best known for his work at TSN hosting the network"s Canadian Football League studio show as well as TSN"s and CTV"s coverage of figure skating. He also did play-by-play for the National Hockey League on TSN (along with the regional coverage of the Montreal Canadiens), World Hockey Championship, and the National Lacrosse League on TSN. Randorf joined TSN in 1985 as an editorial assistant during his first year as a Radio and Television Arts student at Ryerson University. Randorf worked in the TSN newsroom until 1989, when he returned to Vancouver.
He joined Sports Page, nightly sports show on CKVU-television as a reporter and anchor.
While in Vancouver he also worked for radio station CKNW (Department of Administration and Management), working on Vancouver Canucks radio broadcasts as a reporter and, later, game host. He also started hosting his own call-in show on the radio station in 1995.
Also in 1995, Randorf left CKVU and returned to TSN as a Vancouver correspondent. In 1997, became the full-time co-anchor of TSN"s Pacific Prime edition of Sportsdesk (now SportsCentre), from TSN"s Vancouver studios.
He has also hosted TSN"s coverage of the 2000 Summer Olympics, 2002 Winter Olympics, 2004 Summer Olympics, and 2010 Winter Olympics.
Randorf was part of TSN"s Canadian Football League crew from 1999 to 2013, calling the play-by-play action in 1999 and 2000 and hosting from 2001 until 2013. In addition, he was the play-by-play commentator for the Montreal Canadiens regional games from 2011 to 2014. On November 26, 2013, Rogers Media, the owners of the competing network Sportsnet, reached a 12-year deal to become the national rightsholder of the National Hockey League worth $5.2 billion.In June 2014, Randorf officially joined Rogers to become the one of the leading voices of their national coverage along with the revamped Hockey Night in Canada, ending his 17-year career at TSN. He is also one of the play-by-play commentators for the Toronto Maple Leafs regional broadcasts.
He called two National Hockey League All-Star Games.
Randorf was rewarded for his outstanding contribution to the world of sports with a 2000 Gemini Award nomination as Best Sports Broadcaster.