Career
During the lockout that caused the entire 2004-2005 National Hockey League season to be canceled, Weber spent time following the Nashville Sounds minor league baseball team, and served as host of a weekly video on demand show about the team available on Comcast in the Nashville metropolitan area. Weber also called the 2003 and 2004 Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl for WWTN radio. He served as co-host of "SportsNight" on WWTN & WNFN radio from July 2003 to August 2005.
In the past, Weber has served as color commentator for the National Hockey League"s Los Angeles Kings and NFL"s Buffalo Bills.
He was radio play-by-play voice of the National Hockey League"s Buffalo Sabres, and called National Basketball Association"s Seattle SuperSonics on the SonicsSuperChannel. Pete"s association with the Bills also featured his hosting of the team"s preand post-game radio shows 1986–1993, and hosting the radio shows with General Motors Bill Polian, Head Coach Marv Levy, and QB Jim Kelly.
Pete"s other play-by-play slots: minor league baseball"s Albuquerque Dukes, Rochester Red Wings, and 13 seasons with the Buffalo Bisons. Pete called college action for football, basketball and hockey at University at Buffalo, basketball for Saint Bonaventure University and got his start in hockey at the University of Notre Dame.
Weber"s trademark is his colorful and often quirky sense of humor while calling a game, particularly when the action is not intense at the time.
He coined the phrases "The Reverse Oz Effect" regarding the antiquated Bush Stadium in Indianapolis and called the odd rise at All Sports Stadium in Oklahoma City the "Grassy Knoll", a phrase which has now been adopted for a different sports facility (Minute Maid Park in Houston). If a "make-up call" is made during a Predators game, Weber will often use phrases such as, "lieutenant"s Mary Kay time here in Nashville." Weber also refuses to use any kind of objectionable material in his broadcasts, even during promotional announcements. Foreign example, during Predators games on FSN South, Weber promotes the Best Damn Sports Show Period as "B.D.S.S.P."
Weber, born in 1951, is a native of Galesburg, Illinois.
In February 2014, he was hospitalized after suffering a heart attack.