The son of an Adelaide accountant, McAvaney developed an early interest in sport and race calling.[3]
After attending Woodville High School[3] (and failing Year 12)[4] he spent five years as a Telecom clerk.[5] Then in 1976 during a day off from work, McAvaney travelled to Kilmore, Victoria, to bet on some races. There, he met Kevin Hillier, an Adelaide race caller, who suggested McAvaney help him out back in Adelaide.[5] This launched his career in the sports media, joining Adelaide radio station 5DN, calling horse races and later hosting a sports show.[3][5]
Television career
McAvaney moved to television in 1978,[3] when he joined Adelaide station ADS-7 to read sport news and produce the weekly Racetrack program. His career received a boost when colleague Sandy Roberts covered the 1980 Moscow Olympics for Seven,[6] and McAvaney was chosen to host the Adelaide end of the telecast for the station.[7]
In 1989, McAvaney negotiated a two-year premature end to his contract with Ten, and returned to the Seven Network on the condition that he could cover the 1992 Olympics.[3]
In an interview with the Herald Sun,[when?] McAvaney announced informally that he would no longer commentate Men's games at the Australian Open so that he could optimise his health over summer and for other sport events. McAvaney had been calling the Australian Open since 1990 and been chief caller alongside Jim Courier since 2005. 2017 was only the second time he had missed the tournament, attributing that later to his cancer diagnosis.[citation needed]
McAvaney was the MC of the Brownlow Medal for over two decades (though at different time periods), between 1990 and 2018.[citation needed]
Since 2018, McAvaney hosted Seven's coverage of Test cricket, interviewing some of cricket’s most interesting figures in the lunch breaks of the Melbourne and Sydney Tests.[citation needed]
In February 2021, McAvaney announced that he was retiring from calling AFL games because of a desire to reduce his workload.[9]
In 2022, he was inducted into the TV Week Logie Hall of Fame, becoming the second sports broadcaster to be inducted.[12]
In June 2023, McAvaney was inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame. He is the eleventh media personality to be inducted into the code’s Hall of Fame.[13]
Personal life
McAvaney's first marriage, to Merry,[4] lasted from 1983 to 1991.[3] He met his second wife Anne Johnson, a television journalist and producer, in 1993 while making the show Seasons.[3] With her, he has two children, Sam (born 1994) and Alexandra (born 1997).[14][10]
He moved his family from Melbourne back to his hometown of Adelaide in 1999.[15]