The eight inductees will be
officially inducted into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame on
December 15. 2009, at New York City’s Hilton Hotel in a ceremony
hosted by CBS Sports lead play-by-play announcer Jim Nantz.
The Sports Broadcasting
Hall of Fame is produced by the Sports Video Group (SVG), an industry
association dedicated to advancing the creation, production, and
distribution of sports content. For more information about SVG, visit
www.sportsvideo.org.
The 2009 class of the
Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame:
Deane Beman: During his 20
year tenure as PGA Tour Commissioner, Beman was the first to envision
a golf course that would accommodate large galleries and make viewing
golf a user-friendly experience, resulting in the construction of TPC
Sawgrass and its famed Players Stadium Course.
Garrett Brown: Garrett
Brown is the sports business’s premier inventor. As if inventing
the Steadicam wasn’t enough, Garrett is credited for creating the
Skycam, Divecams, and railcams which pursue athletes worldwide.
Dick Enberg: Dick Enberg
is one of the most versatile play-by-play announcers ever to take the
microphone, from his 25 years with NBC Sports to nearly 10 years with
CBS Sports where he still covers the NFL, college basketball, and the
U.S. Open Tennis Championships.
Barry Frank: Frank has
been the leading sports rights agent and packager in the U.S., having
represented the International Olympic Committee, Major League
Baseball, the National Hockey League, the National Basketball
Association, the International Skating Union, and the United States
Tennis Association, in their television negotiations.
Chuck Howard: As vice
president of ABC Sports, Howard covered nine Olympics, the Super
Bowl, World Series, British Open, Kentucky Derby, Indianapolis 500,
and NCAA football. He teamed with Roone Arledge and Jim McKay to
create ABC’s Wide World of Sports.
Keith Jackson: During his
40 years with ABC Sports, Keith Jackson was on air for the first
Monday Night Football game in 1970, made a name for himself
announcing college sports, and was in the announce booth on football
Saturdays for more than 30 years before retiring after the 1998-1999
season.
Steve Laxton: Steve Laxton
is best known as the technical director of the Olympic Games and
worked freelance with all of the major networks, including ABC, CBS,
NBC, ESPN, and HBO. He was the primary designer of the Sony MVS
switcher series.
John Porter: John Porter
was the first to put in-car cameras into Nascar auto racing, which
changed the way the sport is viewed today. He pioneered wireless
applications for every sport including the America’s Cup and
continues to develop new wireless technology to this day.
For biographies and
tribute videos for last year’s inductees, visit:
www.sportsvideo.org/hof.
For information about
sponsoring this year’s Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame, please
contact Rob Payne at rob@sportsvideo.org or 212-481-8131.
For tickets and tables,
please contact Carrie Bowden at carrie@sportsvideo.org or
917-446-4412.