Reds Bagnell Award
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Chris Berman, NFL Prime Time
Bob Sudyk of the Hartford Courant described
Berman as "an easily lovable guy that the world has taken to its bosom...an everyday,
upbeat, natural, unaffected kind of guy who materializes before us in our living rooms or
favorite sports taverns." Tonight, the Maxwell Football Club
recognizes Berman's 16 years breaking the record of 15 set by Brent Musberger at
CBS - of stellar workanchoring ESPN's NFL coverage by presenting him with the Reds Bagnell
Award for Contributions to the Game of Football. Previous winners include former
Miami coach Don Shula, Penn State coach Joe Paterno and the late NFL Commissioner Pete
Rozelle. "What makes the studio show work is
Chris, his enthusiasm is infectious," said Maxwell Football Club president Ron
Jaworski, a regular contributor to ESPN's football coverage. "(Viewers) see him
as a buddy, a guy watching the games with them and saying, 'Hey, did you see that?'
He loves sports, he's a fan and he connects with the audience on that level." The 46-year old Berman approaches each show
exactly the same way. As he told the Courant in his 1997 interview: "When
I look into the camera lens, I don't see millions of people. I see a friend. I
simply have a fun conversation with that friend." Sunday NFL Countdown, which previews each
week's games, has won four Sports Emmy Awards and five CableACE Awards. Berman has
been named National Sportscaster of the Year six times by the members of the National
Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. Among his other duties, Berman also
serves as Master of Ceremonies for the Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremony each
summer. Berman's trademark is dropping catchy
nicknames for players into his rapid-fire narration of the weekly NFL highlights.
Among his most famous nicknames are Andre (Bad Moon) Rison, Steve (I Got You Babe) Bono
and David (Green) Akers. A Connecticut native, Berman grew up in the
Town of Rye, NY and attended Brown University where he was sports director of the campus
radio station. His first professional job was spinning records and broadcasting high
school football games for a small station in Westerly, RI. He broke into television
in Hartford as a weekend sports anchor, earning $23 a show. That led to his hiring
at ESPN, which was only one-month-old when Berman came aboard to host the nightly Sports
Center show. "They said all they needed was someone
who could speak in complete sentences," Berman told the Courant..
"Actually, I was hired as a nightlight for new fathers." It did not take long, however, for ESPN to establish itself as
one of cable TV's most powerful franchises. Today, it is seen in 86 million homes
across America and in nearly every country in the world - - and Chris Berman is the
network's most recognizable face. |
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