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| Sports Emmy Awards | |
|---|---|
| Current:46th Sports Emmy Awards | |
| Awarded for | Outstanding achievement in sports television coverage |
| Website | Sports Emmy Awards |
| Part of a series of articles about the |
| Emmy Awards |
|---|
| Primetime Emmy |
| Daytime Emmy |
| International Emmy |
| Sports Emmy |
| Engineering Emmy |
| News & Documentary Emmy |
| Children's and Family Emmy |
| Regional Emmy |
TheSports Emmy Awards, orSports Emmys, are part of the extensive range ofEmmy Awards for artistic and technical merit for the American television industry. Bestowed by theNational Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (NATAS), the Sports Emmys are presented in recognition of excellence in Americansports television programming, including sports-related series, live coverage of sporting events, and bestsports announcers. The awards ceremony, presenting Emmys from the previouscalendar year, is usually held on aSpring Monday night, sometime in the last two weeks in April or the first week in May. The Sports Emmy Awards are all given away at one ceremony, unlike thePrimetime Emmy Awards and theDaytime Emmy Awards, which hold a "Creative Arts" ceremony in which Emmys are given to behind-the-scenes personnel.
The first Emmy for "Best Sports Coverage" was handed out at thesecond annual Primetime Emmy Awards ceremony in 1950, whereKTLA, a local television station inLos Angeles, won the award for coverage ofwrestling. Thefollowing year, another Los Angeles-based station,KNBH, won an Emmy for their coverage of theLos Angeles RamsAmerican football team. At theseventh Primetime Emmys in 1955,NBC became the first major network to win a Sports Emmy Award for its series, theGillette Cavalcade of Sports.
In 1979, an Emmys exclusively for sports coverage was held for the first time at theRainbow Room in New York City. Winners included golf announcerJack Whitaker, andCBS'sThe NFL Today. The ninth annual Sports Emmy Awards, hosted by actorsAlan Thicke andJoan Van Ark and held on July 13, 1988, became the first Sports Emmys ceremony to be televised; the live telecast was syndicated nationwide byRaycom Sports.Dennis Miller hosted in the 12th Sports Emmys in 1991, which was broadcast onESPN.
Among the Sports Emmy rules, a show must originally air on American television during the eligibility period between January 1 and December 31, and to at least 50 percent of the country.[1] A show that enters into the Sports Emmys cannot also be entered into any other national Emmy competition. Certain shows and segments that air on sports networks that are more entertainment or news, including award shows, the opening and closing ceremonies of theOlympics, and theSuper Bowl halftime show, are ineligible for the Sports Emmys.
Entries must be submitted by mid-January. Most award categories also require entries to include DVDs or tape masters of the show. For most program categories, the submitted DVDs should feature up to five excerpts. For most personality categories, there is no limit in the number of segments submitted, but the DVD should not run over a total of 12 minutes.[1]
Voting is done by peer judging panels between February and early March. The Academy solicits anybody with significant experience in national sports production to serve asjudges. The panels are organized so that they only have one representative from each corporate entity (i.e.Paramount Global,Disney,NBCUniversal,Fox Corporation,Warner Bros. Discovery etc.) Most categories only have a single voting round using preferential scoring system. The top 5 entries in each category are announced as the "nominations", and then the top entry is announced as the Emmy winner later at the awards ceremony.[1]
When a show wins a Sports Emmy, each member of the crew that worked on the production is eligible to purchase an Emmy statue, provided that their job title corresponds to the category that the show won the award in.[2] This policy can result in many different people "winning" an Emmy for a single production; for example, when theOlympics onNBC wins an award for Outstanding Technical Team (Remote), as often occurs, the hundreds of personnel working on the production all have the right to purchase an Emmy statue.[3] Depending on the production, the show or network that won the award will sometimes pay for the purchase of statues for the entire crew.
At that inaugural ceremony in 1979, there were 12 categories. The43rd ceremony in 2022 awarded the following 47 competitive categories:
9 wins
8 wins
7 wins
6 wins
5 wins
4 wins
3 wins
2 wins
28 wins
16 wins
9 wins
7 wins
5 wins
4 wins
3 wins
2 wins