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Lesley Visser (born September 11, 1953 in Quincy, Massachusetts) is an American sportscaster, radio personality, television personality, and sportswriter. She is the only sportscaster, male or female, who has worked on the network broadcasts of the Final Four, NBA Finals, World Series, Kentucky Derby, Preakness, Belmont Stakes, Monday Night Football, the Winter Olympics, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl, the World Figure Skating Championships and the U.S. Open. She is currently working as a reporter for CBS Sports as she covers the NFL on CBS, The NFL Today, College Basketball on CBS, tennis, and horse racing as well as for special projects for CBS Sports and CBS News. Returning to her roots, Visser now writes for CBSSports.com. Visser joined a local radio station in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to be part of their morning show a few days per week. She can be heard regularly on Fridays–Sundays on WFTL 640 Fox Sports (WMEN, Boca Raton) as part of "South Florida's First Team". She is well known for her TV stint at CBS Sports.
Legacy
Lesley Visser added another first to her long and prestigious trailblazing career as the first woman to be recognized by the Pro Football Hall of Fame as the 2006 recipient of the Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award which recognizes long-time exceptional contributions to radio and television in professional football. Pro Football Hall of Famer Troy Aikman said about Visser in his 2006 induction speech, "She brought respect and professionalism to the field of journalism for her work in print and broadcasting. It makes me proud to be in her company today."
Career
Her career at the Boston Globe
Visser was educated at Boston College, majoring in English. She received an honorary doctorate from her alma mater on May 21, 2007. But Visser remembers a time when credentials specifically barred women and children from press boxes, women's restrooms were nowhere to be found in the press area, and players and coaches were rude and threatening and refused to allow women reporters access to locker rooms. In January 1974, she won a prestigious Carnegie Foundation grant which entitled her to work as a sportswriter at the highly regarded Boston Globe. In her 14 years at the Globe, she covered College Basketball, the NBA, the MLB, Tennis, college football, and horse racing. In 1976, she was assigned to cover the New England Patriots, becoming the first ever female NFL beat writer. She was also assigned to cover the Boston Red Sox, and the Boston Celtics, becoming the first ever female MLB Beat Writer and NBA Beat Writer. She covered for the Globe the Final Four (1978-1988), NBA Finals (1974-1988) (Did cover the NBA Finals on CBS while working for the Globe from, World Series (1974-1988), the Kentucky Derby (1974-1988), Preakness (1974-1988), Belmont Stakes (1974-1988), the Super Bowl (1974-1988), the Winter Olympics (1976, 1980, 1984, 1988). the Summer Olympics (1976, 1980, 1984, 1988), the Breeders Cup (1984-1988), Wimbledon (1974-1988).
During her time at the Globe,"she wasn't at the dawn of women covering sports. But she made the breakfast." (13) She wasn't always welcomed in the locker room, but she stuck it out.
Begins television career at CBS Sports
In December 1983, she did a few features for CBS. Lesley said:
"In television, usually it's, 'Let's hire somebody who knows television and we'll teach them sports.'
But CBS said:
'Let's hire somebody who knows sports and teach them television.'" (14) But it took time. "I looked like I had rigor mortis. It's a learned skill." (15)
In January 1984, Visser joined CBS Sports part-time and going full-time in January 1987. In 1984, she became the first woman to cover the NBA Finals and the Final Four. Her assignments included the NBA on CBS inculding the NBA Finals (1984-1990), College Basketball on CBS inculding the Final Four (1984-1993), MLB on CBS inculding the World Series (1990-1993), college football, Tennis inculding the U.S. Open of Tennis (1984-1993) and the Olympics on CBS inculding the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville where Visser coined this phrase, "Hey Snooze you luge." In 1990 she became a regular on "The NFL Today." She said that contacts she had made over the years while covering the sport allowed her to get interviews that others might not have been able to get. "I had gained respect with 14 years covering pro football and 14 (years) at the Globe. I understood what a box-and-one and a two-three zone defense was. Knowledge is the key." (16)
In 1990, she also became the first woman to cover the World Series. In 1992, she became the first woman to handle the televised Super Bowl postgame presentation ceremonies and in 1989 she covered the fall of the Berlin Wall, focusing on how sports would change in East Germany for CBS News.
ABC Sports and ESPN
After CBS lost television rights to NFL games, Visser spent the next six years with ABC Sports and ESPN (1994-2000) and was a sideline reporter for "Monday Night Football," becoming the first woman assigned to the series in 1998 and the first woman ever to report from the sidelines during a Super Bowl when she covered Super Bowl XXIX in 1995. She also covered for ABC Super Bowl XXXIV in 2000. While at ABC Sports, Visser served as a reporter for college football bowl games and NFL playoffs games. She also contributed to horse racing, "ABC's Wide World of Sports," Major League Baseball on ABC, including the 1995 World Series, figure skating, Special Olympics, skiing, the NFL Pro Bowl, and an ABC series "A Passion to Play." She co-hosted the network's coverage of the "Millennium Tournament of Rose Parade." Visser covered College Basketball and horse racing for ESPN. Also for ESPN, she contributed to shows such as SportsCenter, NFL GameDay, and Monday Night Countdown.
"When CBS lost the NFL , we all had to leave."
During the 1998 NFL season she was a sideline reporter for "Monday Night Football," making her the first woman to become a member of the Monday night football broadcast team. She feels she's earned it after covering the NFL for 24 years. "Credibility doesn't come from gender. It comes from the work you've done. ...
"When I started out in the '70s, people wrote to ask me why I was doing this. Now they write to ask me if I think the Dallas Cowboys are going to get to the playoffs." (18)
In June 2000, Visser's career suffered a highly publicized setback when she was famously bounced as the Monday Night Football sideline reporter for a less experienced, much younger woman and man. "It was staggering to me," Visser later recalled. However, she wound up returning to CBS Sports, philosophical as ever."You can have a short career if it's based on looks and youth," she said, "but legitimacy is what lasts." Which ABC replaced her with both Melissa Stark and Eric Dickerson. Visser sued Howard Katz who was the president of ABC Sports and Don Ohlmeyer who was the new Exectuive Producer for both MNF and ABC Sports for Age discrimination for $800,000.
Return to CBS
On August 28, 2000, Visser returned to CBS on camera where she covered the 2000 U.S. Open of Tennis. That is where she continues to work today, as a contributor to the NFL on CBS/The NFL Today, College Basketball on CBS, horse racing and Tennis as well as for special projects for CBS Sports and CBS News. In 2004, Visser became the first woman sportscaster to carry the Olympic Torch when she was honored in 2004 by the International Olympic Committee as a "pioneer and standard-bearer." Returning to her roots, Visser now is a sportswriter for CBSSports.com. Previously, she covered for CBS College Football, and Figure Skating.
Being a woman in a male-dominated field, Visser has had to prove herself time and again,a challenge she has welcomed and met throughout the past thirty years. As Visser herself has said, "Credibility doesn't come from gender. It comes from the work you've done. "Sean McManus, president of CBS News and Sports and one of Visser's biggest fans, summed up her contributions this way: "Lesley Visser's career has broken many barriers and defined previously unimagined roles for women in professional sports and sports broadcasting."
On June 10, 2001, she became a reporter for the "NTRA Champions" on CBS Sports which that show changed the following year. She was on-site at Belmont Park to cover the event.
During the 2001 NFL Season Visser became the became the first female color analyst on an NFL broadcast booth. She joined play-by-play announcer Howard David and analyst Boomer Esiason in the booth for Westwood One/CBS Radio. As the 3 of them worked the 2002 Super Bowl. She resigned from Westwood One after the 2002 Super Bowl to focus exclusively on CBS and HBO. She joined Westwood One in August 2001-February 2002.
On June 15, 2002, she became a reporter and analyst for the "NTRA Summer Racing Tour" on CBS Sports which she was on-site at Belmont Park to cover the event. She returned to the show on June 14, 2003 as she was on-site at Belmont Park. The show was cancelled.
Visser served as lead reporter for the Network's coverage of the NFL on CBS, teaming with CBS Sports' No. 1 announce team of Jim Nantz and Phil Simms for the 2004 NFL Season and the 2005 NFL Season replacing Bonnie Bernstein who took her spot on The NFL Today for 2 seasons. In 2006, she returned to the NFL Today as a Reporter.
Visser was a pre-game analyst for The Super Bowl Today, where she covered the Super Bowl XXXV in February 2001, Super Bowl XXXVIII in February 2004, and the Super Bowl XLI in February 2007 pre-game broadcasts. Visser was also a Sideline Reporter for the Super Bowl XLI besides pre-game analyst. Visser also contributes reports for CBS News and served as a reporter for HBO Sports' "Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel" for 10 years (1995-2005).
Visser was loaned to NBC Sports twice to cover the Olympics on NBC as covered the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens when she served as the Equestrian Reporter. She also covered the 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino as a Reporter for Short Track Speed Skating.
On July 21, 2007 she served as a Handicapper for the Virginia Derby/Virginia Oaks on CBS Sports. She served the same role the next year for the same races on July 19, 2008.
Personal
Visser is married to sportscaster Dick Stockton, who calls games for both FOX and Turner Sports. They live in Boca Raton, Florida. Visser and Stockton met at the 1975 World Series, when Visser was covering for the Boston Globe and Stockton was a broadcaster for NBC. Dick says, "We're together maybe four days a week. Lesley says, That way we don't get tired of each other," she said. The couple wed on January 23, 1983.
In June 1993, Visser suffered a bizarre jogging accident in New York's Central Park in which she broke her hip and skidded face-first across the pavement. She required reconstructive plastic surgery on her face and in 2006 she required an artificial hip replacement. She returned to CBS Sports in July 1993 to cover the 1993 Major League Baseball All-Star Game as a pre-game analyst instead of a field reporter due to the bizzare jogging accident as in her place came Jim Kaat.
In March 2008, Visser joined a local radio station in Fort Lauderdale, FL, to be part of their morning show a few days per week. She can be heard regularly on Fridays-Sundays on WFTL 640 Fox Sports (WMEN, Boca Raton) as part of "South Florida's First Team."
References
External links
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- Articles needing cleanup from January 2009
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- 1953 births
- Living people
- Major League Baseball announcers
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- People from Quincy, Massachusetts
- American sports announcers
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- Boston Globe people
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- Women sports announcers
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- American horse racing announcers
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