Jeremy SchaapReporter/Host/E:60 Correspondent |
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Jeremy Schaap has been a reporter on ESPN since 1996, and based in New York since 1998, appearing frequently on SportsCenter and Outside the Lines, on which he also serves as substitute host. In addition, he is the substitute host for The Sports Reporters on Sundays and contributes to ABC’s Nightline and World News Tonight. Schaap is also a correspondent for E:60, ESPN’s first multi-themed prime-time newsmagazine program, which debuts Tuesday, Oct. 16. Schaap has won five Sports Emmy Awards and other honors for his work, which usually focuses on not on simply who won or lost, but on breaking news, investigative journalism and profiling intriguing stories and personalities. Among his many highlights are a memorably contentious interview with Bob Knight in 2000, breaking the story in 2003 concerning improprieties at the University of Georgia basketball team which led to coach Jim Harrick’s dismissal, and writing the New York Times bestseller Cinderella Man, which in 2005 became an Emmy-winning ESPN documentary about heavyweight champion James Braddock. Schaap joined ESPN in 1994 as the producer for the New York bureau, working on segments for Outside the Lines, and covering the NBA, NHL and NFL playoffs, the NCAA Men’s Final Four and soccer’s World Cup in 1994. He moved in front of the camera in 1996 as ESPN’s first reporter based in Dallas before returning to New York. Schaap has covered virtually all sports – the four major team leagues, golf, horse racing, boxing, college sports, the Olympics and soccer’s World Cup. Additionally, he hosted ESPN Classic’s Classic Sports Reporters, where a panel of renowned sportswriters examined sports headlines of the past, and ESPN Radio’s Saturday morning The Sporting Life. On Sept. 12, 2000, Schaap conducted a one-on-one, exclusive interview with former Indiana University coach Bob Knight – the first by Knight after being fired by the university two days earlier. In the New York Post, Phil Mushnick called the interview, which turned confrontational, "A slam dunk... one that should be stored in the annals of sports broadcast journalism." He also was the first reporter to interview Darryl Strawberry in 1998 after the New York Yankee was diagnosed with colon cancer, and in 1997, Schaap became the first American journalist to report the story of Puerto Rican scout Luis Rosa, imprisoned in the Dominican Republic on charges of sexual assault. In June 2001, Schaap reported on the growing Japanese impact on Major League Baseball in a five-part series entitled “Japan’s Rising Sons.” The series featured extensive enterprise reporting in Japan and the United States. Schaap has been honored often for his work. In 2001, he was cited by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism for his two-part story on a white Florida high school football coach whose use of a racial epithet sparked a local furor. In 2006, Schaap received the annual journalism award of the National Association for Multi-Ethnicity in Communications, for a story on Morgan State’s lacrosse team, the only lacrosse team ever fielded by a historically black college. In a poignant moment in 2006, Schaap won his fifth Sports Emmy Award, the one named for his award-winning journalist father who passed away in 2001 – the Dick Schaap Award for Writing. It was for the SportsCenter feature, “Finding Bobby Fischer.” He had previously won three for his work on Outside the Lines and one as a feature producer for SportsCenter. Before joining ESPN, Schaap, was a writer for NBC’s Atlanta Summer Olympics daytime show (hosted by Greg Gumbel), and a writer and producer for NBC’s Wimbledon coverage. In 1994, Schaap was a writer for CBS’s Lillehammer Winter Olympics prime-time show. His television career also includes covering sports and general news for New York 1 News (1992-94), and serving as an associate editor of special projects for the Winter and Summer Olympics for Sports Illustrated (1991-92). His writing has been published in the international edition of Time magazine, Sports Illustrated, ESPN The Magazine, Time, Parade, the New York Times, and in the official program of the Twenty-Fifth Olympiad. A native of New York City, Schaap is a 1991 graduate of Cornell University. He also authored Triumph: The Untold Story of Jesse Owens and Hitler's Olympics, published in 2007. - 30 - |
