Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
44th Sports Emmy Awards
Award ceremony for television programming of 2022 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The 44th Sports Emmy Awards were presented by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (NATAS), honoring the best in American sports television coverage in 2022. The ceremony took place in-person at the Jazz at Lincoln Center's Frederick P. Rose Hall in New York City.[1]
The nominations were announced on April 11, 2023.[2][3] ESPN received the most nominations with 59, while NFL 360 and the XXIV Olympic Winter Games were the most nominated programs, both with 10 nominations.[4] American journalist and sportcaster Bryant Gumbel was honored with the Sports Lifetime Achievement Award.[5] During the ceremony, he was also one of the recipients for Outstanding Hosted Edited Series, as a host of Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel.
The coverage for the 2022 FIFA World Cup and for the XXIV Olympic Winter Games were the most awarded programs with three wins.[6] ESPN and its channels won the most awards with thirteen wins.[7]
Remove ads
Winners and nominees
Summarize
Perspective





The nominees were announced on April 11, 2023.[4] Winners are listed in bold and first.[8]
Lifetime Achievement Award
Programming
Personality
Technical
Remove ads
Multiple wins
Remove ads
Multiple nominations
Notes
- Senior Audio Engineers: Richard Bernier, Al Craig, Brian Dicrescenzo, Michael Dicrescenzo, Fredrick, Domenigoni, Nuno Duarte, Timothy Dunn, Fred Hedemark, Benjamin Majchrzak, Greg Malenovsky, Karl Malone, Stephen Miller, Michael Moran, Ryan O'Gorman, Eric Paige, Randy Pekich, Jayson Polansky, Stephen Ross, James Starzynski, AJjay Vij; Audio Engineers: Stephan Ahonen, Daniel Beigel, Daniel Bouza, Patrick Brady, Matthew Burke, Davin Clem, Korey Evans, James Fieldson, Patrick Flynn, Leon Frank, Jeremy Katz, Michael Kramer, Joshua Miller, Fawzi Nijem, Luke Phillips, Timothy Pogorzala, Levi Radcliffe, Richard Rahner, Duncan Richards, Kristine Rothwell, Natalie Sigmon, Orin Smith, John Steigerwald, Glenn Stilwell, Dale Tong, Chan Wai Hang, Colin Whitehill, David Wolcott, Alina Wong
- Senior Graphic Designers: David Barton, Wade Echer, Chad Hudson, Mark Levy, David Melfi; Graphic Designers: Bianca Beck, Stephen Belmont, Jonathan Berry, Alex Boccard, Ian Bonilla, Eric Brown, Christopher Brown, Selena Cohen, Robert Cordle, James Coulson, Terry Daily, Joshua Davis, Kenneth Dayhoff, J.marty Dormany, Christie Grams, Shawn Hendrickson, Michael Kerner, Catherine Krebs, Jennifer Lorentz, Random Luttrell, Raymond Martinez, Christian Odar, David Robbins, Jeffrey Smalls, Bridget Smith, Ann Adele Smith, Tyler Stocker, Mark Stroming, Stefanie Toigo, Jessica Torrico, Daniel Velez, Vincent Velez, Masahiro Wakabayashi, Nanzi Wang, Bradley Wasilition, Kristy Weir, Emma Wiatrzyk, Noah Woode, Tim Woulle, Chung Wu, Anna Zavorina.
- Includes ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN+, ESPN Deportes, ESPNU, ESPNews, SEC Network, ESPN App and ABC.
- Includes FOX, FS1 and FOX Digital.
- Includes NFL Network, Mundo and NFL Social.
- Includes CBS, CBS Sports Network, Paramount+ and Nickelodeon.
- Includes NFL Network, Mundo and NFL Social.
- Includes MLB Network and NHL Network.
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads