Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The NFL Films Game of the Week, ... Game of the Week presents the game from a wide variety of angles, ... Steve Sabol was the host.
Sabol played a part in founding the NFL Network. [10] In 1985, Sabol took over NFL Films from his father, Ed Sabol. [11] NFL Films was the first company to wire coaches and players for sound as well as the first to use slow motion and montage editing in sports. [12] The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia inducted Sabol into their Hall of Fame ...
A Football Life is an American documentary series of 116 episodes, developed by NFL Films and aired on NFL Network that documents the lives of select National Football League (NFL) players, coaches, owners, and teams. Friends, teammates, family members and other players and coaches associated with the subjects are interviewed.
NFL Films head Steve Sabol does not mind cutting things close. With less than a month before the start of the regular season of the National Football League, Sabol is turning his attention to ...
Former NFL Films logo. Founder Ed Sabol was a World War II veteran who worked selling topcoats after returning to the United States.In his spare time, he used a motion picture camera, received as a wedding gift, to record his son Steve's high school football games.
According to Steve Sabol, president of NFL Films, only 20 teams were ranked instead of 40 because they feared negative mail from fans of the franchise whose team was ranked the lowest. [3] Sabol stated that, while the panel chose the 1972 Dolphins as the #1 team, several voters hedged and said Miami's unbeaten season was "the greatest team ...
Stories from the Hall of Fame Archive: Ed Sabol took a risk in his mid-40s and revolutionized filmmaking in many ways with the creation of NFL Films.
The show started in 1984 as Monday Night Matchup with Chris Berman as host with Allie Sherman, former Giants coach, and Steve Sabol of NFL Films providing analysis. [1]From 1993 to 2003, it was hosted by Mark Malone, SportsCenter anchor Stuart Scott and finally, ESPN sideline reporter Suzy Kolber, who became the first woman to host an NFL show.