December 17, 2019 New York Hilton Hotel, Trianon Ballroom 5:30 p.m. Cocktail Reception 7:00 p.m. Induction Ceremony

Steve Anderson Jerry Gepner Mary Ellen Carlyle Bob Ley Bud Collins Roger Penske Mike “Doc” Emrick Doug Wilson Bob Fishman Ken Woo

Individual tickets are $650, mezzanine tickets are $600, and round tables of 10 are $6,500. Please note that ALL proceeds from table sales will be donated to the SVG Sports Broadcasting Fund and will help sports production professionals and their families who find themselves in financial difficulty due to illness, injury, or loss of life. Sponsorship Opportunities on Reverse Class of 2019

Steve Anderson For more than 35 years, Anderson called ESPN and ABC Sports home, beginning as a production assistant in 1980 and work- ing his way up to producer and then the executive suite. His career was one of transformation: he played key roles in remote production, talent, studio shows, content operations, and even production and technical operations. Mary Ellen Carlyle In 30 years with Canada-based TV-production-services provider Dome Productions, Carlyle has been instrumental in a number of innovations, including the move to HD, UHD, and the ability to host remote productions via control rooms instead of trucks. Today, she is SVP/GM, overseeing administration, sales, and operations. Bud Collins Collins covered for NBC Sports for 35 years and was known for his passion, lyricism, humor, wit, and true love of the game. He is best remembered for his work at Wimbledon, where he played a role for NBC Sports from 1972 to 2007. His work for NBC ended in 2007, but — at the age of 78 — he continued to work for both ESPN and Tennis Channel. He died in 2016. Mike “Doc” Emrick One of the most recognizable voices in sports, Emrick has been behind the microphone for some of the most memorable games in modern hockey history. In nearly 40 years as a play-by-play announcer, he has called 14 Stanley Cup Finals as lead national announcer on NBC, Versus, Fox, and ESPN. His numerous honors include the Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Personality – Play by Play for a record six years straight, the Lester Patrick Trophy in 2004, and seven local . Bob Fishman Fishman has won 16 Emmy Awards over 43 years at CBS Sports, where he is lead director for college basketball and has directed the NCAA tournament and Final Four since 1982. He also currently directs NFL on CBS. For more than 25 years, he directed the US Open Tennis Championships. His other credits include NFL Today, figure skating at three Winter Olympics (’92, ’94, ’98), the NBA playoffs, the Belmont Stakes, college football, (including the 1992 and 1993 World Series), and — for 21 years — the , for which he was the first American director to implement Race Cam. Jerry Gepner Gepner has done it all. During his time at , he helped change the U.S. sports-TV landscape, designing and managing deployment of such technical innovations as the FoxBox and Dolby Surround Sound. He also co-designed the FoxTrax glow- ing-hockey-puck system. Leaving Fox in 1997, he co-founded Sportvision, the company that transformed graphics enhance- ment for NASCAR and the NFL. Since then, he has guided and led several key industry companies, serving as president of NMT; Group CTO and CEO, Services Division, of Vitec Group; and CEO of Tekserve and T2 Computing. Bob Ley At the time of his retirement, Ley was ESPN’s longest-serving commentator, having become a SportsCenter anchor on the network’s third day of operation. Ley spearheaded ESPN’s aggressive coverage of breaking news and issues, primarily as host of since its inception and also as a host of the weekly E:60 on Sunday mornings. Throughout his ESPN ca- reer, he has been equally comfortable leaving the studio to cover a variety of events onsite as host or play-by-play announcer. Roger Penske Team Penske made its debut in 1966 at the 24 Hours of Daytona, and Penske’s teams have won more than 500 races, in- cluding 18 victories at the Indianapolis 500 and 34 national championships. During the early years of motor-racing coverage on ABC’s Wide World of Sports, Penske was an important (and unofficial) advisor/consultant to the production and commen- tary staffs. Penske continues to be actively engaged with today’s motorsports broadcast partners. Doug Wilson During a 50-year career, Wilson served as director/producer for ABC’s Wide World of Sports, helping the show become the most important brand in sports TV and also accrue 17 Emmy wins. As a producer and director, he covered 51 sports in an odyssey that took him across five continents to events of all proportions: from Olympic arenas (10 Olympics in total) to backroom pool halls, from the Grand Prix of Monaco to wrist-wrestling in Petaluma, from figure skating in Beijing to gymnas- tics in Brazil. Wilson was honored by Directors Guild of American with its Lifetime Achievement Award in Sports in 1993. Ken Woo In more than 40 years as a camera operator and DP, Woo has shot everything from hundreds of “Up Close and Personal” Olympic profiles to the Tour de France, 15 Olympics, Super Bowls, NCAA Final Four tournaments, The Masters, NBA Champi- onships, Iron Man World Championships, the Triple Crown, and more. He has won 27 Emmy Awards, including three Primetime Emmys for his work on the Opening Ceremony for the Salt Lake City, Torino, and Beijing Olympics and three Emmys as an associate producer for Best Short Feature. He also won the Peabody Award for his work on ESPN’s 30 for 30 series. Sponsorship Opportunities

Commemorative Program Ads Half page: $1,500; Full page: $2,000; Two-page spread: $3,000

Benefactor Sponsorship $11,000 includes: Reserved table for 10 with company signage; on-screen and display signage; logo recognition on HOF website; spread commemorative ad in HOF program; logo in event program; logo on all event marketing

Patron Sponsorship $9,000 includes: Reserved table for 10 with company signage; on-screen and display signage; logo recognition on HOF website; full-page commemorative ad in HOF program; logo in event program; logo on all event marketing

Supporting Sponsorship $8,000 includes: Reserved table for 10 with company signage; on-screen and display signage; logo recognition on HOF website; logo and half-page commemorative ad in event program; logo on all event marketing

Cocktail Party Sponsorship $6,000 includes: Two tickets; on-screen and display signage; logo recognition on HOF website; logo in event program; logo on all event marketing

To become a sponsor of the Hall of Fame ceremony please contact Rob Payne: 212-481-8131, [email protected] Andrew Gabel: 646-998-4554, [email protected]