Ed Goren

Ed Goren

CA, US
The Current President and Executive Producer of FOX SPORTS/ 37-Time EMMY Winner/ The 22nd most powerful man in Sports/ Television Visionary

Ed Goren, a 37-time Emmy Award winner and Executive Producer of FOX Sports since 1994, was named President, FOX Sports in April 2000. Goren and David Hill are responsible for the look, sound, editorial content and superior quality of FOX Sports' studio and game broadcasts and continue to serve as Executive Producers of all FOX Sports productions. He's currently ranked No. 22 on The Sporting News' "Power 100" list.
Goren also oversees all aspects of FOX Sports' television investments and partnerships. In addition, Goren spearheads the division's strategy of pursuing major event programming to insure FOX Sports' position as a premier network sports broadcaster.

Goren had been Senior Producer at CBS Sports since 1991, where he worked on nearly every sport the network broadcast. During his tenure as Senior Producer, CBS Sports broadcast such major events as the World Series, the NCAA Basketball Tournament, The Masters® and Super Bowl XXVI. Goren produced CBS Sports' Major League Baseball studio program in 1990. He also produced The College Football Report and the annual Heisman Trophy Award presentation (1986-89). As producer of The College Football Report, he revamped the series, integrating information including scores, highlights, live interviews and special news segments into a program less than 15 minutes long. Other credits at CBS Sports include serving as producer of NFL, NBA and NCAA basketball broadcasts.

Before 1994, there was no FOX Sports. The Fox network had never had a sporting event on their channel until Rupert Murdock overpaid what the NFL was asking for and put the NFL on FOX until present. Ed and David were the mind, vision, and creator of all that we have come to know now as the leader in sports on television. David Hill has since left FOX Sports for Directv, and Ed now mans the ship. Now carrying the NFL, MLB, and NASCAR, they lead the way in look, feel, number of events and sports, production, and viewership in the sports world. They have had more World Series, Super Bowls and major NASCAR events than anyone since their inception. They are known now as the leader in an industry where they didn't exist just a little over 10 years ago. All the other channels have been trying to emulate what FOX Sports has done, what they look like, and how they produce their shows. They have innovated so much in coverage of sports that its hard to know where to start.

He speaks on:
* Building a winning team, franchise, and company.
* Overcoming the worst moment in your career and making it into the beginning of the best chapter of your life.
* Change and starting over.
* Dealing with politics and regulations.

Ed Goren, a 37-time Emmy Award winner and Executive Producer of FOX Sports since 1994, was named President, FOX Sports in April 2000. Goren and David Hill are responsible for the look, sound, editorial content and superior quality of FOX Sports' studio and game broadcasts and continue to serve as Executive Producers of all FOX Sports productions. He's currently ranked No. 22 on The Sporting News' "Power 100" list.
Goren also oversees all aspects of FOX Sports' television investments and partnerships. In addition, Goren spearheads the division's strategy of pursuing major event programming to insure FOX Sports' position as a premier network sports broadcaster.

Goren had been Senior Producer at CBS Sports since 1991, where he worked on nearly every sport the network broadcast. During his tenure as Senior Producer, CBS Sports broadcast such major events as the World Series, the NCAA Basketball Tournament, The Masters® and Super Bowl XXVI. Goren produced CBS Sports' Major League Baseball studio program in 1990. He also produced The College Football Report and the annual Heisman Trophy Award presentation (1986-89). As producer of The College Football Report, he revamped the series, integrating information including scores, highlights, live interviews and special news segments into a program less than 15 minutes long. Other credits at CBS Sports include serving as producer of NFL, NBA and NCAA basketball broadcasts.

Before 1994, there was no FOX Sports. The Fox network had never had a sporting event on their channel until Rupert Murdock overpaid what the NFL was asking for and put the NFL on FOX until present. Ed and David were the mind, vision, and creator of all that we have come to know now as the leader in sports on television. David Hill has since left FOX Sports for Directv, and Ed now mans the ship. Now carrying the NFL, MLB, and NASCAR, they lead the way in look, feel, number of events and sports, production, and viewership in the sports world. They have had more World Series, Super Bowls and major NASCAR events than anyone since their inception. They are known now as the leader in an industry where they didn't exist just a little over 10 years ago. All the other channels have been trying to emulate what FOX Sports has done, what they look like, and how they produce their shows. They have innovated so much in coverage of sports that its hard to know where to start.

He speaks on:
* Building a winning team, franchise, and company.
* Overcoming the worst moment in your career and making it into the beginning of the best chapter of your life.
* Change and starting over.
* Dealing with politics and regulations.