American Football Database
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Steve Sabol
File:Steve Sabol.jpg
BornStephen Douglas Sabol
(1942-10-02)October 2, 1942
Moorestown, New Jersey
DiedSeptember 18, 2012(2012-09-18) (aged 69)
Moorestown, New Jersey
Occupationsports filmmaker, narrator, cameraman, entrepreneur, artist
(co-founder of NFL Films with father Ed Sabol)
Years active1962–2012

Stephen Douglas "Steve" Sabol (October 2, 1942 – September 18, 2012) was an American filmmaker. He was the president and one of the founders of NFL Films, along with his father Ed. He was also a widely exhibited visual artist.

Sabol was born in Moorestown Township, New Jersey and attended Colorado College, where he played football and was a member of the Kappa Sigma Fraternity.[1] He was the subject of a humorous article about his self-promotion exploits in the November 22, 1965, issue of Sports Illustrated.[2] He began working at NFL Films as a cameraman alongside his father Ed Sabol after graduation. He started in the filming industry when his father got the rights to the 1962 NFL Championship.

This company eventually grew into NFL Films, with Sabol serving mainly as a cameraman, editor and writer in the 1960s and 1970s. When ESPN was founded, they signed NFL Films as a production company and Sabol became an on-air personality. He won 35 Emmy Awards and had a documentary about him air on 60 Minutes. Sabol played a part in founding the NFL Network.

He is the author of the poem "The Autumn Wind", later adopted by the Oakland Raiders as an unofficial anthem.

NFL Films[]

As president of the most honored filmmaker in sports, Sabol continued to be the artistic vision behind the studio that revolutionized the way America watches football. Sabol and his father, Ed, who was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on February 5, 2011, were honored in 2003 with the Lifetime Achievement Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for “revolutionizing the way America watches football and setting the standard in sports filmmaking.”

While NFL Films has won over 100 Emmys, Sabol himself has received 35 of those Emmys for writing, cinematography, editing, directing and producing. No one else in all of television has earned as many Emmys in as many different categories.

Building on the entrepreneurial spirit of his father and founder of NFL Films, Sabol was named the 2002 Sports Executive of the Year by Sporting News magazine. Sabol also received the prestigious Pete Rozelle Award, which is presented each year to someone who has made an outstanding contribution to the National Football League and to professional football. He joins a select group of honorees including: Vince Lombardi, Dan Rooney, Lamar Hunt, Tom Landry and Don Shula.

In 2007, the Pro Football Hall of Fame honored Sabol with the Dan Reeves Pioneer Award recognizing his innovative ideas that have contributed to the game of professional football. Sabol was the recipient of the 2010 Sports Leadership Award presented to him at the March of Dimes 27th Annual Sports Luncheon, which is one of the highest profile events of the year for the sports and sports media business in New York.

In March 2011, NFL Films was recognized with the Lamar Hunt Award for Professional Football, which is given in recognition of visionary leadership that has helped the NFL become the preeminent pro sports league in America. Sabol and his father, Ed, were inducted into the Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame in November 2011, which was followed by Sabol’s induction into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame in December.

Sabol received the Sports Business Journal's “Champions - Pioneers & Innovators in Sports Business” award in March 2012 for shaping the business of sports through his career of distinguished success.

Sabol began his career in 1964 as a cinematographer working for his father and founder of NFL Films, Ed Sabol. As an All-Rocky Mountain Conference running back at Colorado College majoring in Art History, as well as an avid movie fan, Sabol was, as his father put it, “uniquely qualified to make football movies.”

Sabol’s collage art was a natural outgrowth of his cinematic vision. As President of NFL Films, Sabol spent his entire career thinking about football and the positive values the game represents. In the process football became for Sabol a prism for looking at American society. Using symbolic imagery from both the sports world and popular culture, Sabol created a unique visual language that hearkens to times past and reminds us of the best in ourselves. Sabol exhibited at the ArtExpo in New York, the Avant Gallery in Miami, Florida, the Govinda Gallery in Washington, DC, the Milan Gallery in Ft. Worth, Texas and the Garth Davidson Gallery in Moorestown, New Jersey.

Sabol won over 40 Emmys during his time with NFL Films and was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003. Sabol took over NFL Films from his father Ed, who founded the company, and instituted several groundbreaking ideas in the world of sports television. 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.[3] The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadephia inducted Sabol into their Hall of Fame in 1996.

Personal life[]

Steve Sabol was married for over a decade to his first wife, Lisa, mother of his only son, Casey Sabol. After their divorce, Lisa married John DeBella. Steve Sabol then married his second wife, Penny Sabol. Steve's sister, Blair, was the original namesake of Ed Sabol's production company, Blair Motion Pictures, before it became NFL Films.

Death and legacy[]

On September 18, 2012, Sabol died of brain cancer in Moorestown, New Jersey, 18 months after being diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor in March 2011. He died two weeks before his 70th birthday, and a week after his father's (Ed Sabol) 96th.[4] He was honored before every NFL game in Week 3 with a video tribute.[5] On November 9, One NFL Plaza (headquarters of NFL Films) was renamed One Sabol Way in his honor.[6]

References[]

Steve Sabol, Creative Force Behind NFL Films, Dies at 69 , The New York Times

External links[]


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