Harold Lederman
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Harold Lederman is a celebrated boxing judge and analyst.
Born in The Bronx, New York, he began his career as a boxing judge in 1967 and joined the cast of HBO World Championship Boxing in 1986, where he has been ever since.
[edit] Education and career
Lederman attended Columbia University and upon graduation earned a license from New York's State Athletic Commission to judge title fights on June 26, 1967. He judged (by his count) over a hundred title fights in every corner of the globe, all the while maintaining his pharmacy in the New York area. In 1986, HBO executive producer Ross Greenburg invited Lederman to join HBO's boxing show World Championship Boxing as an "expert commentator".
Lederman retired from active judging in 1999 but remained with the HBO show as "unofficial ringside scorer." His voice can be heard when official HBO commentator Jim Lampley introduces him with the line, "...and now the rules with our unofficial ringside scorer, Harold Lederman," after which he reads the rules of the fight and occasionally the rules for scoring fights to the audience and cuts back to Jim. During the fight, usually in the 3rd, 6th, 9th and 11th rounds of a ten or twelve round fight, Lampley will have Lederman tell the fans what his unofficial card looks like; HBO also runs a graphic at the beginning of each round with his preceding round's score.
[edit] Family life
Lederman is married with two daughters and lives in Orangeburg, New York. Daughter Julie Lederman has followed her father into the judging business.
[edit] Awards and honors
- 1997: inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame
- Inductee, Rockland County, New York Sports HOF
- Marvin Goldberg Award, Bna'i Br'ith Max Kase Sports Lodge (outstanding contribution to boxing)
- 2006: "Good Guy Award", Boxing Writers Association of America