Skip Bayless

Skip Bayless

Bayless in 2011
Born John Edward Bayless II
(1951-12-04) December 4, 1951
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States
Residence New York, New York
Bristol, Connecticut
Education Vanderbilt University
Occupation Sportswriter, television sports commentator
Notable credit(s) ESPN (Cold Pizza, First Take), 2004–present; San Jose Mercury News, Chicago Tribune, Dallas Times Herald, Dallas Morning News, Los Angeles Times, Miami Herald
Religion Christian
Family Rick Bayless (brother)

Skip Bayless (born December 4, 1951) is an American sports columnist, author, and television personality who is best known as a commentator on the ESPN2 show, First Take, with Stephen A. Smith.[1]

Early years

Bayless was born John Edward Bayless II in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and his father immediately began calling him Skip – his father also had called his mother "Skip", as in "skipper of the ship". The name stuck, and Bayless was never called John by his parents. He eventually had his name legally changed to Skip.[2] His parents owned and operated the Hickory House restaurant in Oklahoma City, which specialized in barbecue. Bayless worked in the restaurant in his youth, but never considered it as a career path. His younger brother Rick Bayless carried on the family tradition and became a chef, restaurateur and television personality. He also has a younger sister.[3]

Bayless' interest in sports began at an early age and he played baseball and basketball.[4] Bayless was the salutatorian of Northwest Classen's graduating class of 1970. He was a two-year member of the National Honor Society and president of the school's Fellowship of Christian Athletes chapter. He was also an officer in the letterman's club. At the urging of one of his English teachers, Bayless became the primary sports columnist for the school newspaper his junior and senior years. Prior to his senior year, Bayless represented Northwest Classen at Oklahoma Boys State. Upon graduation, he was awarded the Grantland Rice Scholarship (named for the sportswriter of the same name) to attend Vanderbilt University (Rice's alma mater).[5][6] While at Vanderbilt, he majored in English and history, and graduated cum laude in 1974. He was a member of Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity, serving two years as the chapter's "rho" (sports director).[7] He was also the sports editor of The Hustler, the university's student newspaper, and spent the summer of 1969 interning under sports editor Frank Boggs at The Daily Oklahoman.[8]

Career

Print journalism

Bayless went directly from Vanderbilt to The Miami Herald, where he wrote sports features for a little more than two years before being hired away by the Los Angeles Times in August 1976. There, he was best known for investigative stories on the Los Angeles Dodgers' clubhouse resentment of "golden boy" Steve Garvey and his celebrity wife Cyndy, and on Rams owner Carroll Rosenbloom's behind-the-scenes decisions to start different quarterbacks each week. Bayless won the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Newspaper Writing in 1977 for his coverage of Seattle Slew's Triple Crown victory.[9]

At 26, Bayless was hired by The Dallas Morning News to write its lead sports column, and three years later, the rival Dallas Times Herald hired him away. This caught the attention of The Wall Street Journal, prompting the paper to do a story on the development. Bayless was voted Texas sportswriter of the year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association three times (1979, 1984 and 1986).[10]

In 1989, Bayless wrote his first book, God's Coach: The Hymns, Hype and Hypocrisy of Tom Landry's Cowboys, about the rise and fall of Tom Landry's Dallas Cowboys. Following the Cowboys' Super Bowl victory in 1993, Bayless wrote The Boys: The Untold Story of the Dallas Cowboys' Season on the Edge, and following the third Cowboys Super Bowl win in four seasons, Bayless wrote a third book about the Cowboys, Hell-Bent: The Crazy Truth About the "Win or Else" Dallas Cowboys. Hell-Bent caused a stir, in part, because in the course of writing about the conflict between Cowboys coach Barry Switzer and star quarterback Troy Aikman, Bayless reported on speculation by Switzer and people close to him within the Dallas organization that Aikman was gay. Aikman apparently still carries a grudge over the matter.[11]

In 1998, Bayless left Dallas after 17 years and become the lead sports columnist for the Chicago Tribune. In his first year there, Bayless won the Lisagor Award for excellence in sports column writing, presented by the Chicago Headline Club (the Chicago chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists).[12] In 2000, he was voted Illinois sportswriter of the year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association.[13] Bayless left the Chicago Tribune in July 2001.[14]

Bayless's work has also appeared in various national sports publications, including Sports Illustrated.[15]

Radio

In 1991, Bayless began a two-year stint hosting a sports talk radio show from 6–8 p.m. Monday through Friday for Dallas radio station KLIF. In 1994, he became one of the original investors in the Fort Worth radio station KTCK ("the Ticket"), and hosted The Skip Bayless Show from 6–9 a.m. weekdays from 1994–96. In 1996, the original owners sold the station to Cumulus Media, which bought out Bayless' contract. Also in the mid-1990s, he was a frequent guest on ESPN Radio's first national weekday show, The Fabulous Sports Babe. After moving to Chicago, he began making regular appearances on Chet Coppock's show on the Sporting News Radio network, Coppock On Sports. In 2001, he became the primary guest host of the syndicated radio program, The Jim Rome Show. Soon thereafter, Bayless began co-hosting a weekend show on ESPN Radio with former SportsCenter anchor Larry Beil, which aired until 2004, when he moved full-time into television.

Television

In 1989, Bayless joined host Dick Schaap as a panelist on ESPN's The Sports Reporters, and over the next decade, he was a regular on the Sunday morning show. In 1992, Bayless became a member of the original debate team on NFL Prime Monday's "Knights of the Roundtable" segments with Mitch Albom and Michael Wilbon.

In 1999 and 2000, he provided commentary for the Golf Channel from the major golf championships.

In 2001 and 2002, Bayless appeared regularly on Jim Rome's show on Fox Sports Net, The Last Word. He also made frequent appearances during the same period of time on Fox's The Best Damn Sports Show Period. When Rome moved to ESPN in 2003, Bayless became a fixture on Rome is Burning. He was also featured in a weekly Sunday morning SportsCenter debate segment with Stephen A. Smith, "Old School/Nu Skool".

ESPN hired Bayless full-time in 2004 to team with Woody Paige of The Denver Post in daily debate segments called "1st and 10" on ESPN2's Cold Pizza, and to write columns for ESPN.com. In May 2007, the show, which had been produced in the network's New York studios, was rebranded as First Take and production was moved to the network's headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut. Around this time, Bayless stopped writing for ESPN.com; he resumed writing columns for the website in August 2012.

Films

Along with ESPN colleagues Woody Paige and Jay Crawford, Bayless had a cameo role in the 2006 film Rocky Balboa.[16] The three are seen on their "First and 10" segment discussing a possible fight between a retired Balboa and current heavyweight champion Mason Dixon. Bayless opines that Balboa "was completely overrated" and mocks his age.

He appeared in the 2010 ESPN 30 for 30 film, Pony Excess,[17] about the Southern Methodist University football scandal involving gross violations of NCAA rules and regulations. Bayless covered the Mustangs while writing for both the The Dallas Morning News and the Dallas Times Herald. He also appeared in the 2011 ESPNU documentary, Herschel,[18] about University of Georgia running back Herschel Walker.

Other honors and awards

In 2008, Bayless was selected to the Oklahoma City Wall of Fame recognizing outstanding alumni of Oklahoma City public schools.[19] In 2009, he was inducted as one of the five members of the inaugural class of the Vanderbilt Student Media Hall of Fame.[20] In 2012, he received two honors: he was nominated for a Sports Emmy Award in the category of Outstanding Sports Personality, Studio Analyst,[21] and was the co-recipient with DJ Steve Porter of a Webby People's Voice Award in the category of Video Remixes/Mashups for "All He Does Is Win", Porter's mashup of clips of Bayless passionately defending oft-maligned quarterback Tim Tebow.[22]

Published books as author

References

  1. Cork Gaines, "One Image That Shows Why So Many People Hate ESPN's 'First Take' And Why It Works", BusinessInsider.com, January 27, 2014
  2. Michael Tillery, "The Skip Bayless Interview Part I: Colorful Conscious and Of Course, Controversial", The Starting Five, February 23, 2009
  3. Rick Maese, "Skip Bayless, ESPN2 'First Take' co-host, may be the most hated man in sports", The Washington Post, September 13, 2013
  4. Bracht, Mel, "ESPN analyst Skip Bayless explains disputed claims about basketball career", The Oklahoman, April 11, 2012
  5. Frank Boggs, "Skip's B proves Nobody's Perfect", The Oklahoma Times, May 21, 1970
  6. Thoroughbred Racing Association: Fred Russell-Grantland Rice Scholarship, Past Winners
  7. Christopher M. Hanes, "Alumnus of the Year: Skip Bayless", Maltese Cross, Spring 2012
  8. Michael Tillery, "The Skip Bayless Interview Part I: Colorful, Conscious and Of Course, Controversial", The Starting Five, February 23, 2009
  9. Daily Racing Form: Past Eclipse Award Winners
  10. Sports Media Monitor: Skip Bayless Archived June 7, 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  11. The Dallas Morning News, "Troy Aikman hints he might deck Skip Bayless if two were to meet", Aug. 31, 2011
  12. Chicago Tribune, "Tribune's Bayless Wins Major Award", May 10, 1999
  13. Chicago Tribune, "Tribune's Bayless Honored", April 29, 2001
  14. http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2001-07-16/sports/0107160053_1_paths-split-memories-predraft
  15. Skip Bayless, "Mail Bonding", Sports Illustrated, August 4, 1997
  16. IMDb: Rocky Balboa (Full Cast & Crew)
  17. IMDb: Pony Excess (Full Cast & Crew)
  18. IMDb: Herschel (Full Cast & Crew)
  19. The Oklahoman, "Education Briefs: City Wall of Fame inductees named", August 10, 2008
  20. Vanderbilt News, "Vanderbilt Student Media Hall of Fame's inaugural class named", August 18, 2009
  21. The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Announces the Nominees for the 33rd Annual Sports Emmy Awards, March 20, 2012
  22. 2012 Webby People's Voice Awards: Video Remixes/Mashups

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.