Legends Behind the Lens: Roone Arledge

Without Roone, there would be no primetime sports television

The story of American sports television is engrained in the history of this nation, rising on the achievements of countless incredible men and women who never once appeared on our screens. During this pause in live sports, SVG is proud to present a celebration of this great industry. Legends Behind the Lens is a look at how we got here seen through the people who willed it to be. Each weekday, we will share with you the story of a person whose impact on the sports-television industry is indelible.

Legends Behind the Lens is presented in association with the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame and the SVG Sports Broadcasting Fund. In these trying times — with so many video-production professionals out of work — we hope that you will consider (if you are able) donating to the Sports Broadcasting Fund. Do so by visiting sportsbroadcastfund.org.

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Without primetime sports coverage, there would be little need for sports technology, and, without Roone Arledge, there would be no primetime sports coverage. Life magazine named him one of the 100 most important Americans of the 20th century, but, in the sports world, Arledge is in the top 10.

Roone Pinckney Arledge Jr. crafted the modern link between sports and entertainment, transforming ABC Sports from a financial disaster to the world’s go-to destination for athletics entertainment. As VP from 1960 to ’68 and president from ’68 to ’86, Arledge moved sports events from weekend programming to primetime television, using unheard-of technical innovations to make the Olympics some of the most important programming on television and creating a staple of modern American sports, Monday Night Football.

One year after joining ABC, Arledge created Wide World of Sports, which became the most successful sports program of all time. The show covered every event imaginable, from baseball to luge, and made announcer Jim McKay’s voice as common a household fixture as his keystone phrases “spanning the globe” and “the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat.” Arledge was one of the first producers to bring live international events to a U.S. audience via Atlantic satellite, but that was only the beginning.

Introducing such techniques as slow motion, freeze frame, instant replay, and split screen, Arledge turned sports events into dramas. He added “up close and personal” athlete features to complement the games, transforming once obscure international athletes into instant celebrities.

“What we set out to do was get the audience involved emotionally,” Arledge told Sports Illustrated in 1966. “If they didn’t give a damn about the game, they might still enjoy the program.”

He made primetime sports into much more than a recording of the game, turning sports programming into its own main event.

“In short,” Arledge once said, “we are going to add show business to sports.”

“Roone was surely the only television executive of his time who would have dared to put sports in primetime.” — Dick Ebersol

In 1970, he created Monday Night Football and, with it, a new national pastime. Arledge had to fight to sell affiliates and advertisers on the idea of primetime football, but he believed in his vision of sports as entertainment.

“I thought there was something special about football,” he said in a 1999 interview, “because there are so few games and relatively few teams. Also, there is something about the look of a night game, with the lights bouncing off the helmets.”

The innovations he used on Wide World worked wonders for MNF. Handheld cameras, end-zone cameras, and cameras on cranes helped Monday Night Football, in Arledge’s words, “change the habits of the nation.”

The step into primetime also paved the way for other sports. In 1971, one game of the MLB World Series tested the primetime waters, and, a few seasons later, all World Series games were cashing in on primetime viewership and advertising revenue that did not exist before Arledge recognized their potential.

The producer of 10 Olympic Games, he won one of his 32 Emmy Awards for his coverage of the 1972 Munich Games, was inducted into the Olympic Hall of Fame, and was the first television executive to receive the Medal of Olympic Order.

Upon Arledge’s death in 2002, McKay gave a concise summary of the innovator’s work: “He was the very best at what he did that there ever was.”

The video in this profile was originally produced in 2007. For more on the life and career of this industry legend, visit their profile at the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame.

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