DeLoss Dodds
(Via recorded video)
Janet Marie Smith
In my unique corner of the world, I’m proud and excited to be the voice for the building, the voice for the cityscape, the voice for the team history, the voice for the trees and the plazas and the signs, even the team artifacts. Whether it’s corrugated metal or brick, whether it’s steel trusses or inverted precast, thousand-foot-long warehouses or the landscaped hills of Chavez Ravine, the 100-year-old Boston elms or the palm trees known as the Three Sisters, I’ve found love in these ballparks, and I really treasure the chance to unite sports and the civic realm. …
The Angelos family and their transformation of Sarasota’s Ed Smith Stadium, and the Dodgers’ renovation of Campo Las Palmas in the Dominican Republic gave me a chance to work on these more intimate sports facilities, and I found I loved that scale, too.
Larry Levy
The restaurant business in sports is very different from the restaurant business on the street. It’s the same skill set for the quality of the food. I couldn’t think of a sports term to analogize it, because it’s more like a military campaign. So to have games going on last night in baseball, basketball and hockey, no one person can do the job. So it really is like having phenomenal generals, phenomenal leaders [and] phenomenal culture, and I will say that Levy Restaurants still has the best culture in the industry. …
It’s been a privilege to get to know the other people. If it wasn’t for Janet Marie Smith and the start of all the new stadiums and arenas, I don’t think we would have had as much territory to cover. Ed has made sports so popular that people want to come and see it in person, and George and I share an amazing passion for basketball, which is my sport.
Bill Giles
(Son Joe’s introduction)
(Bill, via recorded video) I had established myself as a marketing and promotions specialist with the Houston Astros, and was very excited about the challenge of trying to fill the new Veterans Stadium. Now I always believed that the opening day of a baseball season was special, almost a national holiday. When I first arrived in Philadelphia, I didn’t sense the same feeling from the locals. My mission was to change all that. How? By staging a series of wild and wacky promotions designed to remind the fans they were here to have fun
George Raveling
I also want to say one thing: I would like to single out Villanova and Nike. They were both transformational elements in my life. Without Villanova and without Nike, I have no idea what I would have been doing today. To me, working at Nike has been like going to Harvard graduate school. I’ve learned so much about life, so much about myself, and so much about people.
And so I just feel I’m probably the most fortunate person in the world to have lived the life that I’ve lived. I’ve lived a dream, and sometimes I ask myself, “God, why do you bestow all these graces upon me?” I can’t figure out how it’s happened, but I’m happy as hell that it has.
Ed Goren
In 1994, David’s wife was still in London and my wife was still in Connecticut. Literally, we spent 18 hours a day putting Fox Sports together. We’d start early in the morning, bringing in wine-stained cocktail napkins from the last bar we closed down the night before with all sorts of brilliant ideas. Some of them actually worked.
The idea that nobody at a network had ever done an hour pregame show for the NFL — we decided, yes, we’re going to do that. We’re going to have a Fox Box, that was totally different. We were going to build on our set a demonstration area, a mini-football field to demonstrate various parts of the game. …
The beauty back then was that we didn’t have a research department, we didn’t have consultants. David and I went with our gut, and we were going to push the envelope, there was no question about it.