Foster Hewitt Memorial Award
Canadian sports journalism award (1984-)
The Foster Hewitt Memorial Award is an award named after Foster Hewitt and presented by the Hockey Hall of Fame to members of the radio and television industry who make outstanding contributions to their profession and the game of ice hockey during their broadcasting career. The award winners are selected by the NHL Broadcasters' Association.[1]
This award should not be confused with the ACTRA Foster Hewitt Award, which was presented by ACTRA, the Canadian association of actors and broadcasters, for excellence in general sports broadcasting. That award was discontinued in 1986.
Winners
change- 1984 – Fred Cusick, Boston; Foster Hewitt, Toronto; Danny Gallivan, Montreal; Rene Lecavalier, Montreal
- 1985 – Budd Lynch, Detroit; Doug Smith, Montreal
- 1986 – Wes McKnight, Toronto; Lloyd Pettit, Chicago
- 1987 – Bob Wilson, Boston
- 1988 – Dick Irvin, Jr., Montreal
- 1989 – Dan Kelly, St. Louis, Hockey Night in Canada
- 1990 – Jiggs McDonald, Atlanta, New York Islanders, Los Angeles
- 1991 – Bruce Martyn, Detroit
- 1992 – Jim Robson, Vancouver, Hockey Night in Canada
- 1993 – Al Shaver, Minnesota
- 1994 – Ted Darling, Buffalo
- 1995 – Brian McFarlane, Hockey Night in Canada
- 1996 – Bob Cole, Hockey Night in Canada
- 1997 – Gene Hart, Philadelphia
- 1998 – Howie Meeker, Hockey Night in Canada, The Sports Network
- 1999 – Richard Garneau, Montreal
- 2000 – Bob Miller, Los Angeles
- 2001 – Mike Lange, Pittsburgh
- 2002 – Gilles Tremblay, Montreal
- 2003 – Rod Phillips, Edmonton
- 2004 – Chuck Kaiton, Hartford/Carolina
- 2005 – Sal Messina, New York Rangers
- 2006 – Peter Maher, Calgary
- 2007 – Bill Hewitt, Toronto
- 2008 – Mike "Doc" Emrick, Philadelphia, New Jersey, FOX, NBC
- 2009 – John Davidson, New York Rangers, Hockey Night in Canada, FOX, ABC, ESPN, NBC
- 2010 – Ron Weber, Washington [2]
- 2011 – Mickey Redmond, Detroit [3]
- 2012 – Rick Jeanneret, Buffalo[4]
- 2013 – Harry Neale, Buffalo, Toronto, Hockey Night in Canada[5]
- 2014 – Pat Foley, Chicago [6]
- 2015 – Nick Nickson, Los Angeles[7]
- 2016 – Sam Rosen, New York Rangers [8]
References
change- "Foster Hewitt Memorial Award winners". Hockey Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2008-01-06.
- ↑ Dinger, Ralph, ed. (2009). NHL Official Guide and Record Book 2010. NHL. p. 240.
- ↑ "Winnipeg Free Press".
- ↑ "Red Wings TV analyst Mickey Redmond will receive Foster Hewitt Award". MLive.com. 2 June 2011.
- ↑ "News, Sports, Jobs - Post Journal".
- ↑ "Sabres analyst Neale calls Hall of Fame honor 'glorious moment'". 11 June 2013.
- ↑ "Allen, Foley honored by Hockey Hall of Fame". NHL.com.
- ↑ "Nick Nickson Is The 2015 Foster Hewitt Memorial Award Winner". NHL.com.
- ↑ Leonard, Pat. "Sam Rosen to be inducted into Hockey Hall of Fame". NY Daily News. NYDailyNews.com. Retrieved 2 June 2016.