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John Walsh - Former Executive Vice President, ESPN

John Walsh joined ESPN in 1988 and currently serves as executive vice president and chairman of its editorial board. Since joining ESPN, Walsh has been responsible for the launch of some of the network’s most recognizable properties, including ESPN The Magazine and ESPN Radio. He has been instrumental in developing many of the news and information elements of ESPN, and has led the editorial direction of ESPN.com and its properties. Walsh originally joined ESPN as a managing editor responsible forSportsCenter, ESPN’s flagship sports news program, and is widely credited with many of the changes that have made the program so successful through the years.

Walsh’s career path before settling at ESPN was a series of eclectic and influential editorial positions in the newspaper and magazine industries, in sports, news and popular culture.  The founding editor of the original Inside Sports magazine (1979-82), Walsh also served as managing editor of U.S. News and World Report (1985-86) and Rolling Stone (1973-74). He held a number of editorial positions at Newsday (1970-73), including sports editor and op-ed page editor; worked as sports editor of the Columbia Missourian (1967-70), and was an editor at the Washington Post style section (1977-78). 

He has been the editor of three sports books, including “The Heisman: A Symbol of Excellence,” published in 1984. In addition, he has served as a consultant for several publications, including Esquire magazine (1982-83), Vanity Fair magazine (1983-84), the New York Times Sunday sports “Part Two” magazine (1985) and Special Report magazines published by Whittle Communications. 

His television experience includes consultancies to CBS Sports’ NFL Today program (1986-87 season) and with TVTV on a PBS documentary on the 1976 Super Bowl. 

A native of Scranton, Pa., Walsh earned a bachelor of arts degree in English from the University of Scranton in 1966 and received a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Missouri in 1968. In 1991, he received the Frank J. O’Hara Award from the University of Scranton’s National Alumni Association, recognizing his “sustained achievement in the communications field.” In 2001, he received the University of Missouri Journalism School Medal of Honor.

Courtesy: ESPN MediaZone