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Lesley Visser
Lesley Visser is set to begin
her 31st season covering the NFL, serving as CBS' lead sideline reporter.
Visser returned to CBS Sports in August 2000 after seven years at ABC,
where she became the first woman assigned to "Monday Night Football."
Firsts are nothing new for Lesley
Visser. In 1992, she was first woman to cover the post-game presentation
ceremony at the Super Bowl, and she was the first-ever female NFL beat
writer when she covered the New England Patriots in 1976 for the Boston
Globe.
PSR editor Tony DeFazio spoke
to Visser from the home she shares with husband and Fox/Turner sportscaster
Dick Stockton in Boca Raton, Fla.
PSR: Does parity make a
better NFL, or has it caused a weaker product?
Visser: I don't think it's one
or the other. So many young people today probably missed the greatness
of the Steelers and the Cowboys and 49ers. When we all knew everybody's
name from the Cowboys or the Steelers, it was great for then. But now,
for fans, how great is it when you live in Baltimore or New England,
where I covered the Patriots a thousand years ago, for those cities
to finally get their championships? Teams that have struggled lately
always have reason to believe, as Rod Stewart sang. I think the NFL
rocked 20 years ago, 30 years ago, 40 years ago and it still rocks now.
PSR: You are considered
a pioneer among female sports journalists. What were your thoughts when
ABC hired Lisa Guerrero, a reporter with more entertainment than journalism
experience, for Monday Night Football?
LV: That's not for me to
say. I think I've lasted 30 years by having the facts speak. I was under
so much scrutiny when I was 21-22 years old as the first woman covering
an NFL beat and I'm used to enormous scrutiny. I've tried to be a role
model for myself, but also for the Boston Globe, CBS, and ABC.
Maybe different people have different
interpretations of what the job is or should be. I genuinely love the
NFL. I don't think I'm bigger than the game. When Nick Zito finally
won the Belmont, he talked about how humbling it was because the game
is so much bigger than you. I've really just tried to represent myself
and the companies I've worked for. Something must be working or I wouldn't
have lasted 30 years.
PSR: Have you made it easier
for those who have followed you?
LV: I know this: I was
of the school of Will McDonough. And now many people are said to me
from the school of me. So I think that's an honorable legacy. But I
don't know if it's easier or harder. I think that you still need the
same factors: knowledge and passion and commitment and talent. You need
all those factors. Are those easy? No, not for anybody. So I don't think
it's easier or tougher, I think it's Ôare those factors within you?'
I do believe this. Anybody can
have a one or a two year career. I was blessed to start at the Globe,
where it was Murderer's Row. It was Peter Gammons on baseball, Bob Ryan
on basketball, Will McDonough on football, Bud Collins on tennis. CBS
is the network of Sean McManus, son of Jim McKay. Dick Enberg, Greg
Gumbel, Jim Nantz, Verne Lundquist. All people who have had 20, 30 and
40 year careers, and I don't think that's a coincidence.
PSR: Does anything you've
covered come close to 1989 and the Berlin Wall?
LV: Yeah. In different
ways though. Going to Ground Zero with the Jets and the Giants right
after it happened. Both powerful, historical moments.
My father grew up in Amsterdam
during the occupation. His father was a very well-known doctor from
a Jewish family. So I had a tremendous sense of what the Berlin Wall
was. I grew up appreciating the opportunities of freedom. The power
of being at the Berlin Wall with people who had walked for days to taste
freedom the very second they could. It was staggering.
When Martina Navratilova went
back to Prague for the first time since she had defected, and of course
the newspapers had written nothing on her career. But word of mouth
had gotten around that the Great Martina was coming home. People just
went and stood in the rain at the airport just to see her.
But heck, I love seeing the guys
on the sidelines so much as well. I remember one time in Pittsburgh
on a Monday night it was so cold. And it's freezing, my lips are frozen
and it's getting hard to talk. I remember going up to Jerome and saying,
"Jerome, you've got to stay in this game because in this cold, I CANNOT
be saying Fuamatu-Ma'afala."
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