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"Liguori cleared hurdles to establish niche in sports"
By Dave Shedloski Ann Liguori never has had a problem
competing against men. In fact, she's grown accustomed to beating them at their
own games. As an aspiring athlete at Brecksville High School
in Suburban Cleveland, Liguori wanted desperately to play varsity tennis, but
there was no girls' team. A mere inconvenience. She simply tried out for the boys'
team. As a senior, she was its No. 1 singles player. "I
guess I always understood that hard work got you over a lot of hurdles,"
she says. That same attitude has served her well in her broadcast
career. Work hard and create a spot for yourself in the game. And don't take no
for an answer; change the question. The question facing Liguori
in 1982, when she graduated from the University of South Florida in Tampa with
a degree in broadcasting, was "How can a woman break into sports?" She
altered the query to "How can they keep me out?" They
couldn't. Liguori owns and produces her own weekly program, sharp Sports Innerview,
which appears on Prime Sports/SportsChannel. After seven years, it's become the
longest running sports interview TV show hosted by a woman. She also hosts Conversations
with Ann Liguori, which began its second season on The Golf Channel April 24 (each
new segment premiers on Wednesdays at 9:30 P.m. EDT). Liguori,
who also is the host of radio shows for WFAN in New York and the British Broadcasting
Corp., ascended to her current status as a leader of women's sports journalism
or "cable's queen of locker-room talk," according to TV Guide
by becoming one of the most versatile utility players in broadcasting. She
began early, too, acting as host of her own cable show, Tampa Bay Sensation, while
still in college. After graduation, Liguori worked for CBS Sports for a little
more than a year before striking out on her own. "I became
a free agent," she says with a laugh. And Liguori caught
on quickly to the benefits of this chic, modern-day status. She became a New York
correspondent for a new publication called USA Today. She was a producer for ABC
radio sports and a statistician for HBO Sports and began work on another seemingly
risk venture, an all-sports radio station, WFAN. Basically,
she was crazy about sports. "But women didn't have the opportunities back
then that they do now," she says, "so I knew I just had to get as much
experience as possible, no matter what it was." Why sports? "Sports
just always intrigued me. I always loved them, and no matter what I did, I always
cam back to them" Liguori remembers. "When I was little, my mom wanted
me to be a pianist. I quit taking lessons to join a bowling league." Liguori
doesn't bowl over her guests with a lot of difficult questions, though she's not
afraid to broach sensitive subjects when the time is right. "Ann is an aggressive
person who has an uncanny ability to make her guests open up to her," says
Mike Whelan, The Golf Channel's vice president of productions, who has known Liguori
since their days together at HBO. It's that very ability that
prompted Callaway Golf to become a sponsor her Prime Sports program, the first
time Callaway has advertised on a regional sports cable network. "It
was a smart buy for us," Julie Davis, Callaway's advertising manager, says.
"Ann is very down to earth. She asks smart questions and gets people to relax.
She'll pull things out of people that no one else could." "The
interview format, I just love it," Liguori, 35, says. "It never gets
boring. The Golf Channel program has been especially fun, because it has allowed
me to go into different areas of a person's life. Golf as an underlying theme
kind of gives you a window into the soul." This was revealed
to Liguori through her Innerview show. She found many of her celebrity guests
were interested in golf, and simply spun off the idea to create Conversations.
At the same time, TGC executives were looking for a way to bring a celebrity presence
to its fledgling enterprise immediately. She had the contacts. They had the forum.
It became a win-win deal. "Ann has become a terrific ambassador
for The Golf Channel." Whelan said. Liguori, who co-produces
both programs with husband Steve Geller, has completed half of the 20 shows she
will do for The Golf Channel this year. That's down from 26 shows in '95, when
TGC, now with more than 2.3 million subscribers, required more programming. The
slightly lighter load hardly bothers Liguori, working on a year-to-year basis
with TGC. In fact, she's accustomed to being a part of growing businesses. "I
started with USA Today when people said a national daily couldn't work,"
she said. "Then people said an all-sports radio station wouldn't work when
I went to WFAN. Now I see The Golf Channel growing, and it's pretty exciting.
I guess I've always had good instincts." Most good reporters
do. |