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Roy Wood Jr., who co-hosts CNN’s Have I Got News for You, hosted the show, produced by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, that honored excellence in sports television coverage from 2025.
The Sports Emmys presented its 2026 lifetime achievement award to longtime sports media and entertainment executive Steve Bornstein, who joined ESPN in its infancy in 1980 and became its president and CEO a decade later.
The ceremony featured presenters from across the sports community, including: Andrés Cantor (Telemundo), Ian Eagle (CBS Sports), Rich Eisen (NFL Network), Scott Graham (NFL Films), New York Sirens athlete Elle Hartje, NBA Champion Dwight Howard, Brian Kenny (MLB Network), MLB Champion Pedro Martinez (TNT Sports), Mark Shapiro (TKO Group Holdings), Jonathan Scott (TNT Sports), Jenny Taft (FOX Sports), Pablo Torre (Pablo Torre Finds Out), Colleen Wolfe (NFL Network), Nick Wright (FOX Sports).
“In an era defined by endless content and increasingly individualized media consumption, sports television remains one of the few experiences that still consistently brings people together in real time,” said NATAS President and CEO, Adam Sharp. “Tonight we honor the extraordinary professionals whose talent, creativity and innovation bring those dramatic victories, enduring heartbreaking defeats to life.”
Here are the winners of the 2026 Sports Emmy Awards:
Outstanding Live Sports Series: Sunday Night Football (NBC / Peacock)
Outstanding Sports Studio Show: Weekly: College Game Day (ESPN)
Outstanding Sports Studio Show: Daily: NFL Live (ESPN)
Outstanding Sports Personality: Play-By-Play: Mike Tirico
Outstanding Studio Host: Ernie Johnson (TNT / CBS)
Outstanding Emerging On-Air Talent: Katie George
Outstanding Studio Analyst: Alex Rodriguez
Outstanding Event Analyst: Greg Olsen (Fox / NFL Network)
Lifetime Achievement Award: Steve Bornstein, former CEO of the NFL Network
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