List of Jews in sports (non-players)
Appearance
The topic of Jewish participation in sports is discussed extensively in academic and popular literature. Scholars believe that sports have been a historical avenue for Jewish people to overcome obstacles toward their participation in secular society, especially before the mid-20th century in Europe and the United States.[1]
Commissioners
[edit]- Gary Bettman, US, National Hockey League Commissioner[2]
- Mark Cohon, Canada, Canadian Football League Commissioner[3]
- Al Davis, US, American Football League Commissioner[4][5]
- Jim Drucker, US, Continental Basketball Association Commissioner; and Arena Football League Commissioner[6]
- Don Garber, US, Major League Soccer Commissioner[2]
- Abe J Greene, US, National Boxing Association (now World Boxing Association) [7]
- Ludwig Guttmann, Germany, founder of the Paralympics[8]
- Sydney Halter, Canada, first Commissioner of the Canadian Football League[9]
- Cary Kaplan, Canada, President & General Manager, Brampton Beast hockey club; former Commissioner & Chairman of Canadian Soccer League
- Frank Lowy, Czechoslovak-born Australian-Israeli, chair of Football Federation Australia[10]
- Maurice Podoloff, Ukraine-born US, first President of the National Basketball Association[11]
- Jaap van Praag, Dutch, President of Ajax Amsterdam 1964–78, President of the Royal Dutch Football Association[12]
- Alan Rothenberg, US, former President of the United States Soccer Federation; former executive and investor of the North American Soccer League.[13] Currently Vice President of the North American governing body of association football (CONCACAF)[14]
- Bud Selig, US, former Major League Baseball Commissioner, owner of Milwaukee Brewers[2]
- Adam Silver, US, Commissioner of the National Basketball Association[15]
- David Stern, US, former National Basketball Association Commissioner[2]
- Grigory Surkis, Ukraine, Chairman of Football Federation of Ukraine[16]
- Gerardo Werthein, Argentina, is former President of Argentine Olympic Committee and current Honorary President[17] as well as member of International Olympic Committee.[18]
Executives
[edit]- Chaim Bloom (born 1983), US, Chief Baseball Officer for the Boston Red Sox
- Leopoldo Bard, Argentina, co-founder of the Club Atlético River Plate, he was its first president.[19]
- Mike Chernoff, General Manager of the Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball[20]
- Jon Daniels, US, President of Baseball Operations and General Manager of the Major League Baseball team the Texas Rangers[citation needed]
- Theo Epstein, US, former President of Baseball Operations (Chicago Cubs); former General Manager, Boston Red Sox[21]
- Donald Fehr, US, former executive director of the MLB Players Association and of the National Hockey League Players Association[22]
- Andrew Friedman, US, President of Baseball Operations of the Los Angeles Dodgers (and previously general manager of the Tampa Bay Rays) of Major League Baseball[23]
- Sam Fuld, US, General Manager of the Philadelphia Phillies of Major League Baseball
- Hank Greenberg, US, baseball HOF first baseman of the Detroit Tigers; general manager for the Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox, also part-time owner of the Indians.[24]
- Stephen Greenberg, US, deputy commissioner of baseball under Bart Giamatti and chief baseball officer later on.
- Jay Horwitz (born 1945), US, New York Mets executive
- Jed Hoyer, US, baseball Executive VP and General Manager (Chicago Cubs); former General Manager, San Diego Padres[25]
- Cary Kaplan, Canada, President & General Manager, Brampton Beast hockey club; former Commissioner & Chairman of Canadian Soccer League
- Jerry Krause, US, former General Manager (Chicago Bulls)[26]
- Marvin Miller, US, executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, member of Baseball Hall of Fame[27]
- Matthew Silverman, US, President for Baseball Operations for Major League Baseball's Tampa Bay Rays
Field managers and coaches
[edit]- Ray Arcel, US, boxing trainer; trained 18 world champions[28]
- Red Auerbach, US, basketball guard, NBA coach (9 championships) & GM, Hall of Fame[29][30]
- Brad Ausmus, US, baseball catcher, All-Star, 3x Gold Glove, former manager of the Detroit Tigers and Los Angeles Angels, coach for the New York Yankees[31]
- Big Bill Bachrach, US, swimming coach, International Swimming Hall of Fame[32]
- Barak Bakhar, Israel, former player & current manager of the Israeli Premier League association football club Maccabi Haifa since 2020 (during their current 2022–23 UEFA Champions League and its prestigious Group stage)
- Yossi Benayoun, Israel, former player & current professional / technical manager of the Israel national football team since 2022[33][34]
- Morris "Whitey" Bimstein, US, boxing trainer[35]
- David Blatt, US, college & Israeli professional basketball guard, former NBA coach, Cleveland Cavaliers[36]
- Larry Brown, US, basketball player & pro and college coach, currently at Southern Methodist University[32]
- Andy Cohen, US, Major League second baseman and coach; managed one game for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1960.
- Keith Dambrot, US, men's basketball coach (Duquesne University)[37]
- Al Davis, US, football owner/coach of Oakland Raiders[2]
- Nikolay Epshtein, Soviet ice hockey coach[32]
- Charlotte "Eppie" Epstein, US, coach, International Swimming Hall of Fame[32]
- Jedd Fisch, US, football coach of the University of Washington Huskies[38]
- Lawrence Frank, US, head coach (New Jersey Nets, 2004–10; Detroit Pistons, 2011–13)[2]
- Marty Friedman, US, basketball player & coach[39]
- Eran Ganot, US, men's basketball head coach (University of Hawaii)
- Yury Gelman (born 1955), Ukrainian-born US Olympic fencing coach
- Sid Gillman, US, football player & coach[40]
- Ronen "Nano" Ginzburg, Israel, coach for the Czech Republic national basketball team
- Alexander Gomelsky, Russia, head coach of USSR national team for 30 years, including victory in 1988 Summer Olympics, Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame, FIBA Hall of Fame[32]
- Samuel Goodman, US, manager of gold-winning US Olympic rugby[41]
- Eddie Gottlieb, Ukraine-born US, first basketball coach, manager, and owner of Philadelphia Warriors in the BAA/NBA, NBA founder[32]
- Avram Grant, Israel, soccer manager, former head coach of English Premier Club Chelsea F.C. and of the Israel national football team[42]
- Ofir Haim, Israel, soccer manager, head coach of the Israel national under-19 football team during their successful 2022 UEFA Euro Under-19 campaign (2nd place in the finals)
- Brad Greenberg, US, former men's basketball coach (Radford University)[37][43]
- Seth Greenberg, US, firner men's basketball coach (Virginia Tech, South Florida, Long Beach State)[44]
- Béla Guttmann, Hungary, football manager, AC Milan, São Paulo F.C., F.C. Porto, Benfica, C.A. Penarol
- Cecil Hart, Canada, hockey coach/manager (Montreal Canadiens); original Hart Trophy named after father David, & current one after him[45]
- Alon Hazan, Israel, former player & current head coach of the senior Israel national football team since 8 May 2022 (during their successful 2022–23 UEFA Nations League B campaign, where they were placed 1st, and thus has qualified to the upcoming 2024–25 UEFA Nations League A)[33][34]
- Paul Heyman, US, professional wrestling manager[46]
- Melissa Hiatt, US, professional wrestling manager
- Nat Holman, US, basketball player & coach, Hall of Fame[47]
- Roy Hodgson, England, soccer manager, former England national football team manager, currently manager of Crystal Palace
- Red Holzman, US, basketball player & coach, Hall of Fame[47]
- Yoel Judah, US, boxer & trainer[48]
- Gabe Kapler, US, baseball outfielder, manager (Philadelphia Phillies and San Francisco Giants), 2021 NL Manager of the Year[31]
- Béla Komjádi, Hungary, coach, International Swimming Hall of Fame[32]
- Manny Leibert, US, boxing manager & coach, Connecticut Boxing Hall of Fame[49]
- Randy Levine, US, President of New York Yankees baseball team[50]
- Tony Levine, US, football coach of the University of Houston Cougars[51]
- Lenny Levy, US, baseball coach (Pittsburgh Pirates)[52]
- Marv Levy, US, football coach & General Manager (Montreal Alouettes, Buffalo Bills)[53]
- Bob Melvin, US, baseball player and manager (Oakland A's), 3x Manager of the Year[54]
- Cecil Moss, South Africa, coach of Springboks rugby team.[55]
- León Najnudel, Argentina, coach of Argentina national basketball team, and the main driving force in the creation of the Liga Nacional de Básquet (National Basketball League).[56]
- Joe Pasternack, US, men's basketball head coach (UC Santa Barbara)
- Josh Pastner, US, men's basketball head coach (Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets)[37]
- Gabe Paul, US, baseball President & General Manager of Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees[57]
- Bruce Pearl, US, men's basketball coach, Auburn University[58]
- José Pekerman, Argentina, Argentine football manager[59] He was a coach in the Argentina national football team,[60] Colombia national football team,[61] and Venezuela national football team.[62] In his stage as coach of the Argentina national under-20 football team, won three FIFA U-20 World Cup.
- Lefty Phillips, US; briefly a minor league pitcher in the 1930s, later became a pitching coach and manager.[63]
- Jake Pitler, US, second baseman and coach[64]
- David Pleat, England, football manager, Tottenham Hotspur, Luton Town[65]
- Bela Rajki-Reich, Hungary, swimming and water polo coach[32]
- Jimmie Reese, US, baseball second baseman, coach[31]
- Ernie Roth, US, professional wrestling manager[66]
- Larry Rothschild, US, baseball pitcher, coach, and manager (currently New York Yankees pitching coach)
- Yehoshua Rozin, Israeli basketball coach
- Dolph Schayes, US, basketball player & coach[50]
- Mark Shapiro, US, General Manager of Cleveland Indians[67]
- Allie Sherman, US, football player & coach, New York Giants[68]
- Norm Sherry, US, baseball catcher, manager, and coach[31]
- Leonid Slutsky, Russia, National football team manager (2015–16) brought the Russian team to Euro-2016 in France, currently manages Hull City in English Championship League
- Marc Trestman, US, NFL head coach (Chicago Bears, 2013–14), current head coach of the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League[69]
- Irina Viner-Usmanova, Russia, coach of multiple world and Olympic champions in rhythmic gymnastics, President of Russian Rhythmic Gymnastics Federation[70][71][72]
- Ryan Warsofsky, US, NHL ice hockey head coach
- Dan Warthen, US, baseball pitcher and pitching coach (currently, for the Texas Rangers)
Officials
[edit]- Menachem Ashkenazi, Bulgaria/Israel, association football, Olympic and World Cup referee[73]
- Al Clark, US, former MLB umpire[74]
- Norm Drucker, US, former NBA referee and Supervisor of Officials
- Al Forman, US, MLB umpire[75]
- Leo Goldstein, US, association football, World Cup assistant referee[76]
- Jonathan Kaplan, South Africa, rugby union, world record for refereeing highest number of international rugby union test matches, most experienced Test referee of all time[77][78]
- Wolf Karni, Finland, association football, Olympic referee[79]
- Abraham Klein, Romania/Israel, association football, World Cup referee[80]
- Jerry Markbreit, US, former NFL referee[81]
- Mendy Rudolph, NBA and ABA referee, Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame[82]
- Dr. Aviram D. Shmuely, Israel Wrestling Federation, United World Wrestling, 1S Category (Olympic) referee 2006–2021, participated as a referee for Israel at the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympic Games[citation needed]
- Dolly Stark, first Jewish MLB umpire in modern (post-1900) baseball.[83]
- Alon Yefet, Israel, association football, FIFA international referee[84]
Owners
[edit]- Roman Abramovich, Russia/Israel, former owner of English Premier League association football club Chelsea Football Club[85]
- Miriam Adelson, owner, Dallas Mavericks[86]
- Leslie Alexander, US, former owner of Houston Rockets; former owner of Houston Comets[2][30]
- Micky Arison, Israel/US, owner of Miami Heat[2][30]
- Larry Baer, US, CEO of the San Francisco Giants
- Steve Ballmer, US, owner of the Los Angeles Clippers
- Alona Barkat, Israel, owner of Israeli Premier League association football club Hapoel Be'er Sheva[87]
- Steve Belkin, US, former co-owner of the Atlanta Thrashers and Atlanta Hawks[30]
- Arthur Blank, US, owner, Atlanta Falcons, Atlanta United FC, and Georgia Force[88]
- David Blitzer, owner, Philadelphia 76ers, New Jersey Devils, G.D. Estoril Praia, AD Alcorcón, S.K. Beveren, ADO Den Haag, Real Salt Lake, Brøndby IF[89]
- Tony Bloom, England, owner of Brighton & Hove Albion F.C.
- Francis Borelli, France, former President of Paris Saint-Germain Football Club, AS Cannes
- Norman Braman, US, former owner of Philadelphia Eagles[90]
- Alfréd Brüll, Hungary, chairman of sports club MTK[91]
- Alan Cohen, US, owner of Florida Panthers hockey team[92]
- Alan N. Cohen, US, former owner of New York Knicks and New York Rangers, co-owner of Boston Celtics and New Jersey Nets, and Chairman & CEO of Madison Square Garden Corporation[93]
- Steve Cohen, US, owner of the New York Mets[94]
- Uri Coronel, Dutch, former Chairman of Ajax Amsterdam[95]
- Mark Cuban, US, owner of Dallas Mavericks[96]
- William Davidson, US, Chairman of Palace Sports and Entertainment, principal owner of Detroit Pistons, Detroit Shock of the WNBA, and Tampa Bay Lightning of the NHL[97]
- Al Davis, US, former owner, Oakland Raiders[98]
- Mark Davis, owner, Las Vegas Raiders,[88] Las Vegas Aces[99]
- Barney Dreyfuss, US, owner of Pittsburgh Pirates, Baseball Hall of Fame[100]
- Mark Ein, owner, DC Open, Washington Kastles, Washington Justice[101]
- Steve Ellman, US, owner of Phoenix Coyotes[2]
- John J. Fisher, US, owner of the Oakland Athletics baseball team[102]
- Andrew Freedman, US, former owner of New York Giants baseball team[103]
- Emil Fuchs, German-born US, owner of Boston Braves baseball team[104]
- Arcadi Gaydamak, Russia, owner of Beitar Jerusalem F.C.[105]
- Alexandre Gaydamak, France & Russia, co-owner & Chairman of Portsmouth F.C.[106]
- Dan Gilbert, US, owner of Cleveland Cavaliers[107]
- Gary Gilbert, US, part owner of Cleveland Cavaliers, brother of Dan Gilbert[2]
- Avram Glazer, US, joint chairman of Manchester United board, owner of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the (NFL)[108]
- Joel Glazer, US, joint chairman of Manchester United[108]
- Malcolm Glazer, US, owner of Tampa Bay Buccaneers, majority owner of Manchester United[2]
- Paul Godfrey, Canada, owner of the Toronto Blue Jays[109]
- Chuck Greenberg, US, co-owner of Texas Rangers
- Ernie Grunfeld, US, basketball player & GM of Washington Wizards[110]
- Peter Guber, US, co-owner of Golden State Warriors of the National Basketball Association (NBA), Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball, and Los Angeles FC of Major League Soccer[111]
- Walter A. Haas Jr., US, owner of Oakland Athletics[112]
- Josh Harris, US, owner of the Philadelphia 76ers, New Jersey Devils, Washington Commanders[113][114]
- Ben Hatskin, Canada, founder and owner of the Winnipeg Jets[citation needed]
- Leon Hess, US, owner of New York Jets[115]
- Jerold Hoffberger, US, owner of Baltimore Orioles baseball team[116]
- Mat Ishbia, US, majority owner of Phoenix Suns
- Stan Kasten, US, former President of the Atlanta Braves and Washington Nationals and current president, and part-owner, of the Los Angeles Dodgers in baseball.[117]
- Daryl Katz, Canada, owner of Edmonton Oilers[118]
- Raanan Katz, Israel, part owner of Miami Heat & owner of Maccabi Tel Aviv[119]
- Eugene Klein, US, owner of San Diego Chargers and part owner of Seattle SuperSonics[32]
- Alexander Knaster, USSR/UK, owner of Italian football club A.C. Pisa 1909[120][121]
- Louis "Red" Klotz, US, NBA 5' 7" point guard, formed teams that play against and tour with the Harlem Globetrotters[32]
- Herb Kohl, US, owner of Milwaukee Bucks (1985–2014)[2]
- Robert Kraft, US, owner of New England Patriots & New England Revolution[2][88]
- Joe Lacob, US, owner of Golden State Warriors
- Kurt Landauer, Germany, President of Bayern Munich[122]
- Marc Lasry, Morocco, co-owner of the basketball's Milwaukee Bucks[123]
- Al Lerner, US, owner of Cleveland Browns[2]
- Randy Lerner, US, owner of Cleveland Browns & Aston Villa[124]
- Ted Lerner and family, US, owners of Washington Nationals[50]
- Daniel Levy, England, Chairman of Tottenham Hotspur[125]
- Joe Lewis, England, owner Tottenham Hotspur F.C.
- Jeffrey Loria, US, former owner of Miami Marlins[92]
- Bob Lurie, US, owner of San Francisco Giants[112]
- Jeffrey Lurie, US, owner of Philadelphia Eagles[2][88]
- Scott D. Malkin, US, co-owner of New York Islanders hockey team and [126]
- Jamie McCourt, US, President of Los Angeles Dodgers[127]
- Art Modell, US, former owner of Baltimore Ravens[2]
- Idan Ofer, Israel, co-owner of Spain's La Liga association football club Atlético Madrid, as well co-owner of Portugal's Primeira Liga association football club FC Famalicão.[128][129][130]
- Abe Pollin, US, owner of Washington Wizards, former owner of NHL's Washington Capitals & WNBA's Washington Mystics[2]
- Jaap van Praag, Dutch, President of Ajax Amsterdam 1964–78, President of Royal Dutch Football Association[12]
- Michael van Praag, Dutch, President of Ajax Amsterdam, 1989–2002[131]
- Mikhail Prokhorov, former owner, Brooklyn Nets[132]
- Bruce Ratner, US, minority owner of Brooklyn Nets[2]
- Jerry Reinsdorf, US, owner of Chicago Bulls & Chicago White Sox[2][133]
- Carroll Rosenbloom, US, former owner of Baltimore Colts & Los Angeles Rams[134]
- Chip Rosenbloom, US, owner of Los Angeles Rams[135]
- Stephen M. Ross, US, owner of Miami Dolphins[50][88]
- Henry Samueli, US, owner of Anaheim Ducks, founder of Broadcom Corporation[2]
- Abe Saperstein, UK-born US, founder & owner of Harlem Globetrotters[136]
- Irving Scholar, England, chairman Tottenham Hotspur F. C.
- Howard Schultz, US, owner of Seattle SuperSonics and Seattle Storm; founder of Starbucks[2][137]
- Bud Selig, US, former Major League Baseball Commissioner, owner of Milwaukee Brewers[2]
- Herbert Simon, US, owner of the Indiana Pacers basketball team[138]
- Ed Snider, US, owner of Philadelphia Flyers and part-owner of Philadelphia Eagles[2]
- Daniel Snyder, US, former owner of Washington Redskins[2][139]
- Donald Sterling, US, former owner of the Los Angeles Clippers[140]
- Stuart Sternberg, US, owner of Tampa Bay Rays[2]
- Alan Sugar, England, Chairman of Tottenham Hotspur[141]
- Larry Tanenbaum, Canada, owner of Toronto Maple Leafs & Toronto Raptors[2]
- Preston Robert Tisch, US, from 1991 until his death in 2005 Tisch owned 50% of New York Giants American football team[50]
- Steve Tisch, US, part-owner of the New York Giants, son of Preston Tisch[88]
- Leonard Tose, US, owner of Philadelphia Eagles[142]
- Cliff Viner, US, co-owner of Florida Panthers[143]
- Jeffrey Vinik, US, owner of Tampa Bay Lightning (NHL) and minority owner of Boston Red Sox (MLB)[144]
- Larry Weinberg, former owner, Portland Trail Blazers[145]
- Sonny Werblin, former owner, New York Jets[146]
- Zygi Wilf, German-born US, principal owner of Minnesota Vikings[147][148]
- Fred Wilpon, US, minority owner of New York Mets[2]
- Jeff Wilpon, US, minority owner and COO of New York Mets[149]
- Max Winter, US, owner of Minneapolis Lakers and former owner of Minnesota Vikings
- Lewis Wolff, US, owner of Oakland Athletics[2]
- Brett Yormark, US, President & CEO of Brooklyn Nets and Barclays Center[150]
Promoters
[edit]- Bob Arum, US, boxing promoter[151]
- Senda Berenson, Russian-born US, basketball pioneer[32]
- Mickey Duff, British boxing promoter
- Al Farb (1905–2005), US, boxing promoter of championship bouts including Floyd Patterson vs. Brian London [152][153]
- Joel Gertner, US, professional wrestling promoter [154]
- Paul Heyman, US, professional wrestling manager & promoter[155]
- Mike Jacobs, US, boxing promoter[156]
- Sam Muchnick, US, wrestling promoter[157]
- J Russell Peltz, US, boxing promoter
Sportscasters
[edit]- Kenny Albert, US, sportscaster
- Marv Albert, US, sportscaster[158]
- Mel Allen, US, sportscaster, New York Yankees play-by-play announcer[158]
- Chris Berman, US, ESPN talk show host[159]
- Len Berman, US, sportscaster[158]
- Bonnie Bernstein, US, ESPN sportscaster[158]
- Steve Bornstein, US, President & CEO of NFL Network[119]
- Steve Buckhantz, US, Washington Wizards play-by-play announcer [1]
- Steve Bunin, US, ESPN sportscaster[160]
- Craig Carton, US, WFAN morning show
- Gary Cohen,US, New York Mets telecaster
- Linda Cohn, US, ESPN anchor[158]
- Myron Cope, US, Pittsburgh Steelers radio announcer[161]
- Howard Cosell, US, sportscaster[158]
- Seth Davis, US, ESPN sportscaster[158][162]
- Ian Eagle, US, sportscaster
- Rich Eisen, US, ESPN, NFL network anchor[163]
- Josh Elliott, US, television journalist
- Howard Finkel, US, WWE Hall of Fame announcer.
- Roy Firestone, US, sportscaster[164]
- CK Friedlander, South Africa, rugby commentator[165]
- Elliotte Friedman, Canada, CBC Sports broadcaster[166]
- Jack van Gelder, Dutch sports commentator[167]
- Hank Goldberg, US, football analyst[168]
- Mauricio Goldfarb, better known as Mauro Viale, Argentina, sportscaster.[169]
- Marty Glickman, US, sprinter & broadcaster; US Olympic team, All American (football)
- Doug Gottlieb, US, ESPN NCAA basketball analyst[2]
- Mike Greenberg, US, ESPN anchor[170]
- Billy Jaffe, US, New York Islanders sportscaster[171]
- Max Kellerman, boxing broadcaster[172]
- Suzy Kolber, US, ESPN sportswriter[173]
- Tony Kornheiser, US, radio show host, tv show host, author[158]
- Andrea Kremer, US, sportscaster/ NBC sideline reporter
- Justin Kutcher, US, sportscaster
- Michael Landsberg, Canada, TSN anchor[174]
- Ken Levine, Major League Baseball announcer
- Steve Levy, US, ESPN anchor[163]
- Mitch Melnick, Canada, Montreal Expos English radio colour analyst
- Al Michaels, US, sportscaster[175]
- Johnny Most, US, Boston Celtics sportscaster[176]
- Elliott Price, Canada, Montreal Expos radio play-by-play[177]
- Karl Ravech, US, ESPN journalist[173]
- Jim Rome, US, radio, TV host[178]
- Howie Rose, US, New York Islanders, New York Mets sportscaster [179]
- Sam Rosen, US, New York Rangers on TV, NHL on OLN, NFL on Fox sportscaster[58]
- Dick Schaap, US, sportswriter & broadcaster[97]
- Jeremy Schaap, US, sports commentator & broadcaster (son of Dick Schaap)[180]
- Adam Schefter, US, sportswriter and tv analyst
- Louis O. Schwartz, US, President, American Sportscasters Association (ASA); Founder, ASA Hall of Fame; Editor, ASA Insiders Sportsletter; former President, Finger Lakes Broadcasting Corp.[181]
- Archie Shacksnovis, first man to broadcast rugby in South Africa[165]
- Dan Shulman, Canada, sportscaster ESPN: Sunday Baseball, College Basketball coverage[182]
- Ted Sobel, US, Los Angeles based sportscaster/reporter. KFWB, KNX, KMPC radio, Sports USA. Member of Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
- Charley Steiner, US, Los Angeles Dodgers radio-TV play-by-play announcer[183]
- Dick Stockton, US, TNT broadcaster[citation needed]
- Steve Stone, US, WGN-TV broadcaster[39]
- Bert Sugar, US, boxing writer[184]
- Suzyn Waldman, US, New York Yankees TV play-by-play announcer & current commentator/analyst for NY Yankees radio; first woman to hold either position on regular basis for Major League Baseball team[158]
- Lisa Winston[158]
- Warner Wolf, US, sportscaster, w/CBS 9 in Washington, D.C. & CBS 2 in New York City, now w/WABC NewsTalkRadio 77 in NYC[158]
- Lázaro Zilberman, better known as Marcelo Araujo, Argentina, sportscaster.[185]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ See, e.g.: Encyclopedia of Jewish people in Sports by Bernard Postal, Jesse Silver, Roy Silver (1965); Great Jews in Sports by Robert Slater (2003), ISBN 0-8246-0453-9; Emancipation Through Muscles: Jews and Sports in Europe by Michael Brenner, Gideon Reuveni (2006), ISBN 0-8032-1355-7; Jewish, Sports, and the Rites of Citizenship ed. Jack Kugelmass (2007), ISBN 0-252-07324-X; Ellis Island to Ebbets Field: Sport and the American Jewish Experience by Peter Levine (1993) ISBN 0-19-508555-8; Judaism's Encounter with American Sports by Jeffrey S. Gurock (2005) ISBN 0-253-34700-9.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Day by day in Jewish Sports History. KTAV Publishing House. 2008. ISBN 9781602800137. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
- ^ "x". Jewish Sports Foundation. Archived from the original on March 8, 2012. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
- ^ "Al Davis, Class of 1992". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on October 30, 2023. Retrieved November 21, 2023.
- ^ "Silver & Black & Jewish: An attempt to recap Al Davis' life as a Jew". J. The Jewish News of Northern California. October 14, 2011. Archived from the original on January 26, 2023. Retrieved November 21, 2023.
- ^ "Piranha Football--Call Them the Lord's Players". Los Angeles Times. August 10, 1996.
- ^ "Abe J. Greene".
- ^ "Historical View". Jewishsports.net. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
- ^ Hershfield, Leible (1980). The Jewish athlete: a nostalgic view. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
- ^ Margo, Jill (20 July 2015). Frank Lowy: A Second Life. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780730497356.
- ^ Norwood, Stephen Stephen Harlan; Pollack, Eunice G (2008). Encyclopedia of American Jewish history. Vol. 1. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781851096381. Retrieved July 1, 2010.
- ^ a b Flynn, Tom (2007). The new encyclopedia of unbelief. Prometheus Books. ISBN 9781591023913. Retrieved July 1, 2010.
- ^ "jewishsports.com - Informationen zum Thema jewishsports". www.jewishsports.com.
- ^ CONCACAF's chart Archived December 18, 2007, at the Wayback Machine of organization hierarchy
- ^ Michalski, Henry; Mendelsohn, Donna (2012). Napa Valley's Jewish Heritage. Arcadia. ISBN 9780738588988.
- ^ Jewish currents. 1999. Retrieved July 1, 2010.
- ^ Argentine Olympic Committee - MESA DIRECTIVA
- ^ International Olympic Committee - Members
- ^ Leopoldo Bard, entre Hipólito Yrigoyen y River Plate.
- ^ "Theo Epstein vs. Mike Chernoff: The Jewish minds behind the Cubs and the Indians". October 26, 2016.
- ^ The Jews of Boston. Yale University Press. 2005. ISBN 9780300107876. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
- ^ Porter, David L. (1995). Biographical Dictionary of American Sports: 1992-1995 supplement for baseball, football, basketball, and other sports. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9780313284311.
- ^ http://njjewishnews.com/kaplanskorner/2008/11/18/its-not-just-the-players/ [dead link ]
- ^ Acocella, Nick. "The first "Hammerin' Hank"". ESPN Classic. Retrieved May 4, 2024.
- ^ "Jed Hoyer '96 Named Chicago Cubs Executive VP and General Manager, Athletics – Wesleyan University". wesleyan.edu. Retrieved September 6, 2014.
- ^ Castle, George (2006). Baseball and the media: how fans lose in today's coverage of the game. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803264694. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
- ^ Honoree Details: Marvin Miller[usurped]. The National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame and Museum official website. Retrieved September 13, 2011.
- ^ "Jewish Sports Hall of Fame". Jewishsports.org. Archived from the original on February 13, 2007. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Obituary, Jewish Chronicle, January 19, 2007 p.45
- ^ a b c d "Jews in Basketball (International)". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2021-03-05.
- ^ a b c d Jewish Baseball Players, Baseball Almanac. Retrieved May 20, 2010
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Jewish sports legends: the International Jewish Hall of Fame. Brassey's. 2005. ISBN 9781574882841. Retrieved May 24, 2010.
- ^ a b "National A Team - Team Staff". Israel Football Association. 2022-09-15.
- ^ a b "מיגל ויטור: "גאווה גדולה לייצג את ישראל" - ספורט 5". Sport 5. 2022-05-26.
- ^ "Morris "Whitey" Bimstein". Jewishsports.net. July 13, 1969. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
- ^ "David Blatt Accepts Cavs Job". ESPN. 20 June 2014. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
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Books
[edit]- Jews and Baseball: The Post-Greenberg Years, 1949–2008, Burton Alan Boxerman, Benita W. Boxerman, McFarland, 2010, ISBN 978-0-7864-2828-1
- The Baseball Talmud: The Definitive Position-by-Position Ranking of Baseball's Chosen Players, Howard Megdal, Collins, 2009, ISBN 978-0-06-155843-6
- Jews and the Sporting Life, Vol. 23 of Studies in Contemporary Jewry, Ezra Mendelsohn, Oxford University Press US, 2009, ISBN 978-0-19-538291-4
- Day by Day in Jewish Sports History, Bob Wechsler, KTAV Publishing House, 2008, ISBN 978-1-60280-013-7
- The Big Book of Jewish Athletes: Two Centuries of Jews in Sports – a Visual History, Peter S. Horvitz, Joachim Horvitz, S P I Books, 2007, ISBN 978-1-56171-927-3
- The Big Book of Jewish Sports Heroes: An Illustrated Compendium of Sports History and The 150 Greatest Jewish Sports Stars, Peter S. Horvitz, SP Books, 2007, ISBN 978-1-56171-907-5
- Jews, Sports, and the Rites of Citizenship, Jack Kugelmass, University of Illinois Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-252-07324-3
- The New Big Book of Jewish Baseball: An Illustrated Encyclopedia & Anecdotal History, Peter S. Horvitz, Joachim Horvitz, Perseus Distribution Services, 2007, ISBN 978-1-56171-821-4
- Emancipation through Muscles: Jews and Sports in Europe, Michael Brenner, Gideon Reuveni, translated by Brenner, Reuveni, U of Nebraska Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0-8032-1355-5
- Judaism's Encounter with American Sports, Jeffrey S. Gurock, Indiana University Press, 2005, ISBN 978-0-253-34700-8
- Great Jews in Sports, Robert Slater, Jonathan David Publishers, 2004, ISBN 978-0-8246-0453-0
- Jews and the Olympic Games: The Clash between Sport and Politics: with a complete review of Jewish Olympic medallists, Paul Taylor, Sussex Academic Press, 2004, ISBN 978-1-903900-88-8
- The Big Book of Jewish Baseball: An Illustrated Encyclopedia & Anecdotal History, Peter S. Horvitz, Joachim Horvitz, SP Books, 2001, ISBN 978-1-56171-973-0
- Jewish Sports Legends: the International Jewish Hall of Fame, 3rd Ed, Joseph Siegman, Brassey's, 2000, ISBN 978-1-57488-284-1
- Sports and the American Jew, Steven A. Riess, Syracuse University Press, 1998, ISBN 978-0-8156-2754-8
- When Boxing was a Jewish Sport, Allen Bodner, Praeger, 1997, ISBN 978-0-275-95353-9
- Ellis Island to Ebbets Field: Sport and the American Jewish Experience, Peter Levine, Oxford University Press US, 1993, ISBN 978-0-19-508555-6
- The Jewish Child's Book of Sports Heroes, Robert Slater, Jonathan David Publishers, 1993, ISBN 978-0-8246-0360-1
- The International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, Joseph M. Siegman, SP Books, 1992, ISBN 978-1-56171-028-7
- The Jewish Athletes Hall of Fame, B. P. Robert Stephen Silverman, Shapolsky Publishers, 1989, ISBN 978-0-944007-04-4
- The Jewish Boxers Hall of Fame, Ken Blady, SP Books, 1988, ISBN 978-0-933503-87-8
- The Jewish Baseball Hall of Fame: a Who's Who of Baseball Stars, Erwin Lynn, Shapolsky Publishers, 1986, ISBN 978-0-933503-17-5
- From the Ghetto to the Games: Jewish Athletes in Hungary, Andrew Handler, East European Monographs, 1985, ISBN 978-0-88033-085-5
- The Jew in American Sports, Harold Uriel Ribalow, Meir Z. Ribalow, Edition 4, Hippocrene Books, 1985, ISBN 978-0-88254-995-8
- Jewish Baseball Stars, Harold Uriel Ribalow, Meir Z. Ribalow, Hippocrene Books, 1984, ISBN 978-0-88254-898-2
- The Jewish Athlete: A Nostalgic View, Leible Hershfield, s.n., 1980
- Encyclopedia of Jews in Sports, Bernard Postal, Jesse Silver, Roy Silver, Bloch Pub. Co., 1965