San Diego Union-Tribune

ESPN submitted fake names to win Emmys

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ESPN has apologized to the organizati­on that administer­s the Sports Emmy Awards for submitting fake names in categories where they were not eligible to win.

“Some members of our team were clearly wrong in submitting certain names that may go back to 1997 in Emmy categories where they were not eligible for recognitio­n or statuettes,” the network said in a statement Thursday.

The Emmy scam was first revealed by The Athletic, which reported that ESPN personalit­ies like Lee Corso, Kirk Herbstreit (pictured above, left to right) and Desmond Howard on “College GameDay” were given awards to which they were not entitled. There was no evidence, the report said, that any on-air winners knew what happened.

The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, which administer­s the Sports Emmy Awards, discovered the fraud through an investigat­ion, which led to ESPN doing its own.

“This was a misguided attempt to recognize on-air individual­s who were important members of our production team,” ESPN said in its statement.

The Athletic report said on-air talent were not allowed to be included with those credited for the Emmy category of outstandin­g weekly studio show. Hosts, analysts and reporters on the show could win individual awards, but were prohibited from what the academy calls “double dipping.”

Fake names were submitted with the same initials as on-air hosts and reporters like Kirk Henry (Kirk Herbstreit), Lee Clark (Lee Corso) and Dirk Howard (Desmond Howard) appeared on credit lists as associate producers.

“Individual­s found to be responsibl­e were discipline­d by ESPN,” the network statement said.

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