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==Early life and career==
==Early life and career==
She used to work for [[MSG Network]] as an anchor and reporter as well as covering [[PGA Tour on ESPN|golf]], [[College Football on ESPN|college football]] and [[Arena Football]] for [[ESPN]] from 2002-2003. Her on-air career began at WZBN in [[Trenton, New Jersey]] as a sports anchor. She also appeared as a reporter for Long Island News Tonight (LI News Tonight) a local Long Island college run news station.
She used to work for [[MSG Network]] as an anchor and reporter as well as covering [[golf]], [[College Football on ESPN|college football]] and [[Arena Football]] for [[ESPN]] from 2002-2003. Her on-air career began at WZBN in [[Trenton, New Jersey]] as a sports anchor. She also appeared as a reporter for Long Island News Tonight (LI News Tonight) a local Long Island college run news station.


==Career at CBS Sports==
==Career at CBS Sports==

Revision as of 03:13, 3 April 2009

Tracy Wolfson, is an American sportscaster who is a University of Michigan graduate with a degree in communications, is a sportscaster for CBS Sports.

Early life and career

She used to work for MSG Network as an anchor and reporter as well as covering golf, college football and Arena Football for ESPN from 2002-2003. Her on-air career began at WZBN in Trenton, New Jersey as a sports anchor. She also appeared as a reporter for Long Island News Tonight (LI News Tonight) a local Long Island college run news station.

Career at CBS Sports

She has been the lead college football sideline reporter since 2004[1]. She is considered to be part of one of the best college football broadcast teams in the country.[2] Additionally, she is an anchor on the CBS Sportsdesk as well a reporter for college basketball, auto racing, skiing, ice skating, gymnastics, tennis, track and field and rodeo.[3] She covered all the U.S. Opens and the Final Four since 2004.

Accolades

In 2005, she was asked to be a part of Mississippi State University's College Sports Speaker series [4] and has been a spokeswoman and emcee for several Foundation for Diabetes Research events since 2005.[5] In 2004 she was named one of the "Best New Faces" of the NCAA tournament in the USA TODAY.[6]

Personal

She currently resides in New York with her husband.

References