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Woody Paige

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Woody Paige
Born (1946-06-27) June 27, 1946 (age 77)
OccupationSports columnist
The Denver Post

Woodrow Wilson "Woody" Paige, Jr. (born June 27, 1946) is a sports columnist for The Denver Post, author,[1] and a regular panelist on the ESPN sports-talk program Around the Horn. He was also a co-host of Cold Pizza and its spin-off show 1st and 10 until Nov. 4, 2006, when it was announced that Paige would return to the Post.[2] Paige is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Selection Committee and is a Baseball Hall of Fame voter.

Schooling and early career

Paige attended the University of Tennessee and joined Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity in 1964. After leaving UT, he began his career with the Whitehaven Press in 1963, and went on to write for the Knoxville Journal, The Commercial Appeal of Memphis, and the Rocky Mountain News of Denver.

Denver Post

Paige joined the Denver Post in 1981. As of 2007, he writes four columns per week.

In 2001 there was a controversy over one of Paige's articles. He reported that an employee at Invesco, which had the naming rights to the Denver Broncos stadium, Invesco Field at Mile High, claimed that the nickname for the stadium inside the company was "The Diaphragm," after its shape (which slightly resembles a contraceptive device with the same name). The CEO of the company threatened Paige and the Post with legal action over the allegations, but had to retract the lawsuit when it was discovered that the story was true.[3]

After the suicide of Denver Broncos wide receiver Kenny McKinley in 2010, Paige wrote a column in the Post where he detailed his attempt to take his own life in 2002, and the intervention that prevented it.[4]

In 2011 Paige was caught plagairizing the work of Sports Business Journal writer John Ourand in a Denver Post column about the book ESPN: The Uncensored History. The Denver Post issued a correction without any admission of misdeed or public consequence to the plagiarist. ESPN failed to acknowledge the lifting of material ever happened.[citation needed]

Around The Horn

As a panelist on Around The Horn, Paige is well-known for his goofy opening jokes, including a blackboard behind him on which he writes intentionally silly comments. He had a bantering relationship and friendly rivalry with Jay Mariotti. The two have appeared in and "won" the most episodes of Around The Horn (in which host Tony Reali subjectively awards or deducts points for the commentaries that strike him as the most intelligent or appealing). Paige has won the most consecutive shows (five) as well as 346 wins as of October 18, 2010, and 377 wins as of June 28, 2011. For April Fool's Day 2009, the show began with Paige pretending to subdue Reali with fake chloroform and taking over as host as the show, with Reali taking his place as a panelist. He proceeded to award and deduct points erratically, and at the end of the first cut announced that the panelist with the most points would be cut. The showdown ended up being with Reali and Mariotti, and Woody surprisingly awarding the win to Mariotti after the two ended with -3 points in the showdown. However, Woody quickly muted Mariotti's "face time" speech and proceeded to talk himself.

On September 8, 2009, Paige won his 300th show, becoming the first panelist to reach 300 victories.

For Halloween 2009, Paige dressed as the Wicked Witch of the West, and won the show. After his "face time," he slouched out of his chair (and out of view of the camera) while announcing that he was "melting!"

Early in 2010, Woody said that he would not shave until he won a game.

Cold Pizza

In July 2004, Paige announced that he was taking a one-year leave from the Post to join ESPN2's then-debuting Cold Pizza (originally conceptualized as a daytime-TV "morning show"-style program that was only loosely grounded in sports, intended to attract female viewers alienated by SportsCenter's heavy sports- and "guy"-centered focus). On the show, he was featured in the 1st and 10 segment, where he lightheartedly debated sports writer Skip Bayless on ten sports-related topics. Paige continued to contribute to Around the Horn during this time, and debuted his blackboard gags while he was in New York.

In his farewell appearance on Cold Pizza, which aired November 28, 2006, Paige cited declining health in his family as a reason for leaving the show, and New York City, to return to Denver.[5]

Sexual harassment allegations

On June 28, 2007, it was reported that a former makeup artist for Cold Pizza was suing ESPN, alleging incidents of sexual harassment against host Jay Crawford, and Paige. Both Crawford and Paige have denied these allegations.[6]

In August 2008 the case was dismissed.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Search results (matching titles)". http://www.bookfinder.com. Retrieved 2007-03-11. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ Leitch, Will. "Woody Paige Refutes His Own Refutation". Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  3. ^ Westergaard, Neil (2002-03-01). "Greedy, Stupid, and Blind". Denver Business Journal. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
  4. ^ Paige, Woody (2010-09-23). "We must learn from McKinley's Death". Denver Post. Retrieved 2010-09-23.
  5. ^ Paige returned to First Take On May 13, 2009 Video of Paige's Cold Pizza farewell. Accessed December 5, 2006.
  6. ^ Caruso, David B. (2007-06-28). "Makeup artist sues ESPN, claiming she was sexually harassed". USA Today. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
  7. ^ Zambito, Thomas (2008-08-29). "ESPN stars Jay Crawford, Woody Paige off hook in sex-harass suit". New York: NY Daily News. Retrieved 2009-04-04.

External links

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