The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) announced Monday that
Jeannine Edwards, senior broadcast analyst for ESPN, will host the 41st annual
Eclipse Awards presented by Daily Racing Form and Breeders’ Cup Ltd. The
Eclipse Awards, which honors the 2011 champions of Thoroughbred racing, will be
held at the Beverly Wilshire (A Four Seasons Hotel) in Beverly Hills,
California, on January 16, 2012. Edwards becomes the first female to host the
Eclipse Awards ceremony.
“I’m extremely proud, flattered and honored to be hosting the Eclipse Awards
— racing’s Oscars,” said Edwards, who resides outside of Baltimore in Colora,
Maryland. “I want to thank the NTRA for this extraordinary opportunity. Ever
since I was a little girl, I’ve been in love with horses and racing. For me, the
Eclipse Awards would come along every year and be the anxiously-awaited,
crowning moment of a season’s worth of indelible achievements. With so many
divisions up in the air, I’m just as eager as everyone else to see who will be
taking home the hardware. It humbles me to think I will be a part of this year’s
‘crowning moment.'”
Edwards has been consistently named as one of the top 10 female sportscasters
by several media outlets, including Sports Illustrated, which also named
her “Best Broadcaster in Horse Racing” in 2004 and #1 Broadcaster on Television
for October 2007.
“Jeannine is not just a talented on-air personality, but also one of the most
universally admired and respected people associated with the Thoroughbred
industry,” NTRA President and CEO Alex Waldrop said. “We are delighted to have
her as the host of the upcoming Eclipse Awards.”
In 2009, Jeannine’s broadcast team won an Eclipse Award for Outstanding Live
Telecast for the Belmont Stakes on ABC, as well as an Emmy nomination for the
Breeders’ Cup on ESPN. That same team again won the Eclipse Award in 2010 for
the Breeders’ Cup on ESPN, as well as a 2010 Emmy nomination for the same event.
A native of Tenafly, New Jersey, Edwards spent 10 years on the racetrack as
an exercise rider, apprentice jockey, and trainer in New York and New Jersey
before initially getting into television in 1994 as an in-house TV host at
racetracks in Maryland.
Edwards started on ESPN as a studio analyst for “National Best 7” in 1995.
The show was transformed into “2Day at the Races” and ran for five years. During
that time, Edwards also began reporting on-site for remote racing telecasts as
well as branching out into sideline reporting for college football and, later,
college basketball. Edwards became a general assignment reporter shortly
thereafter on ESPN’s SportsCenter.
Among the news stories covered by Edwards for SportsCenter are the steroid
scandal of Rafael Palmeiro, the death of Sean Taylor, the sentencing of Gilbert
Arenas, the indictment of Jamal Lewis, the return to football of Deion Sanders,
and the retirements of Joe Gibbs and Shaquille O’Neal. Edwards was also
recognized for her outstanding reporting for ESPN, ABC News and “Good Morning
America” on the injury and subsequent death of Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro.
Tickets for the Eclipse Awards are available for $400 each or $4,000 for a
table of 10. For ticket purchases and room reservations, please contact Michele
Ravencraft of the NTRA at
mravencraft@ntra.com, or call (859) 422-2657. Order forms for tickets are
available at
www.ntra.com/eclipsetickets.
The Eclipse Awards are named after the great 18th-century racehorse and
foundation sire Eclipse, who began racing at age five and was undefeated in 18
starts, including eight walkovers. Eclipse sired the winners of 344 races,
including three Epsom Derbies.