Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
Awarded for | "Commitment to excellence, quality of broadcasting abilities, reverence within the game, popularity with fans, and recognition by peers." |
Location | Cooperstown, New York |
Presented by | National Baseball Hall of Fame |
History | |
First award | 1978 |
First winner | Mel Allen |
Most recent | Tom Hamilton (2025) |
Website | Official website |
The Ford C. Frick Award is presented annually by the Baseball Hall of Fame in the United States to a broadcaster for "major contributions to baseball".[a] It is named for Ford C. Frick, former commissioner of baseball. Prior to his career as an executive, Frick was a baseball writer and occasional broadcaster; he gained fame as a ghostwriter for Babe Ruth in the 1920s. The award was created in 1978, and named in tribute to Frick following his death that year.
Recipients of the award are not members of the Hall of Fame—they are not "inducted" or "enshrined", they are not "Hall of Fame broadcasters", and there is no "broadcasters' wing" of the Hall of Fame—they are officially "honorees."[3] The award is given at a separate ceremony from the induction ceremony on Hall of Fame weekend.[4] As with recipients of the BBWAA Career Excellence Award for baseball writing, the honorees are permanently recognized in a "Scribes & Mikemen" exhibit in the Hall's library.[5]
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