Dan Rafael
Dan Rafael (/ˈreɪfiəl/ RAY-fee-əl; born August 25, 1970) is an American sportswriter known for his coverage of boxing and baseball.[1]
Dan Rafael | |
---|---|
Born | |
Education | Binghamton University |
Occupation(s) | Online and television journalist for ESPN.com |
Notable credit(s) | ESPN.com senior boxing writer (2005–2020), USA Today staff writer (2000–2005), Press & Sun-Bulletin staff writer (1996–2000), The Saratogian staff writer (1993–1996) |
Early life and education
Rafael was born in Albany, New York. He attended Binghamton University, where he wrote for the school paper. He started as sports writer, and worked his way to managing editor. He also served an internship at the local newspaper, the Press & Sun-Bulletin.
Career
Baseball
Rafael later took a part-time job at The Saratogian, a community newspaper published at Saratoga Springs, New York. When a full-time job opened at the newspaper, he took it, then moved to a reporting position at the Press & Sun-Bulletin, covering college sports and local auto-racing. He later was assigned to cover the Binghamton Mets,.
Gannett (which owned the Binghamton newspaper) fostered promising writers by detailing them to Virginia for four months and thoroughly grounding them in the newspaper business, working at USA Today. Rafael began his course in August 1998. He worked covering major-league baseball. When baseball season ended, the newspaper's principal boxing reporter (Jon Saraceno) was moving up, so Rafael was asked to cover boxing.
Rafael's temporary duty at USA Today ended in December 1998, and he returned to Binghamton.
Boxing
In January 2000, he was asked to return to USA Today on a permanent basis, as a boxing writer.
ESPN Boxing
In September 2004, ESPN began pursuing Rafael, desiring to strengthen its boxing coverage. He began with ESPN.com in March 2005. He writes in-depth coverage pieces, and his specialty is his weekly compilation of rankings.[2]
In January 2016, ESPN announced Rafael had been signed to a new multi-year agreement.[3]
End of Dan Rafael career in ESPN
Dan Rafael tried to omit Ali Raymi name from the ESPN broadcast of the Edgar Berlanga vs Eric Moon fight, as a consequence his long boxing career ended on that note. [4]
Awards and recognition
- In 2013 Rafael was awarded the Nat Fleischer Award for Excellence in Boxing Journalism from the Boxing Writers Association of America.[7]
- Dead Spin's Iron Mike Gallego recognized Dan Rafael as "The Most Important Journalist in Boxing".[8]
References
- Schott, Ken. "Clifton Park native Dan Rafael makes living covering boxing for ESPN". Archived from the original on May 3, 2015. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
- Hauser, Thomas. Dan Rafael, SecondsOut.com. Accessed February 22, 2017
- Dwornik, Ardi (January 26, 2016). "Boxing Writer Dan Rafael to Remain at ESPN with New Multi-Year Agreement". ESPN Media Zone. Retrieved April 3, 2017.
- https://www.ringtv.com/597586-ex-espn-content-provider-dan-rafael-shares-on-his-exit-talks-about-what-comes-next-for-him/
- WBN, World Boxing News (May 11, 2021). "Award-winning boxing writer Dan Rafael joins World Boxing News". World Boxing News. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
- "Dan Rafael".
- Quinn, Dan. "ESPN.com's Dan Rafael honored for career excellence in boxing journalism". ESPN Front Row. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
- Gallego, Mike. How ESPN's Dan Rafael Became The Most Important Journalist in Boxing (A Cautionary Tale) DeadSpin.com (August 12, 2012)