About Bill

The Father of Cable Sports
— USA Today - September 1994

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Get all the updates in Bill’s new book: ESPN: One Giant Leap for Fankind

A life-long entrepreneur and sports fan, Bill  Rasmussen’s innovations in advertising, sports and broadcasting are too numerous to list, but they include the creation of ESPN, the world’s first 24-hour, 7-days-a-week sports television network; the network’s signature program SportsCenter; wall-to-wall coverage of NCAA men’s and women’s regular-season and tournament college basketball coverage; and coverage of the College World Series.

A United States Air Force veteran,  Rasmussen  received his bachelor’s degree in Economics from DePauw University and his MBA from Rutgers University.

Read more about his one-of-a-kind story in “Sports Junkies Rejoice! The Birth of ESPN.

RASMUSSEN TODAY 

Bill Rasmussen  continues to be a popular guest on the speaking circuit, with engagements at Inc. Magazine; The January Series at Calvin College;  Princeton University; The Maverick Series at University of Texas-Arlington; the University of Florida; Oklahoma; Minnesota; Build Magazine; and The Center for Sports Leadership at Virginia Commonwealth University.  

Rasmussen  delivered the keynote address at the Entrepreneurship Center at the CEO Forum at the University of Saint Francis in Fort Wayne, Ind. He spoke at the  Maastricht Institute of Entrepreneurship, which is held on the campus of Missouri Valley College. He is a frequent guest on radio, television and the pitcher’s mound.

He is now bringing awareness to Parkinson's Disease, encouraging people who live with it, and seeking a cure for it. Read more about Rasmussen’s experience with Parkinson’s on ESPN Front Row.  

LIFE BEFORE ESPN 

Born and raised on the South Side of Chicago, Rasmussen was most talented in baseball, but followed all sports with interest. Rasmussen went to DePauw University (Greencastle, Ind.) and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in Economics in 1954.

He then served in the United States Air Force before beginning his professional career working for Westinghouse’s lamp division (Bloomfield, N.J.) in sales and marketing.

After earning his MBA from Rutgers University (1960), Rasmussen had the idea for his first entrepreneurial startup, an advertising services business based in Newark, N.J. - Westinghouse was his first customer. That business thrives six decades later.

But Rasmussen walked away from that business to pursue his dream to become a sports broadcaster. In 1962, WTTT-AM Radio in Amherst, Mass., hired Rasmussen. While there, he created the first-ever radio network for University of Massachusetts football and basketball games.

Three years later, Rasmussen joined WWLP-TV (NBC) in Springfield, Mass., where he spent eight years on the air as the sports director and two years as its news director.

After an earlier successful entrepreneurial venture in the advertising business, Rasmussen’s career in the media began in 1963 at WTTT radio in Amherst, Mass. In 1965, he moved to WWLP-TV, Springfield, Mass., where he spent eight years as sports director and two years as news director and evening news anchor. During these years, he handled numerous football, basketball, baseball and hockey play-by-play assignments on both radio and television. 

In 1974, he left Springfield to join hockey’s New England Whalers as communications director. At the conclusion of the 1977-78 World Hockey Association season, Rasmussen was fired (along with the entire front office) by the Whalers.   Thus began the pursuit of the ESPN dream, incorporating the fledgling network on July 14, 1978. Fourteen months later, at 7 p.m. on September 7, 1979, Rasmussen’s dream, ESPN, became reality. 

Creating ESPN 

Thus began the pursuit of the ESPN dream, an idea born during a conversation with his son Scott during a traffic jam on Interstate 84 that summer.

The following year, they embarked on a whirlwind effort to accomplish the impossible - armed with a $9,000 credit card advance and just enough cable TV knowledge to be dangerous.

In about 14 months, the Rasmussens acquired satellite time and technology; negotiated programming rights with the NCAA and advertising deals with corporate giants like Anheuser-Busch; secured interim and long term financing; assembled a staff and constructed production facilities in time for the Sept. 7, 1979 launch in Bristol, Conn.

First words spoken on ESPN - September 7, 1979 at 7 pm.

In their wildest dreams, the Rasmussens could not have guessed the magnitude of the idea, the impact it would have on sports broadcasting, or the global acceptance that is has achieved today.

How did they get there? Buy Bill's book "Sports Junkies Rejoice: The Birth Of ESPN" for all the details!

LIFE AFTER ESPN 

Rasmussen has served as a consultant to the Big Ten Conference, and several of the conference’s individual member institutions, on television matters. He has also been a consultant with numerous other startup media and internet companies.   His Internet ventures include serving as Chairman of the Attitude Network, home of the highly successful Happy Puppy and Games Domain sites, as Chairman of SportsatHome, a sports-themed game site that offered an array of virtual sports stadiums and games to play online within each of the stadiums, and founder and CEO of College Fanz Sports Network, the world’s largest online college sports social network. 

Rasmussen has been active in numerous charity events, including nine years with the highly acclaimed Winged Foot Scholarship Program, and five years with a Senior PGA Tour event. He continues to be involved in celebrity charity golf events throughout the country. 

RECOGNITION 

His place in sports history was recognized by  Sports Illustrated  in 1994, when he was honored as one of the “Forty for the Ages,” one of forty individuals who has significantly altered and elevated the world of sport during the second half of the 20th century. He has been called “The Father of Cable Sports” by  USA Today

For his many accomplishments,  Rasmussen  was named a Champion: one of the  Pioneers and Innovators in Sports Business  by the  Sports Business Journal  and  Sports Business Daily  in 2011. He was cited in  The Sports 100, honoring the 100 most important people in American sports history.


 Notable Honors

2022 - Independent Author of the Year by the New England Book Festival

2019 - 100 people who grew the NFL’s business

2019 - Gold Key Award recipient at the  Connecticut Sports Writers’ Alliance  

2016 - Induction into the  Cynopsis Sports Hall of Fame, from  Enfield, there is always  more to the story 

2012 - DePauw University - Media Wall of Fame

2011 - Champion: one of the  “Pioneers and Innovators in Sports Business”  by the  Sports Business Journal  and  Sports Business Daily, honoring executives who have spent a lifetime devoted to the sports industry

2009 - Keynote speaker at the  Centennial Celebration  of  Lambda Chi Alpha - Notable - Business

2004 - Jim Thorpe Association - Bill Conners Communications Award

2002 - The  Wall of Distinguished Business Alumni  - Rutgers University

2001 - The Order of Achievement from Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity

1999 - Induction into the  Enfield, CT Athletic Hall of Fame

1997 - Induction into the Connecticut Sports Museum and Hall of Fame

1996 -  The Sports 100  - The  One Hundred  Most Important People in American Sports History (# 57)

1994 - Sports Illustrated  September 19 - “Forty for the Ages” (# 29 on page 120

 

More About Bill

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Sports Junkies Rejoice! - The Birth of ESPN is the fast paced, first person story of that incredible year of birth. You’ll be fascinated by this behind the scenes look at the people, the plans, the emotions and events that led to the launch of the world’s first around-the-clock all-sports network.

If you pride yourself on knowing everything there is to know about ESPN, you’ll need to own this book to cover all the bases. Do you know about the $9,000 credit card advance, the first advertiser on ESPN, or the cost of ESPN’s first transponder? Or how about - why Bristol? All that and more about the early days of the E.S.P. Network ... the very early days in Sports Junkies Rejoice! - The Birth of ESPN!