John Canzano

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John Canzano
John Canzano.png
John Canzano in 2010
Show The Bald-Faced Truth
Station(s) 750AM Portland, Oregon
Time slot 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. PST
Station(s) KGW-TV, Portland, Oregon
Time slot No set timeslot
Style Sports radio
Country United States
Spouse(s) Anna Canzano
Website Canzano's website

John Canzano is an American sports columnist, radio talk show host on Portland's 750 AM "The Game" and sports columnist at The Oregonian newspaper in Portland, Oregon. He is also a sports commentator on KGW-TV, Portland's NBC affiliate. He hosts a daily radio show called The Bald-Faced Truth.

Early life and education

Canzano graduated from California State University, Chico, in 1995 with a B.A. in English.[1]

Career

In his career,[2] Canzano has worked at six daily newspapers including The San Jose Mercury News and The Fresno Bee. He covered University of Notre Dame football and Indiana University basketball as the beat writer during the tenure of coach Bob Knight. He is a former national Major League Baseball writer and national NFL writer at the San Jose Mercury News as well. He has also covered five Olympics Games.

Canzano began writing for The Oregonian in 2002.[3] He currently serves as the paper's lead sports columnist. He appears on KGW-TV, where he offers commentary and analysis on sports. Canzano also hosts a daily mid-day radio show called "The Bald-Faced Truth" on Portland's 750 AM "The Game".

He is a 10-year member of the Baseball Writers Association of America and holds a Baseball Hall of Fame Vote, is a voter for the Heisman Trophy, and has made TV appearances on FOX Sports Live, ESPN2, ESPN News and ESPN's SportsCenter. Canzano's work has also appeared in GQ magazine and The Sporting News, among other publications.

Awards and honors

Canzano has won seven combined Associated Press Sports Editors (APSE) awards in column writing and investigative reporting in his career. In 2010, the Society of Professional Journalists named Canzano the National Sports Columnist of the Year for his work the prior year.[4] In 2009, Canzano was voted America's No. 1 sports columnist by the APSE, for 2008.[5][6] In 2007 and 2008, the Associated Press named Canzano the nation's No. 2 sports columnist among large-circulation newspapers, with Canzano finishing second to the Los Angeles Times’ Bill Plaschke both times.[7] Canzano was recognized by The Press Club of Atlantic City as national sportswriter of the year in 2004, 2010 and 2014.[8][9]

Canzano's investigative work and reporting about Brenda Tracy, the survivor of an alleged gang raped by four college football players, was recognized as the best sports writing in 2014 with a first place in the National Headliner Awards.[10]

In 2013, Canzano won first place in Special Topic Column Writing in the Best of the West contest for his portfolio of columns that included a column on a soldier who died in action in Afghanistan and Canzano's own experience coaching a girls fourth-grade volleyball team with a player who has Down Syndrome.[11]

In 2002, Canzano was named the nation's top investigative sports writer by the Associated Press News Executives Council[12] for his enterprise piece on Carlos Rodriguez,[13] a 21-year-old Dominican basketball star who was masquerading as a 17-year-old high school basketball player.

Canzano is a five-time Oregon Sportswriter of the Year winner.

On July 7, 2007, the Portland Beavers' Triple-A baseball team held "John Canzano Bobblehead Night."[14] Also, on Aug. 29, 2009, the LPGA Safeway Classic featured "John Canzano Bobblehead Day," as part of the tour event held at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Oregon.[15]

Personal life

In July 2010, Canzano married Anna Song, weekend anchor for Portland television station KATU.[16]

The Bald Faced Truth Foundation

In 2009, Canzano co-founded The Bald Faced Truth Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization funding extracurricular activities for children.[17]

References

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  2. Oregonlive.com, Canzano biography
  3. "Writer from San Jose to join The Oregonian" (November 16, 2002). The Oregonian, p. D2.
  4. "The Oregonian," May 3, 2010
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  6. The Detroit Free Press, April 2, 2009, p. B2
  7. "The Associated Press," April 1, 2008
  8. The Oregonian April 14, 2015
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  12. The Fresno Bee, June 30, 2002, p. B1
  13. The Fresno Bee, June 3, 2001, p. A1
  14. The Oregonian, July 3, 2007, p. B2
  15. The Oregonian, Aug. 28, 2009, p. B2
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External links