Mike Soltys

Vice President, Communicationsespnmikes

While a senior at UConn in 1980, founder Bill Rasmussen and pioneering executive Rosa Gatti hired me as ESPN’s first college intern and I never could imagine a reason to leave. Gee, how the place has grown. Today I’m VP, U.S. Network Communications working with an outstanding group of folks who handle publicity and media relations for ESPN’s networks in the USA. Since that doesn’t keep me busy enough, I work on ESPN on ABC too. Follow it all at: twitter.com/espnmikes
A native New Englander, the teams my family and I cheer for are the Huskies and Sox. Involvement in the community is an important part of life’s journey. Here’s a plug for two of my favorite orgs I help out: http://www.southingtonbreadforlife.com/ & http://www.imaginenation.org/

Recent Posts

posted by on June 19, 2013 8:00 AM

Dearth of cicadas on ESPN campus prompts questions, theories and disappointment

Bug from Disney movie that i can't remember name of.. will look up

Flik, who is not a cicada, from Disney’s “A Bug’s Life”

Cicadas aren’t sports fans.

It is the only reasonable explanation as to why, after 17 years underground, billions of bugs visited suburban Bristol, Conn. but none were spotted on our ESPN campus (despite multiple searches from several of our best amateur entomologists). continue reading…

posted by on May 6, 2013 9:17 AM

Tweetback: Sundays with Hiestand come to end; NBA Playoffs roll on; ESPN’s Tedy Bruschi at Kentucky Derby

The author has had over 500 Sunday conversations with USA Today's departing media writer, Michael Hiestand.

The author has had over 500 Sunday conversations with USA Today’s departing media writer, Michael Hiestand. This was one of Hiestand’s earliest columns from 1992.

My conversation yesterday with Michael Hiestand, the TV sports reporter for USA Today, started with Tuesday’s Sports Emmys and ended with where his twins decided to go to college (North Carolina and Virginia). It was similar to the 500-plus Sunday afternoon chats I’ve had with the quirky reporter since 1990, but may be the last as Hiestand has accepted a buy-out from the “Nation’s Newspaper” and looks for his next assignment.

USA Today Sports has had a reserved spot in the psyche of the sports media industry since the full-color paper debuted in 1982. More space is devoted to covering sports media in USA Today than any other newspaper, and its ubiquity in hotels and airports have furthered its place in the travel-heavy sports world. continue reading…

posted by on February 9, 2013 9:17 AM

ESPN’s Saturday “Nemo Cam” update

New England was blitzed overnight with a storm that dumped two feet of snow on ESPN’s Bristol campus. Through a dedicated staff and careful preparation, the network’s non-stop blizzard of sports didn’t miss a beat.

Before us “non essential” employees headed home mid-day Friday, ESPN photographer Rich Arden set up this time-lapse video of the historical storm. It captured a picture every 30 minutes of the first 28 hours of the storm, from Rich’s office, overlooking the ESPN “Dish Farm.” Our corporate cousin Nemo was essential to the project and toughed out the storm – through 30 mile per hour winds and temperatures in the low 20s – managing to swim through the mounting snow.

Time-lapse photography and video production by Rich Arden

posted by on December 5, 2012 3:30 PM

Beano Cook remembered in fitting Pittsburgh ceremony

PITTSBURGH — The laughter that filled the Pittsburgh Athletic Association club today was the perfect tribute to Beano Cook. Friends gathered at the University he loved to remember the long-time ESPN college football analyst who passed away in October.

For decades, Cook schooled everyone on his sport’s rich history, but also taught fans and friends the value of a good laugh. And today, laughter was the consistent theme as the stories flowed.

ESPN researcher Howie Schwab, decked out with a Larry Fitzgerald Pitt football jersey under his blue blazer, eulogized his friend emphasizing Beano’s passion for people. Others to speak included University of Pittsburgh Chancellor Mark Nordenberg, author John D. Lukacs and several Pittsburgh luminaries.

ESPN college football reporter Ivan Maisel, who for the past six years hosted a weekly podcast with Beano, also spoke at the ceremony and shares his remarks with Front Row:

I am a writer, and time is theoretically of the essence, so I will give you a peek into the editing process. My first draft of my opening paragraph went as follows:

Dear God! What a man we are here to remember today. I want to thank everyone at Pitt and at the Kiski School who put this together. As you know by now, it was a lot of work. But he’s worth it. And as all of us who came from across the country, when travel is such a a pain in the ass. . .

But that took 30 seconds, so I began to pare down each sentence to get to the core of what I think we all feel as we gather today. With care, considering every word, this is what is left:

Dear God,

As you know by now

He’s

Such a pain in the ass.

***

I knew Beano for 30 years but I didn’t get to know him until the last six years of his life. We recorded a podcast together. We started out recording once a week during the football season and eventually we recorded once a week year-round. So Beano and I talked for 15 to 30 minutes the day before the show, and then the show went from 20 to 45 minutes.

Podcasting is a new form, created by technology, just as letter-writing, just as television and radio. It is most like radio, of course, but it is not radio. The best podcasts are, essentially, overheard conversations between smart people who are passionate about the subject.

So Beano podcasting about college football was a matchup like Notre Dame and Alabama. Our listeners grew to adore him for that passion, for his incredible and nearly infallible memory regarding not only games but point spreads and how much he lost on the parlay.

I tell you that because that is the Beano I knew. So many of you knew him better and longer than I. But I wanted you to know that even in the final innings of his life — and I worked hard to include one reference to baseball into this talk — Beano captivated people. His listeners adored him. I expected, in the week after he died, that they would tell me so. What has surprised me is that I continue to hear from them every week.

As Notre Dame continued its incredible run, as No. 1 Kansas State and No. 2 Oregon lost within minutes of each other on a November Saturday night, as Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel directed an upset at Alabama and is on the verge of becoming the first freshman to win the Heisman — every week, I got emails and tweets from listeners. continue reading…

posted by on November 22, 2012 10:00 AM

Dozens of Team ESPN volunteers deliver Happy Thanksgiving
to our community

The lines of people in need of a Happy Thanksgiving gets longer each year at YMCA Camp Sloper. Team ESPN employee volunteers assemble and distribute the turkeys, stuffing, pecan pie and more that Southington Community Services gathered for 375 local families.

This ESPN Thanksgiving tradition started nine years ago with a handful of people, but as the economy turned and the need sky rocketed, a full army of 100 volunteers has stepped in. A morning shift sorts and assembles food donated by the community and an afternoon crew greets the recipients and loads cars with everything needed for a Thanksgiving feast. The afternoon scene of local people who have to line up for basics is a powerful Thanksgiving message each year for all those who volunteer.

ESPN Manager of Corporate Outreach Shelley Hunter says: “Our employees enthusiastically volunteer all year long, but there is a special thrill Thanksgiving Week as they see directly how they are helping people in our community.”

posted by on October 11, 2012 11:53 AM

ESPN remembers Beano Cook
(1931-2012)

Longtime ESPN college football analyst Beano Cook passed away overnight in Pittsburgh. Beano was 81.

The ESPN family extends its deepest sympathies to the family and friends of Beano, who had taken ill in recent weeks.

“He was one of a kind,” said ESPN Executive Chairman George Bodenheimer. “There never was and never will be another Beano. His combination of humor, passion, love of college football and his engaging personality left an indelible mark on the sport and touched anyone who knew him.”

Carroll H. “Beano” Cook — known as much for his caustic wit as for his encyclopedic knowledge of college football history — was one of the sport’s most memorable commentators. In addition to college football programming, SportsCenter and ESPNEWS on television, Cook was a fixture as a guest on ESPN Radio and had a popular podcast on ESPN.com.

Prior to ABC, Cook worked in public relations for CBS Sports from 1977-82. From 1974-77, he worked as sportswriter for the St. Petersburg Times, the director of public relations for the Miami Dolphins, public relations director for Mutual Radio Network, and toured with VISTA. From 1966-74, Cook served as ABC Sports NCAA press director.

Chris Fowler, Lee Corso and Ivan Maisel — three ESPN personalities who worked closely with Cook over his career at ESPN — provided the following memories:

Fowler: “Cook was an American original. His passion, depth and breadth of knowledge, and humor were unique. He was an invaluable early mentor to me and friend. His imprint can still be seen on GameDay each week.”

Corso: “Beano was a unique human being and he was college football at ESPN. I am indebted to him. Beano was a tremendous help at the start of my television career and I would not be where I am today without him. I am forever grateful to Beano and the time we spent behind the GameDay desk.”

Maisel: “Beano loved college football, and he had the encyclopedic memory to prove it. More than that, he loved people. He collected friends like some people collect stamps. People would say they don’t make them like Beano, because of his ability to be so quotable. But Beano was one-of-a-kind in his friendship. I think all of us who valued that quality in him are very, very sad.”

Other ESPN colleagues also have shared their thoughts, including researcher Howie Schwab: “Beano was extremely passionate about a lot of things, most notably college football. He was also extremely intelligent in many areas ranging from history to the television industry. He cared about people. If you were a friend of Beano’s, you always knew he had your back and would always be there for you. Miss him already.”

ESPN NFL analyst Mike Ditka, a player at Pitt when Beano was the SID: “He was special. We became really good friends the years I was in school at Pitt. I don’t know that anybody loved that job and loved Pitt more than he did.”

Cook always will be remembered for his sense of humor. Over his ESPN years, he gave many memorable quips, such as:

• I’d like to do the last scoreboard show and then go. I don’t want to die in the middle of the football season. I have to know who’s No. 1 in the last polls. (1988) continue reading…

posted by on September 26, 2012 7:59 AM

Treetop view of ESPN campus

The buzz over Bristol, Conn. yesterday wasn’t solely caused by the “Inaccurate Reception.”

Late in the afternoon, a helicopter whirled away hundreds of feet above the 120 acre campus as ESPN Images photographers Joe Faraoni and Rich Arden captured aerial pictures for archival use, the facilities department and for use in photo galleries like the one above. continue reading…

posted by on August 29, 2012 9:32 AM

ESPN announces $1 million donation to Bristol Boys and Girls Club

A big company in a small city can make a real impact on its community and ESPN does that with a growing relationship with the Bristol Boys and Girls Club.

Today we announced a $1 million donation to help fund the future of the organization and its ambitious plans for needed new facilities.

This slideshow gives you a glimpse of ESPN’s relationship with the Club, from playing a key role in getting its Imagine Nation Children’s Museum open to building a playground in a single day to ongoing financial support.

The children of Bristol continue to benefit, and so have our countless Team ESPN volunteers.

posted by on August 6, 2012 4:32 PM

Usain Bolt’s latest Olympic triumph rekindles memories of his Bristol visit

Working at ESPN presents some enviable extras, this week ranging from live Olympics on my in-house TV via ESPN Brazil to Thursday’s “Newsmaker Luncheon” for employees with Boston Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino.

My personal favorite had to be the September day in 2009 when Usain Bolt came to town for a This is SportsCenter shoot and offered to race employees. I was chosen not for my athleticism, but for my lightning quickness on the Blackberry as one of the first employees to respond to a Saturday morning email with a once-in-a-lifetime offer.

Bolt, always the showman, staged a false start that basically exhausted me on the spot.

Then he let us all get out of the blocks first so we can claim to friends each Olympiad to have once led the world’s fastest man in a race. All Bolt had to do to win was accelerate for about 25 meters of the approximately 60-meter sprint.

As for me, I finished no worse than Trinidad and Tobago’s Richard Thompson did against Bolt in the 100 meters this past weekend in the London Olympic Games.

In the YouTube video above, which is humorously approaching 2.5 million views, I’m the guy busting through the finisher. . . long after they had finished.

Bolt also punches the clock — for less than 10 seconds a day — for ESPN’s “This Is SportsCenter” ad series as you can see below.

posted by on April 27, 2012 12:25 PM

A tradition was born: How ESPN covered the NFL Draft 32 years ago

The No. 1 overall pick in the 1980 NFL Draft was Billy Sims (left). He was interviewed by ESPN's George Grande and Joe Thomas, former Baltimore Colts GM.

Article written in the Hartford Courant assesses ESPN's first Draft coverage in 1980.

Some 32 years ago, the world’s first pro sports draft telecast netted one review, this one: NFL Draft Telecast. A Neat Experiment.

The piece, by now retired Hartford Courant columnist Owen Canfield, describes a telecast with basics similar to today (135 player highlight packages in 1980 versus 250 today), minus the cabbies and Rusty Staub’s restaurant. continue reading…