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Earlier this year, Comcast had chosen Ebersol to oversee the NBC Sports Group, which included NBC Sports, Versus, the Golf Channel and a string of regional sports networks the company owns.
After working with ABC and Arledge at three Olympics, Ebersol moved to NBC as one of the network's youngest executives, in charge of weekend late-night programming. He teamed with Lorne Michaels to develop "Saturday Night Live," a comedy institution that endures today.
When Michaels left the show for several years, Ebersol was executive producer of "SNL" from 1981 to 1985. He briefly left NBC for his own production company, developing "Later with Bob Costas" and working with Vince McMahon to televise professional wrestling.
Even as a sports executive, he kept his hand in other parts of the company. Ebersol took on a public attack role during NBC's contentious divorce with former "Tonight" show host Conan O'Brien, publicly criticizing the comedian's stewardship of the late-night series.
During 1995-96, NBC became the only network to televise the World Series, Super Bowl, NBA finals and Summer Olympics in one year. The Sporting News in 1996 named Ebersol the most powerful person in sports.
Costas, the longtime NBC announcer, lauded Ebersol's gift for producing major events and "capturing the atmosphere and sense of occasion."
"Over the years he has been by far the most important person in my professional life and one of my closest friends," Costas said.
"Sunday Night Football," which Ebersol largely put together, has been a huge ratings success for the network in the past five years, increasingly helping NBC keep afloat in the fall as its prime-time schedule continues to slump.
"Dick Ebersol is an incredible talent whose contributions to the company over the last four decades in sports, news and entertainment are unsurpassed," said Steve Burke, CEO of NBCUniversal and executive vice president of Comcast.
Burke said that "we will miss his intellect, experience and passion for the television business."
Ebersol said he will leave NBC in June. He said one reason he was leaving was because of fatigue; on top of his executive responsibilities, he travels many weeks of the year to produce events.
"He's the most engaged sports executive I've ever known," said NBA Commissioner David Stern, who credited Ebersol's aggressive promotion of the sport for boosting ratings in the 1990s.
Ebersol was in the headlines for the 2004 tragedy in which a small plane with ice on its wings crashed in Colorado and killed three people, including his 14-year-old son, Teddy. Dick and another son, Charlie, were seriously injured in the crash.
Ebersol said one of his career's most memorable moments was the reaction to Muhammad Ali lighting the Olympic flame in Atlanta. "It was a long process to convince the organizers to let it be him," he said.
[Associated Press;
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