Bill Seward is an award-winning sportscaster for the NBC family of networks. Seward called the Rugby World Cup on NBC and also hosts the HSBC Rugby Sevens World Series and Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series on Universal Sports and NBC Sports Network. Seward can be heard on KFWB Radio in Los Angeles, where his work earned him several Golden Mikes and multiple "Best Radio Anchor Staff" awards, the top honor presented by the Southern California Sports Broadcasters Association. He also anchored pregame segments on the Dodgers Radio Network and hosted the popular postgame call-in show, Dodger Talk. For the past 12 consecutive years, Seward has been voted "Top Sports Update Anchor" by the Los Angeles Daily News and can be seen on the TVG network, hosting thoroughbred horse racing coverage. In addition to his broadcasting career, Seward has been featured in David Fincher’s “Zodiac” and HBO's "Recount", along with appearances on television shows "Scandal", "Touch", "Key & Peele", "The Event", "The Whole Truth", "No Ordinary Family", "Monk", "Everybody Hates Chris", “Medium”, “Numbers”, “It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia” and several others. Seward is also the host of Sega’s popular video game, “Virtua Fighter 5.” Seward was with ESPN, hosting such shows as "SportsCenter", "ESPNEWS" and "2Day at the Races". He was also part of ESPN's coverage of the 1984 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles. While at ESPN, Seward was a regular contributor to ABC's "World News this Morning." Seward began his television career as Sports Director at KVIQ-TV in Eureka, California. After that he worked for KATY-TV in Oxnard, California and WNHT-TV in Concord, New Hampshire before returning to his hometown to become an award-winning sports anchor at KCBS-TV and KNX-AM in Los Angeles. A graduate of Loyola Marymount University, Seward was the youngest head football coach in the nation at St Bernard High School in Playa del Rey, California, where he was honored as "Bay Area Coach of the Year." Seward coached at Saint Bernard and at Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks, California, working with several future MLB and NFL players, including Cy Young Award Winner Jack McDowell, All-Star shortstop Royce Clayton and All-Pro linebacker Al Smith.
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