Pam Oliver is an icon and a trailblazer in sports broadcasting, and now she will add Hall of Famer to her resume.
Last week, it was announced that Oliver would be inducted into, as part of the Class of 2025, the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame, an honor reserved for those who have forged legendary careers in the industry.
Oliver’s distinguished career is definitely worthy of this honor.
She is, according to the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame’s website, “the longest-tenured sideline reporter in the NFL, with experience in over 500 games.”
Congratulations Pam Oliver for being named to the @sportsvideo 2025 Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame! pic.twitter.com/T3LjxkwTPj
— FOX Sports PR (@FOXSportsPR) September 4, 2025
Oliver worked at ESPN, covering the NFL Playoffs and Super Bowls before moving to FOX Sports and continuing her now Hall of Fame career, a career that also includes coverage of the NBA, college and women’s sports.
Oliver also expanded her presence off of the gridiron and stadium floor, becoming a correspondent for 60 Minutes, which showcased her overall journalistic talents.
She’s been honored numerous times for her outstanding work, receiving awards such as the Association of Women in Sports Media Mary Garber Pioneer Award, the Atlanta Women in Sports Lifetime Achievement Award, a Gracie Award by the Alliance for Women in Media and in 2020, she was inducted into the NABJ Hall of Fame.
Oliver was also a star athlete from the state of Florida. As a star member of Florida A&M’s track team, she was inducted into the school’s athletic Hall of Fame in 1996, and again in 2016 when Florida A&M honored the women’s mile relay team.
The Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame’s mission is “to honor those from across the entire spectrum of the sports-broadcast industry who have had an impact, directly or indirectly, on the way sports television is produced,” and Oliver has done that constantly over her many decades in the industry.
This year, her class, which includes legends such as Cowboys owner, Jerry Jones, college football icon Lee Corso and Greg Gumbel, who passed away in December 2024, will join the ranks of other legends such as Bryant Gumbel, James Brown, Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley and Andrea Kramer.