Scott Van Pelt

Scott Van Pelt joined ESPN in Spring 2001 as the network's lead professional golf reporter. He has since become a SportCenter anchor, primarily hosting the 11 p.m. ET edition while remaining the lead reporter and host of the network's coverage of golf's grand slam events. In April 2008 he was named co-host ESPN Radio's Tirico & Van Pelt weekday show (1-3 p.m. ET M-F), and solo host of The Scott Van Pelt Show (3-4 p.m. M-F). Previously he shared regular co-hosting duties on The Mike Tirico Show (1-3 p.m. M-F) which debuted in September 2007. In 2001, Van Pelt sat down for a one-on-one interview with Tiger Woods after he won the U.S. Open to capture the "Tiger Slam," four majors in a row. The interview was featured on ESPN's Sunday Conversation. Van Pelt joined ESPN from The Golf Channel (TGC) where he was an anchor and reporter for the sport-specific network from 1994-2000. Soon after joining TGC's on-air team, Van Pelt reportorial skill helped him to move up the ranks quickly. At TGC, he was the co-host of Golf Central, Leaderboard Report and occasional host of Viewer's Forum  all signature studio programs for the network. Over his career, Van Pelt has covered all the major golf tournaments  the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open and the PGA Championship. Following Tiger Woods' victory at the 1997 Masters (his first at the tournament), Van Pelt conducted an exclusive half-hour interview with the young Woods for a critically acclaimed network special, Tiger Woods: In His Own Words. He has also covered numerous USGA events, NCAA Men's and Women's championships, BUY.COM Tour events and Senior PGA Tour events. Van Pelt began his sports broadcasting career at WTTG-TV (FOX) in Washington, D.C. in 1990. He worked in WTTG sports studio production department contributing content for the station's The 10:00 News, Sunday Night's Sports Extra and specials on the Washington Redskins. A native of Brookville, Md., Van Pelt graduated from the University of Maryland with a bachelor's degree in radio/television and film.