The National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association (NSSA) was formed in 1959 by a local restaurant owner,
Pete DiMizio, to honor regional
sportscasters and
sportswriters whom he had met at the Greensboro Open Golf Tournament in
Greensboro, North Carolina. When DiMizio died,
Ed McKenzie took over the leadership role and guided it through the expansion to a national association. Its first Annual Awards Program was held in
Salisbury, North Carolina, on April 12, 1960.
Lindsey Nelson was selected the 1959 National Sportscaster of the Year and
Red Smith was voted the 1959 Sportswriter of the Year. On November 1, 2005, Community Bank of
Rowan (later part of
Yadkin Financial) purchased the Innes Street location, opening its headquarters there in 2006. This required the NSSA to move to a temporary location on North Main Street in Salisbury, but visitors would not be allowed. Veteran sports journalist Dave Goren, best known as sports director at
WXII-TV in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, became NSSA executive director September 1, 2009. On December 1 of that year, the NSSA held a reception at its new office in 1,900 square feet at 325 Lee Street in Salisbury. The warehouse only included a few items such as shoes autographed by
Ralph Sampson and a football signed by Berman; the rest remained in storage. The NSSA has since moved to Summit Avenue in Salisbury, on the campus of Catawba College. At the 54th annual program in June 2013,
Dan Patrick of ESPN Radio received the award as National Sportscaster of the Year with
Peter King of
Sports Illustrated honored as National Sportswriter of the Year. The Hall of Fame inductees were
Mitch Albom and
Dick Vitale. In June 2014, hockey broadcaster
Mike "Doc" Emrick was voted National Sportscaster of the Year, with King repeating as National Sportswriter of the Year. Inducted into the Hall of Fame were sportscaster
Marv Albert and sportswriter
Rick Reilly. Emrick and writer
Tom Verducci were the national award winners honored on June 8, 2015. Four new NSSA Hall of Fame members were inducted: baseball writer
Hal McCoy, basketball commentator
Bill Raftery, sportswriter and sportscaster
Lesley Visser and, posthumously, author, journalist and television personality
Dick Schaap. In April 2017, after 57 years in Salisbury, the National Sports Media Association moved to
Winston-Salem, North Carolina. ==Organization==