After graduation, he began his career in 1964 as a cameraman alongside his father
Ed Sabol (1916–2015) when his father got the filming rights to the
1962 NFL Championship Game, played in
Yankee Stadium. With his degree in art history and experience playing football, Sabol was, as his father put it, "uniquely qualified to make football movies." This company eventually grew into NFL Films, with Sabol serving mainly as a cameraman, editor, and writer in the 1960s and 1970s. When
ESPN was founded in 1979, they soon signed NFL Films as a production company and Sabol became an on-air personality in the 1980s. He won 35
Emmy Awards and was featured in an episode of
60 Minutes Sports. Sabol played a part in founding the
NFL Network. In 1985, Sabol took over NFL Films from his father,
Ed Sabol. NFL Films was the first company to wire coaches and players for sound as well as the first to use slow motion and montage editing in sports. The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia inducted Sabol into their Hall of Fame in 1996. In March 2011, NFL Films was recognized with the
Lamar Hunt Award for Professional Football. ==Awards and recognitions==