Cory Leible, NBC Sports Legend and Sports Broadcasting Hall of Famer, Dead at 76

Cory Leible, legendary NBC cameraman and Sports Broadcasting Hall of Famer who was inducted only last year, died on Monday following a hard-fought battle with cancer at the age of 76.

Inductee Cory Leible with his wife Vally (second from right), and daughters Debbie, Linda, and Gwen at the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame ceremony last December.

Inductee Cory Leible with his wife Vally (second from right), and daughters Debbie, Linda, and Gwen at the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame ceremony last December.

During more than four decades at NBC, Leible revolutionized the use of the handheld camera on everything from NFL sidelines to U.S. Open putting greens to presidential inaugurations. He elevated the role of the handheld to an art form, offering viewers a new perspective for watching live sports.

“For over 30 years, Cory Leible was a cameraman’s cameraman and a director’s dream,” says fellow Hall of Famer and legendary sports-TV executive Don Ohlmeyer. “He was in the vanguard of those hearty souls that lug around not only a handheld camera but about 90 lbs. of gear that goes along with it.”

A Long Island, NY, native and the son of a long-time vaudeville performer, Cornelius Patrick Leible studied ballet and dramatics at the High School of Performing Arts in New York City. It was there that he put down creative roots and developed the legendary endurance that would serve him so well as a camera operator.

“Cory had such amazing energy, stamina, and balance that his nickname was ‘Iron Legs,’” says former NBC Sports Executive Producer Mike Weisman.

Leible mastered and revolutionized the use of the handheld camera in his four decades at NBC.

Leible mastered and revolutionized the use of the handheld camera in his four decades at NBC.

After serving in the United States Army from 1957 to 1963, Leible entered the RCA School of Broadcasting in 1964 and got his first break when NBC needed vacation-relief crew. Over the next two years, he worked off and on at the Peacock network in a variety of production roles, while also handling camera duty for WPIX-TV’s New York Yankees coverage. By 1965, he had been brought on full-time at NBC and was assigned to the network’s NFL coverage in a variety of hard-camera positions. The handheld camera was not yet popular for live sports production, but that was about to change, thanks to Leible and a fellow Sports Broadcasting Hall of Famer.

“[Longtime NBC director] Ted Nathanson asked if I wanted to do the handheld when another guy dropped out,” recounted Leible last year. “I did it, and, by halftime, I started suggesting a few ideas to Teddy. He said, ‘Cory, let’s do it. I’m going to isolate a camera to you, and we’ll see what happens.’ After that, I pretty much had free rein over anything I wanted to do with the handheld.”

He had a knack for capturing the perfect shot and would go on to cover three decades of NFL football and 14 Super Bowls.

“One of the goals of every network was to make the coverage more intimate,” says Ohlmeyer. “And Cory was one of the guys who was a real master on the sidelines. He had an instinctive presence that told him somehow where that next interesting moment was going to come from.”

Leible’s mastery of the camera reached nearly all of NBC Sports’ live telecasts, including MLB, NBA, NHL, tennis, and Olympics coverage. However, it was on the golf course that he made his most indelible mark, pioneering the use of helicopter-facilitated aerial shots for hole previews, as well as close-up ground-level shots of putts. Leible’s reputation as a daredevil became legend. Having first strapped himself to the bottom of a helicopter at the 1972 Bob Hope Classic, he perfected the shot over the next two decades — often flying just 5 ft. above the ground.

Leible at his 2012 Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame induction ceremony with fellow HOF cameraman Davey Finch.

Leible at his 2012 Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame induction ceremony with fellow HOF cameraman Davey Finch.

“He always told the story,” notes NFL VP of Media Operations Glenn Adamo, who came up through the NBC ranks during the Leible era. “Whether hanging from a helicopter in golf to shoot the holes or hanging upside down at the Superdome for a Super Bowl to get a live shot [of all 22 players at once], Cory got the shot everywhere he went, and I know we were all better for it.”

The aerial shots may have garnered the most attention, but Leible’s work around the green had the most significant impact on modern golf coverage, allowing viewers to see the trajectory of the putt from ground level.

“I was criticized a lot for standing behind a golfer,” Leible said of this angle. “People said I might end up getting in the way of his line. But I never did, and that shot offered such perspective. You could actually see the golfer looking at the green with the pin in front. That shot became part of the framework of golf [coverage] after that.”

A father to three daughters and grandfather to seven, Leible resided in Southampton, NY, with his wife of 50 years, Valley. Although he may have been long retired, his sense of humor and storied work ethic made him one of the most beloved characters ever to grace a live sports production.

“Cory was one of those artists who helped drive this business forward,” says Ohlmeyer. “He made the coverage more intimate and more exciting. It allowed the viewer to be brought from their home to inside the game, and it made their appreciation of the game that much better.”

Cory is survived by Vally, his wife of over 50 year; three daughters; and eight grandchildren.

Visitation will be on Friday, December 6, 2013 from 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. at St. Peter the Apostle Church, 5130 Rattlesnake Hammock Road, Naples with Mass to follow at 10:00 a.m. Burial will follow at Palm Royale Cemetery.

Memorial contributions may be made in Cornelius’s name to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital at St. Jude Tribute Program, P.O. Box 1000, Dept. 142, Memphis, TN 38101-9908, stjude.org/tribute.

Password must contain the following:

A lowercase letter

A capital (uppercase) letter

A number

Minimum 8 characters