|  | WRAL  Playbook Changes: Suiter Handing Off Sports Anchor Role | 
|  WRAL-TV Sports Anchor Tom Suiter will retire after the newscast on Thurs, Dec 18th.
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                  On Dec. 18,  2008, longtime WRAL sports anchor Tom Suiter will emerge from the sports office  in the back of the newsroom.                  As he briskly walks to the set, he will take time  to greet fellow employees as he always does. He will likely sing a song or two  as he passes producers and directors preparing the next newscast. Like any  other day, Suiter will make people smile before he ever appears on television.
Unlike any  other day, when Suiter delivers the sports report with his energetic style and  unending passion, it will be his last 6 pm sportscast.
After that,  Suiter will transition into a new role at the station. In the coming year, he  will continue to bring viewers the scores, highlights and excitement from high  school football games on his Football Friday show. He will still honor  outstanding high school athletes with the Extra Effort Award and will take on  some special assignments including work for WRAL.com and radio station 99.9 FM  The Fan.
“Tom’s  enthusiasm and energy, fast-paced delivery, dedication to accuracy and  commitment to excellence have all been hallmarks of his sportscasts,” said Rick  Gall, WRAL news director.
|  Tom Suiter (right) chats with retired WRAL-TV Anchor Charlie Gaddy on the reunion newscast to celebrate the   station’s 50th anniversary in 2006.
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Jeff  Gravley, a long-time friend whom Suiter first met when Gravley interned at the  station in 1985, will become the 6 pm sports anchor in addition to his roles on  the late newscasts during the week. Bob Holliday will continue to anchor WRAL’s  weekend sports.
“Jeff is  top-notch,” Suiter said. “Not only is he an Emmy-winning broadcaster, but,  before that, he was an award-winning photographer.”
Gravley had  words of praise for the man he follows to the anchor desk. “I’m following  a legend,” he said. “The sportscaster I grew up watching, a friend  who has taken so much of his time to teach me about television. I got a masters  degree in sportscasting in the 20 years I have worked with Tom.”
This change  is a landmark one at WRAL. Gravley will be only the fifth 6 pm sports anchor in  the station’s history. He follows Suiter, Rich Brenner, Nick Pond and Ray  Reeve. No one has held the position as long as Suiter, who has had a lasting  impact on sports coverage in the Triangle.
         Suiter  joined WRAL on June 2, 1971, after earning his degree from Erskine College.
|  Tom Suiter began Football Friday on WRAL to provide better coverage of high school football.
 |  Suiter checks his notes one last time before another recent episode of Football Friday.
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“After  graduation, I wrote every television station in North and South Carolina, and only two stations  responded with something other than a form letter. WRAL was one of those  stations. I got a personal letter from Jesse Helms,” Suiter explained.
At the  time, Helms was the executive vice president of the station. He encouraged  Suiter and gave him a chance in the sports department despite his lack of  experience.
“The only  thing I knew when I came here was how to turn the set on,” Suiter said,  laughing.
|  Suiter (right) proudly shows U.S. Senator Jesse   Helms the letter of recommendation Helms wrote for him to introduce him   to WRAL-TV. Helms was at the station to announce his retirement from political   life in 2001.
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To prepare  for his first television interview, Suiter stayed up the night before,  anxiously writing out questions in longhand and repeatedly rehearsing possible  dialogue in his mind. He wore his best button-down shirt and put on the only  necktie he owned.
“I was  interviewing (basketball) Coach John Wooden from UCLA. As soon as the camera  started rolling, I forgot everything. I held my notebook close to my face and  read every question verbatim,” Suiter said.
“About five  minutes into the interview, Coach Wooden patted me on the knee and said, ‘Son,  just talk to me like we’re having a conversation.’”
Despite his  nerves and shyness, Suiter knew sports and he knew how to craft a good story.  Even as a young boy, Suiter could announce the starting line-ups for  basketball, baseball and football teams from memory.
He  instantly loved working at the station he had watched growing up in Rocky Mount. For his  first 10 years at WRAL, Suiter anchored weekends, early morning newscasts,  coach’s shows and early morning radio.
Suiter  laughs, “You name it, I did it.” He earned his opportunity to anchor the 6 pm  news when then-anchor Brenner left the station in March 1981.
Suiter’s  long, steady career at WRAL is unusual in an industry where turnover and job  changes are common.
|  Tom Suiter has spent his entire award-winning sportscasting career at WRAL-TV.
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“That’s  something you don’t see in virtually any industry today, especially  television,” Brenner said. “A guy gets his first job and stays there his entire  career.”
“I went  from being the youngest on the set to the oldest,” Suiter quipped.
Suiter’s  love of sports has never faded as the years passed. He maintains his boyish  enthusiasm for local sports teams and has become an enduring presence on WRAL  broadcasts.
His  dedication to his profession earned him induction into the prestigious Silver Circle by  the Nashville/Midsouth Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and  Sciences.
Over the  years, one of the most exciting stories Suiter covered was N.C. State’s  run to the 1983 NCAA basketball championship.
“Nobody  thought State could win, and when they did, it was so surprising. I think  everyone was happy even if they weren’t a State fan,” he said.
Suiter’s  appreciation of State’s upset win came from his tendency to root for the  underdog.
“It all  started in prep school. At Christ School, located outside Asheville, it was common for the older  students to haze the younger students. I remember one day when a senior grabbed  me and started calling me names. I didn’t like it,” he said.
From that  day on, Suiter promised himself he would always be nice to the younger students  at the school. “I knew they were scared and I wanted to help them,” Suiter  said.
At WRAL,  Suiter continues to live by the principle of being kind to others and treating  everyone as he or she wants to be treated. He is humble about many aspects of  his distinguished career, but he prides himself on his ability to get along  with most everyone.
He makes it  a point to know the first and last name and something unique about every person  who works with him. To Suiter, titles do not matter. He will pull up a chair  beside a production assistant for a conversation just as quickly as he will  enter a manager’s office to talk.
Suiter  seeks out the youngest employees at the station and tries to help them any way  he can.
“I’ve known  several of the photographers and sports reporters since they were in high  school,” said Suiter, proud of their accomplishments.
Suiter met  sports reporter and anchor Ken Medlin at a Christmas parade when Medlin was in  high school. “I was amazed by the fact he took time to talk to me. He went out  of his way to be nice to me. We talked for at least 30 minutes, and he invited  me to the station for a tour,” Medlin said.
A few years  later, when Medlin was hired as a news clerk at WRAL, Suiter recognized him  right away. “He remembered the parade and he remembered me,” Medlin said.
Debra  Morgan, who anchors the news with Suiter, said, “Viewers don’t know how much  time Tom spends as a mentor to others in the newsroom.” Nearly every day, he  can be seen talking and joking with those eager to learn more about the  business.
“He really  has a connection to young people,” Morgan said. “Of course we’ll miss him on  the air, but we’ll really miss what a kind-hearted person he is.”
“Living is  about getting to know people, learning their stories and knowing what they’re  doing and what’s important to them,” Suiter said.
“I love  sports and always will, but I have loved working here because I love the  people,” he added.
Suiter’s  long career has allowed him to cover ACC Tournaments, Final Fours, and NCAA  championships across the county. But one of the highlights of his career has  been high school athletic coverage.
“I had such  a good experience playing high school sports,” said Suiter who still holds his  school’s record for most points scored in a basketball game. “And I’ve always  admired high school coaches for the difference they make in kids’ lives.”
Bob  Holliday, a Suiter colleague since 1981, remembers their very first  conversation at the station. “Tom felt strongly even then that there was so  much WRAL could do to advance the cause of high school athletics,” Holliday  recalled. “We began covering games, first in Raleigh,  then in Rocky Mount, Wilson  and Fayetteville.”
Under  Suiter’s leadership and direction, the Football Friday show began and has  emerged as a local tradition. Crews cross the state to cover football teams  from the WRAL viewing area.
Because  there are so many games to shoot and deadlines are tight to make air at 11:35 pm  each Friday night, Suiter enlists a lot of help. Many reporters and  photographers in the WRAL newsroom got their starts in the business assisting  Suiter with the show.
In addition  to game coverage, Suiter began the Extra Effort Award as a way to honor top  high school athletes who excel in sports and in the classroom. Each week,  Suiter travels to an area high school to present the award to a deserving  student.
“Tom has  recognized more than 700 young people since we began the award in 1981,”  Holliday noted. “Now we see some coaches who once were Extra Effort  winners.”
“Tom  and I often marvel at the qualities many of our award winners possess – they  are great students and leaders as well as athletes. The passion he brings to  this weekly recognition of young people is, like his mentoring, Tom’s way of  helping others. The opportunity to recognize the best seniors in the WRAL  viewing area is something that means a great deal to Tom,” Holliday continued.
“Today,  coverage of high school athletics in North Carolina ranks among the nation’s  best in my opinion,” Holliday said. “Our friends at the North  Carolina High School Athletic Association have told me that the work of  WRAL-TV, and Tom in particular, has played a large role in the quality of  coverage statewide.”
Before his  last 6 pm newscast, Suiter will prepare as he always does. Sitting at his desk,  which is covered with papers, previous scripts, old newspaper articles and  mementos from fans and co-workers, he will work hard to write scripts with the  rhythm and pace he loves, reading them aloud over and over as he hones them.  His two favorite typewriters remain fixtures on his desk despite the fact he  does all of his work on the computer.
“I’ve  always tried to deliver each sportscast with enthusiasm and accuracy like it  would be my last one. I’ve always wanted to do the best I possibly could,”  Suiter said.
When he  signs off the air on Dec. 18, Suiter says he will look forward to the changes  ahead.
         Through his  work with Football Friday, the Extra Effort Award, radio broadcasts on The Fan,  and contributions to the Web site, Suiter will continue making people smile  both on and off the air.
Preparing  to anchor the 6 pm sportscast has been a part of his life for many years, and  the decision to retire from the show has been an arduous one for Suiter.
“I’m  grateful for the opportunity to anchor so long,” he said. “I never thought this  day would come, but it’s time.”
Thanks to  WRAL-TV’s Kelly Riner, Dane Huffman, Jeff Gravley & Bob Holliday for this  capcom story.