Occupation Sports broadcaster Name Mark Lee Employer Rogers Media Role Sportscaster | Spouse(s) Carol Children 3 | |
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Alma mater Carleton University (1975–1980) Awards Gemini Award for Best Sports Play-by-Play Announcer Nominations Gemini Award for Best News Information Segment, Gemini Award for Best Sports Play-by-Play or Analyst People also search for Andy Blicq, Barbara Underhill, Paul Martini |
Mark Lee (born c. 1956) is a Canadian sportscaster with Rogers Sportsnet and formerly with CBC Sports. While at CBC, Lee covered the National Hockey League, women's ice hockey, Canadian Football League, Olympic games and the Pan Am Games. He was born in Ottawa around 1956 to William and Doreen Croswell Lee, and he attended the Earl of March Secondary School in Ottawa. He quarterbacked the Carleton Ravens football team for four years, graduating with a journalism degree. He then worked as a news anchor at CFCF radio in Montreal. Lee then moved to Toronto where he worked at CBC Radio as a national sports reporter where he also hosted the sports magazine show The Inside Track.

From 2008 to 2014, Lee served as the main western play-by-play voice for Hockey Night in Canada and worked first round playoff series. In addition, he read most of the pre-recorded continuity and sponsorship announcements on CBC Sports broadcasts (such as "The following is a [live] presentation of CBC Sports"). For the 2008 Summer Olympics and 2016 Summer Olympics, Lee covered the track and field events for CBC. Lee was the on field reporter for CBC Sports during the 1997 150 meter race between Donovan Bailey and Michael Johnson, and asked for immediate comment after the race was finished from Donovan Bailey, breaking a long standing unofficial rule in track and field sports coverage to allow for several minutes of cool down by the athlete. The comments given by Donovan Bailey in the immediate aftermath of the race were considered in poor taste, and possibly due to the fact that he was interviewed immediately after the race and not given a cool down period.citation
Lee has earned a Gemini Award, two ACTRA Awards. He lives in Cambridge, Ontario with his family.
Lee was laid off by the CBC in August 2014 after the network ceded control of its NHL coverage to Rogers Media-owned Sportsnet. Lee has since joined Sportsnet on a part-time basis and mainly covers amateur sporting events.