It may be 13 years since Gary Striewski has broadcast from KGWN-TV in Cheyenne, but the ESPN SportsCenter anchor remembers it well, and heâs looking forward to doing it again.
Striewski, who got his broadcasting career launched in Cheyenne 15 years ago, told Jake Nichols on Wednesday morning that when he returns July 24 for a Cheyenne Frontier Days segment on ESPN, he will sit in his old seat at the local TV station
âItâs a full-circle moment going back to Cheyenne,â Striewski said on Cowboy State Daily Radio. âTheyâre going to let me host the sportscast at 5 and 5:30, so thatâll be pretty cool.â
Old Days
Striewski, who grew up in Denver, fondly recalled his two years in Cheyenne as the sports anchor.Â
He said he was surrounded by people just like him â young upstarts in the TV broadcast industry who were âjust trying to find their way.â
Striewski, who wrote in his sixth grade yearbook that he was going to be an ESPN anchor, found his way, and it didnât take him that long.
After two years in Cheyenne, he moved to Houston and then spent five years at the Northeast Sports Network (NESN) in Boston before joining ESPN in 2018.
Favorite Memories
One of Striewskiâs favorite memories in the Cowboy State was being on the sports desk when Cheyenneâs Brandon Nimmo was selected in the first round by the New York Mets in the 2011 Major League Baseball draft.
âThat was cool, man,â Striewski said. âI texted Nimmoâs dad and asked him if I could pop over and get the first interview.â
âBrandon was smiling ear to ear,â he said of the outfielder who has played in the major leagues for the Mets since 2016.
To Striewski, Nimmoâs is a Hollywood story. Someone from the least-populated state in the country getting drafted by a team in the No. 1 media market.
âItâs a Disney storybook movie plot,â Striewski said.
The sports anchor said he doesnât really have any favorite teams anymore. He roots for Nimmo-like stories.Â
He pulls for the players. He pulls for the storylines.Â
Like his story of coming back to where he started.
Return To Roots And Boots
Striewski still has friends in Cheyenne. His former roommates still live here.
Theyâve already talked and theyâre going to get together.
Striewskiâs so-called homecoming was set-up by him. When the network announced it was doing a 50 States in 50 Days event, Striewski marched into his bossâ office and requested Wyoming.
âI still have my boots,â Striewski said. âThis [location] was my first big assignment, and it was awesome. I canât wait.â
Itâs not just the sentimentality of it all, he added. ESPNâs got insurance. KGWN-TV didnât.
That means he can ride a bull. Or a horse. Or whatever they come up with.
âIâm getting on some kind of animal,â he said.
Jimmy Orr can be reached at jimmy@cowboystatedaily.com.