Lauren Shehadi Bio|Biography
Lauren Shehadi is an American sportscaster for the MLB Network. She joined Langley High School in McLean, Virginia, graduating in 2001. In college at the University of Florida. she served as the host of the online Gatorzone. She also worked as an intern for The Best Damn Sports Show Period and as a sports anchor for KXMC-TV in Minot, North Dakota.
She worked for CBSSports.com and CBS College Sports Network. In addition to serving as the host for many of the videos on CBSSports.com, Shehadi was the co-host of the SEC Tailgate show and the ALT Games with Jonny Moseley on the CBS College Sports Network. In 2010 she was a candidate for Playboy’s “Sexiest Sportscaster” contest.
Lauren Shehadi Age
She was born on May 23, 1983, in McLean, Virginia, United States. She is 35 years old as of 2019.
Lauren Shehadi Height
She measures 5 feet 9 inches ( 1.73) meters tall.
She weighs 64 kilograms.
She has black hair and dark brown eyes.
Lauren Shehadi Family
There is no information provided about her family. This information will be updated soon.
Lauren Shehadi Father
There is no information provided about her father or her mother. This information will be updated soon
Lauren Shehadi Husband|Lauren Shehadi Fiance|Lauren Shehadi Engaged
Lauren Shehadi has kept her personal life low profiled. She usually doesn’t talk about her private life in the media and public. There is no record of her marriage and divorce until now. She has not clarified about her married life, affair, boyfriend, and spouse until the present time.
She is currently focusing on her work and it seems like she doesn’t have time for love affairs. There is no record of her past and present relationship. According to the records, she is possibly single at the present time.
Lauren Shehadi Softball
Lauren Shehadi Baseball Card
Lauren Shehadi Nationality
She belongs to American nationality and is of white ethnicity.
Lauren Shehadi Salary
Her salary is under review. This information will be updated soon.
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Lauren Shehadi Divorce
There is no information on Lauren in any relationship or in any marriage. This information will be updated soon.
Lauren Shehadi Softball Video
Lauren Shehadi Single
There is no information provided for Lauren relationship. We are not sure if she is in a relationship or not. This information will be updated soon.
Lauren Shehadi Instagram
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Lauren Shehadi Interview
For McLean’s Lauren Shehadi, covering the All-Star Game in D.C. is a ‘full-circle moment’
Now in her seventh year as a host and reporter at MLB Network, Lauren Shehadi is coming home to cover her first All-Star Game. The McLean native, who co-hosts the weekday morning show “MLB Central” alongside Mark DeRosa and Robert Flores from the network’s Secaucus, N.J., studio, can’t wait for what amounts to a dream assignment, including some time with friends and family, beginning this weekend in D.C.
“All my greatest baseball memories are from the nation’s capital or around the Beltway,” Shehadi, 35, told The Post in a recent phone interview. “It’s kind of like a full-circle moment for me. I remember [American] Legion softball games, being on travel teams where you have five games in a day. All of my favorite memories that molded me into a baseball fan happened in and around D.C., so being able to cover the game of all the greats there is really special for me.”
Shehadi grew up in McLean and attended Langley High School, where she played softball for the Saxons. Her earliest sports memory was watching the Redskins defeat the Broncos in Super Bowl XXII with her dad, Michael. She traces her baseball fandom to Sept. 6, 1995, when she watched Cal Ripken Jr. break Lou Gehrig’s consecutive games played streak at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
While her job at MLB Network requires her to follow all 30 teams, Shehadi remains a die-hard Orioles fan. Since 2005, she has slowly adopted the Nationals as her second team. Shehadi said her favorite places to watch a game are Camden Yards and Nationals Park, and she’ll try to catch the Orioles and Nationals when they’re at Yankee Stadium or Citi Field.
“I live in New York City,” Shehadi said. “Here, you’re down the line — you’re Mets or Yankees. Or in Chicago, you’re White Sox or Cubs. There’s no ‘I kind of cheer for both teams.’ In the nation’s capital and in Baltimore, you are able to cheer for either team. If both teams went to the postseason, I would cheer for both. We didn’t have a team in D.C., so we adopted the Orioles and they gave us so many great moments. When the Nats came to town, it kind of slowly trickled over to that side.”
Shehadi will fill a lot of roles during all-star week in D.C., where many Nationals fans loathe the Orioles. She’ll serve as the in-game reporter for Sunday’s Futures Game, which will be called by Greg Amsinger and Harold Reynolds, and emcee the Legends & Celebrity Softball Game that follows. On Monday, she’ll host a town-hall chat with MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, and on Tuesday, she’ll handle pregame and postgame interviews. Shehadi’s biggest challenge may be fulfilling her family’s ticket requests and ensuring her mom, Mary, has a good time.
“She has a list of people she wants to meet,” Shehadi said. “That’ll be a little thank you for all she’s done so far.” Shehadi, who graduated from the University of Florida and worked at TV stations in North Dakota and Florida before joining MLB Network in 2012, counts Orioles outfielder Adam Jones and Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer among her favorite players to interview. Her greatest All-Star Game memory is watching former Rangers outfielder Josh Hamilton hit 28 home runs in the first round of the 2008 Home Run Derby at Yankee Stadium.
“You didn’t have to be a fan of the team,” she said. “You were a fan of the display. The Home Run Derby is just a show — pure entertainment. It allows for moments like that that you can never forget.”
Shehadi wouldn’t offer a prediction about where Manny Machado, who could be traded before the All-Star Game, ends up, but she has some advice for where his new team should play the Orioles star in the infield.
“I know he wants to win. I also know he wants to play shortstop,” she said. “In my opinion, you want Manny Machado happy, so let him play shortstop.”
As for the Nationals, Shehadi is confident Manager Dave Martinez’s club will turn things around in the second half.
“I think if you were to ask 10 people to name the most talented team in the National League, on paper, I think eight might say the Washington Nationals, but for some reason they haven’t been able to put it all together,” she said. “I’m not sure why. It doesn’t really make sense, because on paper the names are there. That’s not to say they won’t put it together; I think they will. I think they will actually win the East and play deep into the postseason. Over 162 [games], talent wins. It just does.”
Source:www.washingtonpost.com
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