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College TV Pioneer And White Sox Owner Eddie Einhorn Dies

 
Chicago White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf, left, manager Ozzie Guillen, right, vice chairman Eddie Einhorn, center right, and former St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa talk before a baseball game between the two clubs in Chicago, Tuesday, Jun

Chicago White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf, left, manager Ozzie Guillen, right, vice chairman Eddie Einhorn, center right, and former St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa talk before a baseball game between the two clubs in Chicago, Tuesday, June 20, 2006. Brian Kersey/Associated Press

Eddie Einhorn, a minority owner of the Chicago White Sox who helped put college basketball on television 50 years ago and set the stage for the wall-to-wall coverage that is common today, has died following complications from a stroke. He was 80.

Scott Reifert, senior vice president of communications for the White Sox, announced the death Thursday after speaking with Einhorn's widow, Ann. Einhorn died late Tuesday in New Jersey.
 
Einhorn was the founder and chairman of TVS Television Network, which broadcast the so-called "Game of the Century'' between Houston and UCLA from the Astrodome in 1968.

The game is widely credited for the growth in popularity of college basketball on television, and Einhorn was inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011.
 
He spent the past 25 years as vice chairman of the White Sox and was the team's president and chief operating officer from 1981-90.

He also was a member of the Chicago Bulls' board of directors, just part of the relationship he had with Jerry Reinsdorf, the Bulls and White Sox executive who was a law school buddy at Northwestern.