Trinidad and Tobago’s most decorated Olympian, Ato Boldon, continues to make waves, not on the track, but behind the microphone. At the 2025 Sports Emmy Awards held at Lincoln Centre in New York City on Tuesday night, Boldon was part of the NBC Universal broadcast team that won 13 Sports Emmy Awards, 10 of which came for their 2024 Paris Olympic Games coverage.
Boldon, 52, was also individually nominated for Outstanding Sports Personality in the Sports Event Analyst category, making it his second nomination following his first in 2013. He remains the only track and field commentator ever to be nominated in that category. Although he didn’t win, his role as NBC’s lead analyst for athletics was instrumental to the network’s overall success.
Before becoming a respected broadcaster, Boldon had a legendary track and field career. He won four Olympic medals for Trinidad and Tobago: two bronze medals in the 100m and 200m at the 1996 Atlanta Games and a silver in the 100m and a bronze in the 200m at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. These achievements make him the most successful Olympic athlete in T&T’s history.
He also won gold in the 200m at the 1997 World Championships in Athens, becoming Trinidad and Tobago’s first world champion in track and field. Boldon remains a Commonwealth Games gold medallist as well, winning the 100m in 1998 with a Games record time of 9.88 seconds, a record that still stands today.
In addition to his medals, Boldon still holds several national records, including the 50m (5.64 seconds), 60m (6.49 seconds), and 200m (19.77 seconds).