Bob Tompkins
Sport: Distinguished Service Award in Sports Journalism
Induction Year: 2016
University: LSUNorthwestern StateTulane
Tompkins retired last fall after a remarkable 43 years as a sports journalist in Louisiana, 38 at The Town Talk in Alexandria. Tompkins has been voted the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Sportswriter of the Year for Louisiana four times (1998, 2004, ’06, ’12). He was the Louisiana Sports Writers Association Sportswriter of the Year in 2006 and shared the same award in 2007. He won LSWA Columnist of the Year for the 1988-89 judging period. He won the LSWA’s Mac Russo award in 2011. A 1972 graduate of LSU, he was sports editor of the Reveille in the spring of ’72. Over the next four years, Tompkins worked at four different newspapers — the Lafourche Parish Daily Comet in Thibodaux (general assignment news reporter), the Monroe Morning World, the Shreveport Journal and the Lafayette Daily Advertiser. He was sports editor of the Advertiser from (Feb.-Aug. ’76), then moved to the Town Talk, where he was sports editor from 1987-94. Prior to 2015 he spent 19 years as a senior reporter and sports columnist. Tompkins covered LSU’s BCS Championship Games in 2004, 2008 and 2012, he covered the 1994 and ’95 Masters, the 1981 and ’90 Super Bowls, the 1986 and ’93 NCAA Final Four tournaments and the 1992 U.S. Track and Field Olympic Trials and the 1981 NCAA Track and Field Championships. He has covered 33 Sugar Bowls, several of which settled national championships. During his career, Tompkins was the beat writer at various times for the New Orleans Saints, LSU football and basketball, Northwestern State football, Louisiana College football, basketball and baseball, Tulane football, USL football and basketball and for the Lafayette Drillers and Alexandria Aces minor league baseball teams. He has covered many PGA Tour events in New Orleans. He was president of the LSWA for 1990-91 and ’91-92 and has been a member of the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame selection committee since 1977. He also served many years on the committees to select the Heisman Trophy and the John Wooden Award.







