Marc Rovner is an accomplished attorney who serves as the general counsel and director of business development for BETA Abstract in East Rockaway. Outside of his professional work as an attorney, Marc Rovner is an avid sports fan who closely follows the New York Mets, Rangers, and Giants. A lifelong Giants football fan, Mr. Rovner is a season ticket holder and attends all of the team's home games. Founded in 1925, the Giant’s compete in the National Football Conference East division of the National Football League and have won eight league championships in addition to sixteen division championships. The team’s winning tradition and storied history is reflected in the Giant’s Ring of Honor. Founded in 2010, the Ring of Honor recognizes figures that have had a lasting influence on the organization. There are 42 players, coaches, and other staff are currently featured in the Ring of Honor, which is located in the club level of MetLife Stadium. Most recently, former coach Tom Coughlin, former general manager Ernie Accorsi, and former defensive end Justin Tuck were inducted.
0 Comments
The recipient of the Lawyers.com Client Distinction Award, Marc Rovner of East Rockaway, New York, is an experienced attorney who earned his JD from the Boston University School of Law in 1988. When he isn't providing his attorney-related expertise to BETA Abstract, LLC, Marc Rovner enjoys following his favorite Major League Baseball (MLB) team, the New York Mets. The Mets have made the playoffs in each of the past two season after an eight-year absence in large part due to its impressive pitching staff, which includes 24-year-old hard-throwing right-handed hurler Noah Syndergaard. A 6’6” native of Mansfield, Texas, Syndergaard was originally drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the first round of the 2010 MLB Amateur Draft, but was dealt to New York in 2012 as part of a package for R.A. Dickey, Josh Thole, and Mike Nickeas. Syndergaard made his major league debut with the Mets in 2015 and posted a win-loss record of 9-7 to go along with an earned run average (ERA) of 3.24 en route to finishing fourth in National League Rookie of the Year voting. He was named to his first All-Star game the following year and finished eighth in Cy Young voting after posting a record of 14-9 and an ERA of 2.60. He also recorded a career-high 218 strikeouts in just 183.2 innings. He has been sidelined for much of the 2017 season with a partial tear in his right lat muscle, which he attributes to an aggressive offseason workout regiment. He's now doing the Kinstretch program, which is an athletic form of advanced yoga that helps improve strength and flexibility. Marc Rovner is an award-winning attorney who manages the legal department for BETA Abstract. Outside of his duties as an attorney, East Rockaway, New York, native Marc Rovner is a New York Rangers season ticket holder. The National Hockey League (NHL) team recently paid tribute to lifetime fan and New York hero Steven McDonald, who, at 59 years old, died from a heart attack on January 10. McDonald, a former police officer, was shot 30 years ago while on patrol in Central Park. The resulting gunshot wound left him paralyzed, but he remained on the force and in 1995 was promoted to detective. Former and current Rangers players expressed sympathy on social media, while the team planned an extensive ceremony in his honor prior to its game against the Toronto Maple Leafs on January 13. During the pre-game skate, every Rangers player wore on his jersey the number 104, which was McDonald's badge number. McDonald will continue to be remembered by the Rangers through the Steven McDonald Extra Effort Award, which is given annually to the player who best exemplifies McDonald's fighting spirit. East Rockaway, New York, native Marc Rovner is an experienced attorney, who, while working as director of business development for BETA Abstract, received a client distinction award from Lawyers.com. Outside of his responsibilities as an attorney, Marc Rovner is an avid fan of the National Football League's (NFL) New York Giants. A NFL Man of the Year finalist and six-time recipient of the award for the Giants, Eli Manning was named 2016 co-NFL Man of the Year along with Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald. The award win means $500,000 will be donated to a charity of Manning's choice, while $500,000 will also be donated in his name to the NFL Character Playbook, a recently launched initiative to help build character and foster healthy relationships among youth. A fervent community supporter, Manning has helped raise more than $25 million for New York's March for Babies throughout the past seven years. He and his wife founded their own children's clinic and charitable foundation in Mississippi. In addition to a variety of other charitable causes in support of children, Manning recently spearheaded the Tackle Kids' Cancer program at Hackensack University Medical Center. A native of East Rockaway, New York, and a magna cum laude graduate of Boston University, attorney Marc Rovner serves as general counsel and director of business development for BETA Abstract LLC. Outside his work as an attorney, Marc Rovner is a fan of the New York Rangers. Brandon Pirri and the New York Rangers recently came to terms on a one-year deal worth a reported $1.1 million The 25-year-old Pirri played with the Florida Panthers and Anaheim Ducks last season, tallying 14 goals and 15 assists in his 61 games played. The 29 points he scored were a career high. Pirri was selected in the second round of the 2009 draft with the 59th overall pick. He has been twice traded and mostly regarded as a specialist in shootouts, scoring on 83.3 percent of his attempts (5 of 6 in total) last year. That was enough to net him first place among players with at least five shootout attempts. In his 166 games played with the Blackhawks, Ducks, and Panthers, Pirri has totaled 49 goals and 31 assists. Attorney Marc Rovner has served BETA Abstract, LLC, as general counsel and director of business development since 1998. Beyond his activities as an attorney, East Rockaway, New York, native Marc Rovner enjoys attending New York Mets games as a season-ticket holder. Finishing the regular season first in the National League (NL) East division with a record of 90 wins and 72 losses, the New York Mets ended an eight-year playoff drought and returned to the postseason in 2015. In the opening round of the playoffs, the Mets took on the Los Angeles Dodgers. While the Dodgers had won 92 games during the regular season, the Mets had claimed four of the seven regular-season contests. The trend carried over into the playoffs, as New York overcame an early 2-1 deficit in game five to win 3-2 and advance to the NL Championship Series (NLCS). In the second round of the postseason, the Mets came up against the Chicago Cubs. Chicago had won all seven regular-season meetings, but thanks in part to a career performance by Daniel Murphy, the Mets completed a four-game sweep and advanced to the World Series for the first time since 2000. Over the course of the series, the Mets outscored the Cubs by a combined 13 runs. In the first game of the World Series, New York traveled to Kauffman Stadium to face the Kansas City Royals, the winningest team in the American League (AL). After narrowly losing game one, the Mets fell to the Royals 7-1 in game two. The Mets responded with their own blowout victory, 9-3, back at home in game three, but it proved to be New York's only win of the World Series. The Royals earned a 5-3 victory at Citi Field before ending the series with a five-run 12th-inning victory in game five. An attorney from East Rockaway, New York, Marc Rovner oversees BETA Abstract, LLC’s entire legal department and guides business development across the firm’s five offices. An avid football fan, attorney Marc Rovner is on a decade-long quest with his youngest son to visit every NFL stadium. He has been to 21 of the 32 stadiums across the country to date. The oldest stadium still being used for NFL play is Chicago’s historic Soldier Field, which was inaugurated as Municipal Grant Park Stadium in 1924. College football reigned during that era, and the first game involved Notre Dame University taking on Northwestern University. Expanded into Soldier Field by 1926, the stadium hosted the sell-out 1927 Jack Dempsey versus Gene Tunney heavyweight championship, which broke records with its $2.5 million gate. The Chicago Bears moved to Soldier Field from Wrigley Field in 1971 and have played there since (excluding a one-year hiatus in 2002 for a stadium renovation). In addition to football, Soldier Field has hosted diverse events over the decades, from stock car races to concerts by the likes of Bruce Springsteen and The Rolling Stones. An attorney who garnered a 2015 Client Distinction Award from Lawyers.com and Martindale.com, Marc Rovner of East Rockaway, New York, leads as general counsel and senior staff attorney of the title insurance company BETA Abstract, LLC. Marc Rovner is a dedicated New York sports fan who holds Giants season tickets. In January of 2016, the Giants hired Aaron Wellman as the team’s new strength and conditioning coach. He comes to this role after serving in the same capacity at the University of Notre Dame, and his hiring follows the naming of Ben McAdoo as the team’s new head coach in mid-January. The addition of Wellman comes in the wake of the release of Jerry Palmieri. Palmieri served as the strength and conditioning coach for 12 years, during which time the Giants won two Super Bowls. However, the consistency at which players had been injured in past years led the franchise to make a change. Reports from the New York Daily News state that Wellman will likely track the players’ workload using global positioning system (GPS) technology, a tool he used in his previous positions. |
AuthorVice president, managing director of business development, and senior staff attorney at BETA Abstract, LLC Archives
January 2021
Categories
All
|