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Sports Q&A: Rick Reilly
![Former Broncos standout John Elway, right, helps Rick Reilly (Jour’81) get ready for Monday Night Football in October 2012.](/coloradan/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/usatsi_6662794-rick_reilly_and_john_elway.jpg?itok=HHef_CEA)
Former Broncos standout John Elway, right, helpsĢżRick ReillyĢż(Jourā81) get ready for Monday Night Football in October 2012. Reilly has spent his career working at Sports Illustrated and ESPN.
The Rock star of sports writing
Rick ReillyĢż(Jourā81), an ESPN columnist since 2008 and writer atĢżSports IllustratedĢżfor 23 years prior, will be inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame in June. The Denver and Hermosa Beach, Calif., resident will stop writing his ESPN column on July 1 but will continue to do ESPN TV broadcasts and essays during football season. His 11th book,ĢżTiger, meet my sister ā¦ and other things I probably shouldnāt have said, was released in May. Itās a collection of his best columns during his time at ESPN.
Youāre an 11-time National Sportswriter of the Year, but what does the Hall of Fame mean to you?
Itās probably the best award Iāve ever gotten because (formerĢżL.A. TimesĢżcolumnist) Jim Murray is in it. Heās my hero and mentor. I admired everything he did and everything he wrote. Sportswriter Hall of Fame: It sounds like, āHey, hereās the skinniest girl at the fat farm.ā But I donāt care. Iām in it.
When did you start writing sports?
I started in 1979 covering (coach) Rene Portland and the Lady Buffs basketball team. They blew somebody out, and she was eight months pregnant. My lead was something like, āIf every game is like the University of Colorado womenās basketball teamās 91-42 blowout of Weber State, Rene Portlandās obstetrician will be a very happy man.ā
Itās been a lot of fun. I donāt think Iāve stopped writing sports, except for the six months between when I jumped fromĢżSports IllustratedĢżto ESPN and they made me quit. Thatās when I realized how great life was if I didnāt have to write on a schedule. After doing TV work for ESPN during this fallās football season, I think Iāll go over to Italy to write books. Iām not going to do jack squat, and on weekends Iām not even going to do that.
You started the āNothing But Netsā anti-malaria campaign.
In 2006 I was stuck for a column idea. My daughter told me how 3,000 kids a day die simply because they donāt sleep under a malaria net in Africa. I said, āYouāve got to be kidding.ā
So I started this thing called Nothing But Nets. I called up the United Nations Foundation, which had something kind of like it. I said, āCan you put a little box on your website where people can donate to it?ā They said, āSure,ā and we got $100,000 the first week, and then it just took off. Weāre at $46 million now in eight years. The whole anti-malaria net movement has reduced the disease to less than 2,000 deaths per day now. This is a disease we can wipe out.
Do you still have a soft spot in your heart for CU?
I loved it there, but almost all of my journalism education came from formerĢżDaily CameraĢżsports editor Dan Creedon.
Iām a sophomore in college cranking out stories, covering the Broncos, writing columns, doing headlines, writing captions, getting yelled at and getting things thrown at me by Creedon. Then I am going to the bar at 1 a.m. and having him explain all the things I did wrong. Then I get to my 8 oāclock class at CU and theyāre talking about the Pennywhistle Press and stuff. It was a fine education ā donāt get me wrong ā but it was nothing like the University of Creedon.
Photography by Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY sports