2021: Mirin Fader,
The Ringer During her time at the Register, Mirin would go anywhere
in pursuit of a story. The sport didn't matter, the subject didn't matter
she simply wanted to write a quality piece. And, to be honest: The stuff
was a little
erratic. Mirin wasn't one to pass up a hackneyed clichι;
didn't mind telling us the Orange Lutheran High quarterback was "the
baby of the family." But she kept working at it; working at it; digging,
scratching, clawing. When she'd sit down to read a piece by Wright Thompson
or Sally Jenkins, she'd do so with pen in hand, taking (wait for it) notes.
Studying ledes. Noting transitions. Before long, her stuff was leaping off
the page, and when Bleacher Report came calling in 2017, the site found
itself with a dynamic and insatiably curious staff writer.
2020: Chris Heady,
Omaha World Herald Omaha World-Herald sportswriter Chris Heady
has had a meteoric rise in his journalism career. His accomplishments are
exactly why he was recognized with the 2020 Rising Star Award, given annually
by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association to a member under the age of
30 who shows great promise as a college basketball writer. Heady joins an
elite group recognized for this honor, including Sam Vecenie and Eamonn
Brennan of The Athletic, Myron Medcalf of ESPN and Laura Keeley of the Raleigh
News & Observer. Heady said that when USBWA president Mike Waters delivered
the good news, it was hard to believe.
2019: Sam Vecenie,
The Athletic Fittingly, the USBWA discovered a Rising Star in
Hollywood. Yet glitz and glamour have little to do with the latest winner
of the award given to the organization's top basketball writer under the
age of 30: Sam Vecenie. Vecenie, 28, is a roll-up-the-sleeves kind of guy
as a senior writer at The Athletic specializing in the NBA draft. He must
be an expert in the worlds of both the NBA and college basketball and
on the top prep players as well. Then he must determine where those prospects
would fit best on NBA teams and be able to convey that knowledge in an entertaining
manner.
2018: Nicole Auerbach,
The Athletic When your last name is Auerbach, you should be involved
in basketball. Nicole Auerbach is not only still involved, she is this year's
winner of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association's Rising Star award. Though
Auerbach switched jobs over the summer, she earned the honor through her
body of work at USA Today and because she will continue to write about college
basketball for The Athletic's college basketball wing, the Fieldhouse. While
she was the primary college basketball writer for USA Today, her emphasis
at The Athletic is on college football for the All-American.
2017: David Gardner,
Sports Illustrated A restless nature has served David Gardner
well over his young career. The 27-year-old Gardner, named the USBWA's Rising
Star by past winners of the award, recently joined Bleacher Report as a
staff writer and will write columns and long-form stories there about college
basketball. Three years before that, Gardner became the college basketball
editor for Sports Illustrated's website. "I think I am kind of a wanderer
by nature, and there are a lot of things (in college basketball) to grasp
my attention," said Gardner, who will begin his new job at Bleacher
Report on Feb. 27. "There are so many people, so many stories, and
all of them are interesting to me. At SI.com, Gardner exhibited a versatility
beyond his years.
2016: Laura Keeley,
Raleigh News & Observer It is significant enough that the
Raleigh News & Observer's Laura Keeley is the first woman to be named
the USBWA's Rising Star. Perhaps just as meaningful, Keeley emerged from
a pool of eight strong candidates for the award, given annually to a member
who is under the age of 30 who shows great promise as a college basketball
writer. And that half of those candidates were women.
2015: Michael Cohen,
Memphis Commercial Appeal The USBWA's next Rising Star emerged
from the long shadows of ESPN. Michael Cohen, a 24-year-old sports enterprise
reporter for the Commercial Appeal in Memphis, grew up fewer than 10 miles
from the ESPN campus in Bristol, Conn, and about 45 miles from Storrs, home
of the UConn Huskies. Naturally, he was determined to become a sports broadcaster.
CohenWhile still in high school, Cohen called play-by-play for games involving
his own and other high schools on a local radio station. He hosted a sports
talk show. He then enrolled at Syracuse University's renowned sports broadcasting
program. That's where he discovered that his heart was really in print journalism.
2014: Eamonn Brennan,
ESPN Before Eamonn Brennan entered into the blogosphere for the
ride of his life, there was a USBWA-related event in 2006 that convinced
him that becoming a sportswriter was in fact a journey that he wanted to
take. Back then, Brennan was an Indiana University student who was attending
the USBWA's "Fullcourt Press," an event held for college students in Bloomington,
Ind., just prior to that Final Four. Brennan won a writing contest that
allowed him to attend the Florida-UCLA championship game held at the Final
Four in Indianapolis.
2013: Myron Medcalf,
ESPN.com ESPN.com's Myron Medcalf was named the fourth recipient
of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association's Rising Star Award, given annually
to a member who is under the age of 30 and has shown great promise as a
college basketball writer. ESPN.com employed Medcalf, 29, in 2010 as a regular
contributor through columns, features, live chats, blogs, video and analysis.
Prior to joining ESPN.com, Medcalf spent six seasons at the Minneapolis
Star-Tribune covering crime, city politics and the University of Minnesota
men's basketball program. He was named Minnesota's AP Young Journalist of
the Year in 2006.
2012: Steve Yanda,
Washington Post Steve Yanda's road to the USBWA's Rising
Star Award has sent him crisscrossing the United States, to a foreign country
and to the sharp end of a former Notre Dame forward's chin. Yanda, 24,
who covers Virginia for the Washington Post, is the third recipient of the
honor given to a member of the USBWA who is under 30 and has distinguished
himself in our profession. Past winners include Dan Wolken (then of the
Memphis Commercial Appeal) and Kevin Armstrong of the New York Daily News.
Yanda has also covered Maryland for the Post and helped with coverage of
Gary Williams' retirement and the search for his successor.
2011: Kevin Armstrong, New
York Daily News Kevin Armstrong of the New York Daily News has
been named the second winner of the USBWA's Rising Star Award, given
to a member of the organization who is under 30 and has shown exceptional
journalistic skills. Armstrong, 27, became a staff writer for the Daily
News in April 2010 and continues to contribute to SI.com. He also has written
about college basketball for the Boston Globe, the New York Times and Street
and Smith's. His most rewarding feature, on talent evaluator Tom Konchalski,
won first place for magazine length features in the USBWA's most recent
best-writing contest. He also took third place for a profile on Jay Wright
in 2009.
2010: Dan Wolken,
Memphis Commercial Appeal Dan Wolken of The (Memphis) Commercial
Appeal has been named the recipient of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association's
Rising Star Award, announced today. The award, in its first year, allows
the USBWA to recognize top young talent covering the sport of college basketball.
Nominees must be USBWA members under the age of 30. Wolken has covered the
University of Memphis Tigers for The Commercial Appeal since 2006 and also
worked for nearly five years at The (Colorado Springs) Gazette on a variety
of beats. He chronicled the final three years of the John Calipari era,
from its highest highs (the Tigers' 2008 run to the national championship
game) to its lowest lows (Memphis vacating 38 victories and its 2008 Final
Four by the NCAA Committee on Infractions).
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