ST. LOUIS (USBWA) – Michael Cohen, a sports enterprise reporter
for the Memphis Commercial Appeal, has been named the winner of
the U.S. Basketball Writers Association's Rising Star Award,
which is presented annually by the USBWA to a member under 30 years
of age who demonstrates journalistic excellence.
Cohen, 24, emerged from the long shadows of ESPN to begin a career
that led him to winning the award.
He 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.
While 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.
Cohen was "so hell-bent on broadcasting" that he had not written
for the student newspaper at Lewis S. Mills High School in his hometown
of Burlington, Conn. An instrumental AP English teacher, Nina Fournier,
had drilled her students on the finer points of writing, but Cohen
had ignored her encouragement to pursue a writing career.
But when Rece Davis, also a Burlington resident, was among a
few from ESPN who advised Cohen that writing was an essential skill
to becoming a good broadcaster, Cohen began to listen.
In his first week as a Syracuse freshman, Cohen wrote a trial
story for the Daily Orange that was published. He was given his
first beat, covering the now-defunct swimming and diving team.
"I just fell in love with it," said Cohen, who switched majors
following his freshman year.
Davis and Fournier are just two of the guardian angels who have
guided Cohen along his journalistic journey.
As a junior, Cohen was the sports editor of the Daily Orange
when the Bernie Fine scandal broke. That's also when he met Syracuse
alum Pete Thamel, who had not yet moved from the New York Times
to Sports Illustrated.
"Obviously, I had never dealt with anything like the (scandal)
before, and I was totally overwhelmed and just treading water,"
Cohen said. "Then I got an email from Pete, whom I'd never spoken
to before, and he basically said if I needed any help with this
to feel free to give him a call.
"Ever since then, he has been the most crucial mentor I could
ever imagine."
Thamel introduced Cohen to others, wrote recommendations for
him and continues to help him with stories.
"I owe him for just about everything in this business," said
Cohen. "He is as kind and as friendly a person as I can imagine,
considering that he reached out to someone who was essentially a
total stranger and a 21-year-old kid."
Cohen also counts Dana O'Neil of espn.com and fellow Syracuse
alum Greg Bishop of SI as mentors. They have seen the same things
in Cohen that made Thamel so willing to help with his career.
"Michael has exhibited a confluence of story sense, investigative
chops and flat writing ability that make him one of the best young
writers in the country," Thamel said. "His work exhibits a relentless
desire to make the extra phone call, dig a layer deeper and tell
the story behind the story."
Cohen, who also covered Syracuse football for nearly a year at
the Post-Standard, was still a student when one of those stories
placed in the USBWA's best-writing contest.
"That was a surreal moment for me that made me want to work even
harder, because I could see that I was close," he said. "There were
definitely people on that list who can write circles around me,
but I was making progress.
"That showed me that I was headed in the right direction and
that my decision to leave broadcast behind was a good one."
|