2024 Jenkins Medal Winners
Washington Post columnist Sally Jenkins has won the 2024 Jenkins Medal for Best Sportswriting for her profile on tennis legends Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova, "Bitter Rivals. Beloved Friends. Survivors." Grant Wahl has won the 2024 Jenkins Medal for Lifetime Achievement for his body of work at Sports Illustrated, CBS Sports and his independent site Futbol with Grant Wahl.
This is the eighth iteration of the Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting. The awards are selected annually by a jury of working sports journalists in honor of the legendary Texas sportswriter and best-selling author, who defined the sportswriter’s craft for a generation. The winners will be celebrated with a dinner in their honor on September 4, 2024 (6-9 pm) and the Headliners Club in Austin. Dinner seats, tables and sponsorships can be purchased now.
Sally Jenkins
Jenkins' award-winning article, published on July 3, 2023, offered a deep chronicle on Evert's and Navratilova's overlapping cancer battles in the context of their life-long relationship as elite competitors on the tennis court. In early 2022, Evert was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Later that year Navratilova was diagnosed with throat and breast cancer. The competitors, who had met in 80 matches (60 of them tournament finals) in their days jockeying for position as world Number One, stood firm together against the disease and got a deeper glimpse into the complexity of their relationship.
From CSCM Director Dr. Michael Butterworth:
"With this award, Sally Jenkins becomes the first writer to win both the Lifetime Achievement and Best Sportswriting medals. Her winning feature is something only Jenkins could have captured. It is an intimate portrayal of Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova, the tennis legends who defined their sport for a generation. Jenkins evokes the depths of the Evert-Navratilova rivalry and friendship in a way that resonates for readers well beyond the tennis court. It is an exceptional accomplishment, clearly deserving of this year's Best Sportswriting medal."
Grant Wahl
Wahl, who died from a ruptured aortic aneurysm on December 10, 2022 at age 49 while in Lusail, Qatar, covering the 2022 FIFA World Cup, is cited for his unparalleled work as an American sportswriter covering soccer, the world's most popular sport. In launching www.grantwahl.com in 2021, Wahl published in-depth magazine-style stories on men’s and women’s soccer in the U.S. and abroad, reporting on-location from the sport’s biggest events, including World Cups and World Cup qualifying. He covered soccer at Sports Illustrated for 25 years and and began working in television in 2012. In all, he covered 11 World Cups—six men’s, five women’s—and wrote two books: The Beckham Experiment (2009), the first soccer book to make the New York Times Best Seller list, and Masters of Modern Soccer (2018), about the craft of soccer position by position.
From Dr. Butterworth:
"It is with bittersweet feelings that we celebrate the career and life of Grant Wahl with the Lifetime Achievement medal. Wahl's sudden passing in 2022 has left a significant void in sports coverage, but the greater losses are the joy and humanity with which he approached his craft. It is fair to say that no one did more to bring the world's most popular sport to readers in the United States, helping to educate and engage a new generation of fans. More importantly, he approached his work with generosity and humility, seeking to include everyone in the conversation and to use sport as a way to better understand the world. Although we lament that his career was cut far too short, we are grateful for his contributions and congratulate his family on this recognition."
The co-chair of the 2024 Jenkins Medal jury is Michael MacCambridge. Members of the Best Sportswriting jury were Kevin Blackistone, Kirk Bohls, Christine Brennan, Bryan Curtis, Melanie Hauser, Peter King, Jackie MacMullen, Kevin Robbins, John A. Walsh and Alexander Wolff. The jury for Lifetime Achievement in Sportswriting was comprised of Chuck Culpepper, Vahe Gregorian, Michael Hurd, Will Leitch, Elizabeth Merrill, Joe Posnanski, Steve Rushin, Wright Thompson, and Seth Wickersham. Jury co-chair Sally Jenkins, Dan Jenkins' daughter, recused herself from award deliberations this year.
2024 Jenkins Medal Finalists
The Center for Sports Communication & Media has announced 12 nominees for Best Sportswriting of the year for the eighth iteration of the Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting. The awards are presented annually in honor of the legendary Texas sportswriter and best-selling author, who defined the sportswriter’s craft for a generation.
The Jenkins Medal is awarded in two categories:
- The Dan Jenkins Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Sportswriting
- The Dan Jenkins Medal for Best Sportswriting
The Best Sportswriting award cites accomplishment for a single piece published in the previous calendar year (2023). Both awards are accompanied by a cash prize. The nominees for the 2024 Best Sportswriting category are:
- Andrea Adelson, A Shattered Family Forgives Phillies Pitcher Andrew Bellatti, for ESPN.com, August 20, 2023
- Roberto Jose Andrade Franco, The Cowboys Conflict: The Cost of Rooting for America's Team, for ESPN.com, January 16, 2023
- Brian Burnsed, They’re the Toughest of the Tough, But When Their NFL Teammates Started Dying, These Players Grew Afraid, for SInow.com, January 31, 2023
- Matt Dollinger, Bob Knight Was Larger Than Life in Indiana. He Still Is, TheRinger.com, November 2, 2023
- Tyler Dunne, “I’m Still Alive: The Zay Jones Story, for GoLong.com, June 23, 2023
- Mirin Fader, Greg Oden’s Long Walk Home, for The Ringer.com, Mar 8, 2023
- Danny Heifetz, The NFL and Amazon Are Coming for Black Friday… and Your Holiday Spending, for TheRinger.com, Nov. 21, 2023
- Sally Jenkins, Bitter Rivals. Beloved Friends. Survivors, for The Washington Post, June 3, 2023
- Diane Mehta, Epiphany at the Y, for Virginia Quarterly Review, Spring/Summer 2023
- Dan Moore, The Long, Sad Story of the Stealing of the Oakland A's, for TheRinger.com, June 21, 2023
- Marcus Thompson II, Chris Paul, a trip to San Quentin, and a Window into What He Brings to the Warriors, for TheAthletic.com, October 12,2023
- Jessica Wilkerson, Lady Vols Country, for Oxford American, Summer 2023
From Jenkins Medal jury Co-Chair Michael MacCambridge:
"The entire history of this award speaks to the deep well of talent in the sportswriting space, but this year’s field was particularly competitive. The twelve nominated stories demonstrate different styles and literary approaches—further illustrating that the field contains multitudes—but they share a compelling gift for storytelling and a sense of profound empathy."
From CSCM Director Dr. Michael Butterworth:
"The 2024 Jenkins nominations celebrate sports journalism at its very best," said CSCM Director Michael Butterworth. "This year's authors focus on individual journeys, intimate friendships, and communal bonds that remind us of the central role sports plays in so many lives. The nominees include voices both familiar and new, and we are especially pleased to acknowledge work across the increasingly diverse landscape where great sportswriting can be found. The 2024 nominees are a spectacular reflection of the enduring power of sports and sports storytelling."
Final voting for Best Sportswriting award will be conducted by a jury of sportswriters that include committee members Kevin Blackistone, Kirk Bohls, Christine Brennan, Bryan Curtis, Melanie Hauser, Peter King, Jackie MacMullen, Kevin Robbins, John A. Walsh and Alexander Wolff.
The voting for Lifetime Achievement in Sportswriting will be conducted by the co-chairs Jenkins and MacCambridge with a committee that includes Chuck Culpepper, Vahe Gregorian, Michael Hurd, Will Leitch, Elizabeth Merrill, Joe Posnanski, Steve Rushin, Wright Thompson, and Seth Wickersham. Nominees for the lifetime achievement award are not made public.
The 2024 Best Sportswriting and Lifetime Achievement winners will be announced in the coming months. CSCM will host an in-person dinner this fall in Austin to celebrate the winners.
Dan Jenkins
Dan Jenkins was an award-winning sportswriter and best-selling novelist whose career spanned more than six decades. He was the author of 24 books—12 novels and 12 works of non-fiction. Jenkins wrote for newspapers in Fort Worth and Dallas for 15 years before he became nationally known for his stories in Sports Illustrated. After more than 25 years at SI, Jenkins was a columnist for Playboy and Golf Digest. Three of his best-selling novels—Semi-Tough, Dead Solid Perfect, and Baja Oklahoma—have been made into movies.
For a lifetime of excellence in his profession, Jenkins has received the Red Smith Award from the Associated Press Sports Editors Association, the Ring Lardner Award from the Union League of Chicago, the PEN/ESPN Award for literary sports writing, the lifetime achievement award in sports journalism from the PGA of America and the William D. Richardson Award for outstanding contributions to the game from the Golf Writers Association of America. He is one of only three sportswriters to be inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame. He has also been inducted into the National Sportswriters and Sportscasters Hall of Fame, the Texas Sports Hall of Fame, the Texas Golf Hall of Fame, and the TCU Lettermens Hall of Fame. But Jenkins said he was proudest of the fact that he managed to stay employed by one publication or another throughout his long career.
Rhoden, Junod and Lavigne Honored in 2023
Tom Junod, Paula Lavigne and William C. Rhoden were named winners of the seventh annual Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting. Junod and Lavigne won the Jenkins Medal for Best Sportswriting (of 2022) for their ESPN article "Untold". Rhoden wons for his body of work (spanning over 50 years) as an author, "Sports of the Times" columnist for The New York Times and currently as columnist and editor-at-large for Andscape (formerly The Undefeated). All were be honored at the Jenkins Medal award ceremony in Austin. Click through for more information on the 2023 nominees and a video of the awards dinner.
Passan, Jenkins Reset Awards Dinner
Jeff Passan and Sally Jenkins received the 2022 Jenkins Medals for Best Sportswriting and Lifetime Acheivement (respectively) at the reboot of the annual awards dinner after the COVID-19 pandemic. The ceremony also featured medal presentations to Liz Merrill, Rick Telander, Mitchell S. Jackson and Roger Angell (posthumously). NFL Hall of Famer Charles "Mean Joe" Greene received the 2022 Jenkins Medal Sports Legend award.
Distinguished Accomplishment: Angell, Jackson
Roger Angell and Mitchell S. Jackson have been named 2021 award winners by the Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting jury.
Angell, who died in 2022, was a senior editor and a staff writer at The New Yorker, where he first began working in 1944. He wrote more than a hundred Sporting Scene pieces for the magazine, mostly on baseball but also on tennis, hockey, football, rowing, and horse racing. He is the author of numerous books - many on baseball - including, “The Summer Game,” “Five Seasons,” “Late Innings,” “Season Ticket,” “Once More Around the Park,” “A Pitcher’s Story,” and “Game Time.” The only writer ever elected by both the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
Jackson received the 2021 Jenkins Medal for Best Sportswriting for "Twelve Minutes and a Life" which was published in Runner's World. The article recounts the death of Ahmaud Arbery who was murdered after going out for a jog. In the piece, Jackson recounts the circumstances that led to Arbery’s murder in Glynn County, Georgia. Jackson’s piece also won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing and the 2021 National Magazine Award in Feature Writing.
Telander, Merrill Recognized in 2020
Rick Telander and Elizabeth Merrill have been named 2020 award winners by the Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting jury. Telander receives the Lifetime Achievement award while Merrill is recognized for the best sportswriting of the year (2019). The winners will be celebrated in a video compilation under production. They will participate in the 2021 Jenkins Medal dinner and award ceremony when in-person events resume post-coronavirus. This is the fourth year these national awards have been presented. They are named in honor of Jenkins, the legendary Texas sportswriter, to celebrate the craft and culture of sportswriting he personified through his storied career.
Smith, Spain, Sheinin (and Nicklaus!!!) Celebrated for 2019
Gary Smith, Sarah Spain and Dave Sheinin have been named 2019 award winners by the Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting jury. Smith receives the Lifetime Achievement award, while Spain and Sheinin are recognized for the best sportswriting of the previous year. The winners will be celebrated and receive their medals at a banquet at the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth on Oct. 25, hosted by The University of Texas at Austin’s Center for Sports Communication & Media. This year’s ceremony honored the legacy of Dan Jenkins, who passed away in March 2019 at age 90, featuring a conversation with legendary golfer Jack Nicklaus, who received the inaugural Jenkins Medal Sports Legend award.
Kindred, Ballard Recognized with 2018 Medals
Dave Kindred and Chris Ballard were among dozens of distinguished sports journalists, faculty members and university officials who attended the second annual awards banquet hosted by the Center for Sports Communication & Media at UT-Austin's DKR Texas Memorial Stadium. NBC Sports broadcaster Mary Carillo emceed the event, attended by Jenkins and his family, including his daughter, Sally Jenkins, a columnist at The Washington Post. Kindred, a beloved figure in the sportswriting community, was recognized with the Jenkins Medal for Career Achievement in sportswriting, for an body of work, featuring stints at Atlanta Journal Constitution, The National Sports Daily, Sporting News, The Washington Post and Golf Digest. Ballard, a writer for Sports Illustrated, was presented with the Jenkins Medal for Best Sportswriting of 2017 for his profile, “You Can't Give In,” a moving profile of NBA coach Monty Williams, enduring tremendous personal loss.
Deford, Thompson Honored at Innaugural Dinner
Frank Deford and Wright Thompson were named winners of the first-annual Dan Jenkins Medals for Excellence in Sportswriting during a ceremony in Dallas on Oct. 13, hosted by The University of Texas at Austin Center for Sports Communication & Media. The national awards, named after the legendary Texas sportswriter Dan Jenkins, were presented before a sellout crowd of 150 at the Pecan Room in Dallas. Deford, a sportswriting icon, was recognized posthumously with the Jenkins Medal for Career Achievement in sportswriting, for an unsurpassed career that defined cultural engagement with and observation of American and international sports. Thompson, a writer for ESPN The Magazine, was presented with the Jenkins Medal for Best Sportswriting of 2016 for his profile, “The Secret History of Tiger Woods.”