January 2022 Ohio Golf Journal

Kaye Kessler Passes at the Age of 97 If it happened in Central Ohio, Kaye Kessler wrote about it. I began reading Kaye Kessler’s sports coverage in 1969, while attending Ohio State University. He always had the inside scoop on Woody Hayes, Fred Taylor and the Buckeyes. He began covering Jack Nicklaus, when he was just a 10-year-old kid, before he became the Golden Bear. Kessler covered every Memorial Tournament since its beginning in 1976. In 2016, Nicklaus honored Kaye, in a short ceremony held in the media room, as the only golf writer to have covered all 40 Memorials. His accomplishments are too many to list, but he was one of the great sports writers of his time and was universally recognized as such. Born in Toledo in 1923 he knew at an early age he wanted to write about sports and began working for the Columbus Citizen newspaper, while still in high school. Except for his service in the Army’s Intelligence Corps during World War II, Kaye could be found at various sporting events. He graduated with a journalism degree from OSU and was a sportswriter and columnist from 1946 until the demise of both the Citizen and the Citizen Journal. Hewas a very prolificwriter, who tirelessly covered Ohio State sports, Jack Nicklaus, the Masters, the U.S. Open, The World Series, The Super Bowl, The Olympics, and many other sports. He served as president of the Golf Writers Association of America and in 1984 was named Ohio Sportswriter of the Year. He won the Jake Wade award from the College Sports Information Directors. Perhaps Jack Nicklaus said it best in a tribute he posted to his Facebook account. “Writing for the Columbus Citizen-Journal, Kaye Kessler was the first sportswriter to cover me when I picked up the game at age 10. He went on to cover me throughout my career, becoming not only a trusted writer but a close friend to Barbara, me and our entire family. Kaye loved his craft, but I believe he loved the people in the game and around him even more. He was always a welcomed face, whether you were an athlete, or a fellow scribe. He informed and entertained By Fred Altvater Ohio Golf Journal

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