|
Desmond "Des" Kelly (born 1965) is a British journalist and broadcaster. He presents a live, late-night sport/entertainment show on BT Sport called ''Follow the Football with Des Kelly''. Kelly is also executive producer of the programme, which originally launched as ''Life's a Pitch'' on 5 August 2013.〔http://sport.bt.com/watchnow/programmes/des-kelly-presents-lifes-a-pitch-S11374092420899〕 Kelly also presents SportsHUB, BT Sport's sports news programme, from Monday to Thursday. Kelly is a presenter on talkSPORT commercial national radio station, which broadcasts from London across the United Kingdom. He is the former host of ''The Press Pass'', a show introduced on the first weekend of the Premier League season in August 2011. He quit in August 2014 to concentrate on his BT commitments, but is still co-presenter with Colin Murray on Monday mid-mornings from 10am to 1pm. He has a column in the London Evening Standard every Monday. ==Journalism== A past winner of the SJA Sports Columnist of the Year award, Kelly was nominated as ''UK Press Gazette'' Sports Writer of the Year and commended on four separate occasions by the Sports Journalists' Association for his articles. In 2012 Kelly was named among the top 10 most influential sportswriters in Britain by the trade publication, UK Press Gazette.〔In 2012 Samuel was named top in a UK Press Gazette poll of Britain's best sports journalists.〕 Kelly was a sports columnist on The Daily Mail for nearly a decade, having joined the paper in 2004. A contributor to Sky News and BBC Breakfast, he is also a regular member of the BBC Radio Five Live ''Fighting Talk'' panel show and has appeared on ''Sportsweek'' and the BBC Radio 4 ''Today programme''. Previously, Kelly was the Acting Editor and Deputy Editor of the ''Daily Mirror''. Kelly replaced Piers Morgan after he was sacked for publishing faked photos of Iraqi prisoners being "tortured" by British troops〔(Editor sacked over 'hoax' photos ) BBC News 14 May 2004〕 and edited the paper in the wake of that controversy. Kelly was also 'forced out' of the ''Mirror'' later in 2004 when Richard Wallace was handed the position.〔Kelly forced out of the Mirror | url = http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/des-kelly-my-life-in-media-519169.html〕 He is a former Assistant Editor and Head of Sport of the ''Daily Express'', football editor of the ''Sunday Express'', and the Chief Sports Reporter of the now defunct'' Today'' newspaper. He was previously a columnist for ''The Sunday Times'', has written for ''GQ'', appeared in the German newspaper ''Bild'' and also ''L'Équipe'' in France. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Des Kelly」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|