Ivan Maisel

Ivan Maisel is a national college football writer, most recently for ESPN, and book author. His memoir of his relationship with his late son Max, I Keep Trying to Catch His Eye, will be published by Hachette Book Group in October 2021.

Maisel in 2018

Biography

Maisel was born to a Jewish family in Mobile, Alabama, the son of Freida Gutlow Maisel and real estate developer Herman Maisel.[1] He has one brother, Elliot Maisel, and one sister, Kathy Bronstein.[1] Ivan Maisel has often joked about his odd background, being a Jewish Alabamian.

An alumnus of Murphy High in Mobile and Stanford University, Maisel began his career at The Atlanta Constitution in 1981, where he covered Clemson's unlikely run to the national championship. Sports Illustrated hired him as a Reporter (fact-checker) the following year. He began covering national college football in 1987 for the Dallas Morning News, then moved to Newsday in 1994. He rejoined Sports Illustrated in 1997 as a Senior Writer. In 2002, ESPN.com hired him as its first college football writer. Maisel appeared on ESPN television, radio and podcasts. For many years he co-hosted the ESPN college football podcast. His regular guests included ESPN analyst Beano Cook (until Cook's death in October 2012), Gene Wojciechowski, and other ESPN colleagues.

Maisel served as the Editor-at-Large of ESPN College Football 150, the multi-platform project commemorating the 2019 sesquicentennial of the sport. In that role, Maisel served as the writer and host of Down & Distance, a podcast series, as a producer of The American Game and The Greatest, two 11-week series, and as a producer of Saturdays in the South, an eight-week series on the SEC Network. ESPN College Football 150 created more than 30 hours of television that continues to air and stream on ESPN.

Maisel has been honored eight times for Best Story by the Football Writers Association of America, most recently for a 2019 remembrance of author Dan Jenkins. The FWAA honored Maisel in 2016 with the Bert McGrane Award, the organization’s Hall of Fame. He has been honored twice by the Associated Press Sports Editors, who in 2019 named him one of the 10 best sports columnists in the nation. In 2020, the College Sports Information Directors of America presented Maisel the Jake Wade Award for his contribution to intercollegiate athletics. Maisel also won the Edwin Pope Vanguard Media Award from the Orange Bowl in 2019.

Maisel announced on Twitter in November 2020 that ESPN had informed him it would not renew his contract. He left the company in January 2021.

Maisel's son, Max, went missing and was last seen on Sunday, February 22, 2015 leaving his apartment complex in Rochester, NY. On Friday, April 18, 2015 a body matching Max Maisel's description was found in Lake Ontario. On April 21, 2015 Max's body was positively identified.[2] Max was a junior professional photographic illustration student at RIT.[3] Maisel would later say "circumstantial evidence" pointed to suicide as the cause of Max's death.[4]

In September 2018, Maisel authored a story about the death of Tyler Hilinski, a Washington State quarterback who died by suicide, and Maisel's bond with the Hilinski family. [5] Maisel serves on the board of directors of the Jordan Porco Foundation, which works to prevent suicide and promote mental health among young adults.

References

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