Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

NFL suits Neil to a tea!

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One of our own will be guiding television viewers through coverage of the 57th Super Bowl this weekend.

Kent man Neil Reynolds, the main host of NFL on Sky Sports since 2017, is in Arizona where he’s building up to Sunday’s showpiece between Philadelph­ia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs.

To be fronting one of the biggest sports events in the world is a privileged position but it’s one Reynolds has worked hard to achieve.

Growing up in Maidstone before moving to Medway, he started his career as an editorial assistant with the KM Group in 1994, working on the daily Kent Today title in Chatham. It was the foot in the door he needed and the start of a long road to fronting American football on Sky Sports.

“I was effectivel­y the tea boy,” said Reynolds. “I went from being the tea boy to sitting at the Super Bowl.

“It’s definitely something I don’t take for granted. I’m very fortunate to do what I do but I’ve also put in quite a lot of hard graft. I didn’t just pop up on TV.

“It’s been quite a journey and every Super Bowl I reflect on all the great people that have presented the sport in this country on TV and now I’m getting a go at it and helping to grow the game. “My job as editorial assistant was two things - make any tea or coffee the reporters wanted and file all their press cuttings. That was it. Then I started writing up little bits like weddings and bits from council meetings that no one really wanted to touch.

“I became a reporter for a couple of years, ventured into sport - I used to do the Medway Bears ice hockey-andthenile­fttogotoan American football newspaper.” Reynolds’ passion for NFL started in the 1980s, when Channel 4 started broadcasti­ng games. He became a fan of the Miami Dolphins and their legendary quarterbac­k Dan Marino. Reynolds took up the sport, playing in the British League for Medway Mustangs and the Invicta Eagles for 10 years.

He was close to playing profession­ally - trying out for the London Monarchs, where he made it to the final two kickers.

“A better journalist than a player”, Reynolds went on to work for the NFL and BBC radio before working his way up at Sky Sports. He was initially invited on to promote an American football book he’d written after being made redundant by the NFL, entitled Pain Gang.

“I did one show in the middle of the night,” said Reynolds.

“I started at one in the morning until about four, so Lord knows who I was promoting it to, but Sky liked me and I did a couple of years of the overnight shifts that their main presenting crew didn’t want to do.

“I stopped that for a couple of years because I did NFL on BBC Radio 5 Live, which was really good. I became a full-time co-presenter on Sky in 2011 and then the full-time main presenter in 2017.

“I’m very fortunate and also glad, because I’ve worked hard to help it, that NFL has never been bigger in this country. We have regularsea­son games - two at Tottenham and one at Wembley - every year. “There’s a Sky Sports NFL channel, so it’s definitely the right place at the right time.” Reynolds is hosting shows all this week in the build-up to Sunday’s match between the Chiefs and the Eagles, with Sky’s coverage starting at 10pm UK time (kick-off 11.30pm).

“It’s going to be a great game, I think, because the two teams are very evenly matched,” he said. “They’re the No.1 seeds in each Conference, they’ve both scored the same number of points 546 - which is crazy. I’m picking Philadelph­ia Eagles to win it in a close one.”

 ?? Picture: Sky Sports NFL ?? Neil Reynolds, far left, in the Sky Sports NFL studio
Picture: Sky Sports NFL Neil Reynolds, far left, in the Sky Sports NFL studio

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