GoFundMe Aims to Help 93-year-old Sportswriter Cover Super Bowl

Jerry Green of Grosse Pointe is the only journalist to cover every Super Bowl, but 鈥楾he Detroit News鈥 doesn鈥檛 pay his expenses anymore
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jerry green
A GoFundMe has been launched to support sportswriter Jerry Green. // Photograph courtesy of Jenny Klein

The only journalist to cover every Super Bowl is heading to Los Angeles this weekend on his own dime on behalf of The Detroit News, which no longer pays his expenses 鈥 so fans have launched to defray the cost of the flight, hotel, and food.

Jerry Green, 93, of Grosse Pointe, was featured this week in recalling his illustrious six-decade career covering Detroit sports. As of 2020, Green was the last of the 338 credentialed reporters who covered Super Bowl I to have made it to every Super Bowl, but this could be his last time. He says he liked the idea of stopping at 56, the same number of consecutive games his childhood baseball idol Joe DiMaggio hit safely in for one of sports鈥 most vaunted records. Like DiMaggio, Green owns 鈥渁nother unbeatable record. That might be enough,鈥 he says.

While Green did not make a big deal out of the lack of financial support from The News, where he worked on staff from 1963 to 2004 and continues to contribute freelance columns, some Newsweek readers were offended that it鈥檚 on him to pay his way.

Amy Turner, a reader in Las Vegas, launched the GoFundMe with a $5,000 goal, writing: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a shame that newspapers are so cash-strapped these days that a 93-year-old has to pay to do his work, which he loses money on but does anyway because it鈥檚 his passion and livelihood. This could be Jerry鈥檚 last Super Bowl. Let鈥檚 raise enough money for Jerry and his daughter to fly direct, stay somewhere nice, and have some good meals. It鈥檚 only right that after more than 60 years, he gets to go out in style.鈥

After his retirement, The News asked him to continue to cover Super Bowls, but they stopped paying his way at least a decade ago, he says. For the past three years, he鈥檚 traveled with his daughter, Jenny Klein of Troy, to ensure his safety.

Among Green鈥檚 distinctions, he was one of a half-dozen reporters in an iconic Sports Illustrated photo of an impromptu press conference lounging by the pool before Super Bowl III. Green recalled that in a the 50th anniversary of that moment. He鈥檚 been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame as well as the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame and the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.

While Green is suffering the impact of aging 鈥 back and leg troubles, hearing difficulties 鈥 he still writes columns for The News, about his appreciation of the career of University of Michigan alum and seven-time Super Bowl champ Tom Brady. 鈥淭om Brady is a cherished No. 2 in my GOAT rankings,鈥 he wrote, referring to his personal 鈥済reatest of all time鈥 ranking. 鈥淢y GOAT? Johnny Unitas, in the high-topped, black cleated boots winning championships for the Baltimore Colts.鈥

Green鈥檚 journalistic acumen and stamina have been praised by others in the industry. 鈥淛erry has basically what appears to be a photographic memory 鈥 and the ability to put the history into context in the present,鈥 The Detroit News sports editor Gerald Ahern says in my Newsweek story. While Michael Signora, the NFL鈥檚 senior vice president for communications, says Green 鈥渋s a legend. He鈥檚 become synonymous with the Super Bowl, and I cannot imagine walking into the press box on game day and not seeing him. Jerry has chronicled this event from its inception, watching it grow and develop into something that has become part of the fabric of American life.鈥