Oak Mountain student working as SI Kid Reporter

Published 2:53 pm Tuesday, August 30, 2016

SI Kid Reporter Jack Ronilo, right, asked questions of Mississippi State football coach Dan Mullen at SEC Media Days and spent some time with the coach afterward.

SI Kid Reporter Jack Ronilo, right, asked questions of Mississippi State football coach Dan Mullen at SEC Media Days and spent some time with the coach afterward.

By CINDY WARNER / Shelby County Schools 

NORTH SHELBY – Football coaches attending Southeastern Conference Media Days in Hoover in July fielded questions from reporters from multiple media outlets, including 11-year-old Oak Mountain Middle School sixth-grader Jack Ronilo, who was working as a “Kid Reporter” for Sports Illustrated Kids.

Ronilo was selected in early February as one of 14 Kid Reporters for SI Kids after entering a contest. He is the only Kid Reporter from Alabama and one of three from the Southeast.

“I went to the SIkids.com website and entered the contest,” Ronilo said. “I had to write a 400-word essay about something that impacts the community. I chose to write about the Beat Bama, Beat Hunger; Beat Auburn, Beat Hunger food drive.”

As a winner of the contest, Ronilo is able to request media credentials as an SI Kid Reporter to cover various sporting events. His first media credentials were to cover the SEC Softball Tournament in May at Mississippi State University. Ronilo also covered the SEC Baseball Tournament in Hoover.

Ronilo’s most recent assignment was covering the week-long SEC Media Days event at the Hyatt Regency – Wynfrey Hotel in Hoover. While attending the event, Ronilo had the opportunity to not only ask questions of the SEC coaches, but he also interviewed sports analysts for the SEC Network and ESPN, including Greg McElroy, Joe Tessitore, Marcus Spears and Peter Burns. His interview with them is the topic of one of his current features on the SI Kids website, which can be found at SIKids.com.

Ronilo was also called upon to ask questions of seven of the SEC coaches during their time on the podium. Those coaches included Derek Mason of Vanderbilt, Dan Mullen of Mississippi State, Butch Jones of Tennessee, Barry Odom of Missouri, Mark Stoops of Kentucky, Will Muschamp of South Carolina and Hugh Freeze of Ole Miss.

Those interviews were airing live on the SEC Network that week. As the various reporters asked questions, the cameras panned to them in the audience. Ronilo was featured several times stating his name, his affiliation with Sports Illustrated Kids, and then asking his questions of the various coaches.

His favorite question was to Mississippi State’s head coach, Dan Mullen. Ronilo first asked Mullen about a new coach. He followed that question with one asking about Mullen’s shoes, a pair of Adidas Yeezy Boost 750’s designed by Kanye West. Mullen not only scored points with Ronilo for answering his question about the popular shoes but also for taking extra time with him later in the day.

“Dan Mullen was the nicest of all the coaches,” Ronilo said. “They are on a really tight schedule, but he took the time to come over to me and get a picture.”

For Ronilo, who has been a sports fan since he was a small child, the whole experience of being a Sports Illustrated Kid Reporter has been a dream come true.

“It is exciting! At the age of 4, he could recognize and name most every collegiate football helmet,” his mom Beth said. “He has been wanting to do something like this since he was little. We always talked about how he needed to go on the Paul Finebaum show.”

“I just think it has been unbelievable,” added Ronilo. “I never thought anything like this would happen.”

Next up for Ronilo will be coverage of the University of Alabama versus the University of Southern California football game on Sept. 3 in Dallas, Texas. He has also put in his request for media credentials to cover the University of Tennessee matchup against Virginia Tech on Sept. 10 at Bristol Motorspeedway and SEC Championship Media Day.