DALLAS (FWAA) – The Navy Sports Information Office was named one of the Top 11 Sports Information Offices in the country by the Football Writers Association of America for the 2023 season it was announced today by the FWAA. This is the seventh time that Navy has been honored, including the fifth time in the last six years. Only Clemson (11) and Colorado (10) have been honored more than Navy.
Two first-time winners and nine previous ones comprise the 15th Super 11 Awards, presented annually by the Football Writers Association of America to the best performing College Sports Communications departments in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
In addition to the departmental awards, the FWAA presented a Super 11 Coach of the Year Award to Mike Norvell of Florida State. Norvell, entering his fifth season in Tallahassee, has granted outstanding access to his programs over the years. He is the sixth head coach to win this award and it comes in a season in which he won the ACC title in an undefeated regular season.
Previous recipients of the Super 11 individual award since its inception in the 2018 season have been Herm Edwards (Arizona State), Chris Klieman (Kansas State), Tom Allen (Indiana), Jeff Hafley (Boston College) and Sonny Dykes (TCU).
The Super 11 Award is a record 11th for Clemson and its staff led by Ross Taylor, Assistant Athletic Director for Football Communications. Nebraska and its staff led by Keith Mann, Associate Athletic Director for Communications, earned its 10th. Other awards with their CSC directors and their staffs went to Navy (Scott Strasemeier) for the seventh time, Kansas State (Ryan Lackey) and Pitt (E.J. Borghetti) each a sixth time, Kentucky (Susan Lax) and Oklahoma (Mike Houck) a third time and BYU (Brett Pyne) and Cal (Kyle McRae) a second time. The first-time recipients are Illinois (Brett Moore) and LSU (Michael Bonnette).
This year’s winners were deemed to have had excellent accessibility during the week of their games and after the game with a program’s players, coaches and coordinators/assistant coaches. Other criteria include beat reporter access, interview requests and decorum and protocols in the press box and locker room.
“We once again honor some programs who have provided great assistance to writers for many years and have demonstrated a culture of excellence in what they do in their press box in terms of accessibility to players and coaches,” said FWAA Executive Director Steve Richardson. “We applaud those programs as well as the two newcomer programs.”
“I want to thank these departments for fostering a welcoming environment and providing terrific access, allowing us to tell the stories that are informative and insightful,” said 2024 FWAA President Andrea Adelson of ESPN.com. “Rather than limit our access, they understand providing more than just a fleeting glimpse into their programs is a service not only to their players and coaches but to their respective fan bases as well.”
FWAA members provided input during the season when press boxes were judged on how well they were run and maintained in terms of neutrality, pool reporters, noise level and accessibility to the press box that could affect a media person’s ability to do his or her job.
In January of 2009, the FWAA released the first Super 11 Awards – a concept supported by the College Sports Communicators (formerly CoSIDA).
Founded in 1941, the Football Writers Association of America consists of journalists, broadcasters, publicists, photographers and key executives in all areas of college football. The FWAA works to govern media access and game-day operations while presenting awards and honors, including an annual FWAA All-America Team.