ESPN Reporter Edward Aschoff Dies On Birthday At Age 34

Aschoff, who covered college football for the sports network, had recently fallen ill.
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ESPN reporter Edward Aschoff died Tuesday on his 34th birthday, just months before he was to be married. He had recently contracted pneumonia, according to his social media posts.

The sports network said Aschoff died after “a brief illness,” and called the reporter’s death “devastating” in a statement.

Aschoff, who covered college football on television and for ESPN’s website, began working for the network in 2011.

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Edward Aschoff joined ESPN in 2011 and his role expanded into national reporting on college football for television, radio and the website.
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In 2016, he and fellow ESPN reporter Adam Rittenberg won a Football Writers Association of America contest for an enterprise story about racial tension in college football, the sports network noted in its obituary.

Rittenberg mourned Aschoff on Twitter, calling him “a great colleague and an even better friend. All of us are devastated and heartbroken. Just isn’t fair. I love you, Ed, and will miss you.”

“Ed was one of the smartest, brightest reporters I’ve ever had the pleasure of working with,” ESPN executive editor Lauren Reynolds said in the network’s obit. “Watching him grow from our co-SEC reporter with Chris Low to a multi-platform national reporter was a treat. For as good of a reporter Ed was, he was an even better person.”

Aschoff grew up in Oxford, Mississippi, graduated from the University of Florida and wrote for the Gainesville Sun before joining ESPN.

Aschoff and his fiancee, Katy Berteau, had their wedding planned for April in New Orleans, USA Today reported.

On Dec. 5 Aschoff tweeted about having pneumonia and added later that he had been battling a virus for a few weeks. 

“Doctors think it turned into this multifocal pneumonia recently,” he wrote in another tweet. “I’m on day 4 of antibiotics. Days are getting better but nights are basically fever and coughing and sweating.”

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