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Kenny Kott, a longtime sports-talk radio producer at 97.1 The Ticket, has died.
Kott died Saturday at the age of 32, Ticket host Mike Valenti announced on the air Monday. Kott was a producer for Valenti and Rico Beard's afternoon drive-time show, and frequently contributing on-air analysis, particularly when the topic turned to his beloved Red Wings.
The Ticket said Kott suffered a "medical event" in early June that left him hospitalized for the last few weeks. Valenti delivered an emotional tribute to Kott on the air Monday.
"We're heartbroken," Valenti said. "Genuinely, I'm struggling to find the words for this."
"He's a part of our dysfunctional family."
Kott, a Utica Eisenhower High School graduate, was promoted to a board operator at The Ticket in December 2017, and he's been long been a staple on the popular "Valenti Show with Rico."
He was known for an infectious laugh and his deep hockey knowledge, proudly accepted his coworkers' moniker of being a member of the "Hockey Elite." As a kid, he took selfies with the Stanley Cup and Steve Yzerman. Ken Kal, Red Wings radio broadcaster, wrote on social media, "Kenny was a big hockey fan and also knew the game."
"I just want you to know what we truly thought of Kenny, beyond the jokes and the ball-breaking and the rest," Valenti said on air Monday. "I would always bust his chops, like, 'Man, what do you want out of life? What is it you want, so I can help deliver this?' And he would say, 'No, I just always wanted to be part of a radio show.' And I'd say, 'OK, well, you did that, and you're part of the best one. So, what's next?'
"I would always push him, and I said this to his wife, the reason I pushed him so hard is because I believed in him more than he believed in himself."
Kott got married in the summer of 2025.
David Hall, a producer at 97.1, worked alongside Kott for six years.
"I'm going to miss him," Hall said on the air Monday. "It's a huge loss for us, because as Mike said, we are a team. We get on each other, we get at each other, but we all love each other, and that's the important part.
"We loved Kenny and we're definitely going to miss him."
Jeff Riger, a host at 97.1, wrote on X (formerly Twitter) on Monday: "Kenny was a natural at radio and a tremendous human being. Being gone so young is not fair."
Last month, 97.1 The Ticket host Pat Caputo died after a battle with pancreative cancer. He was 67.
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@tonypaul1984
This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Kenny Kott, producer at 97.1 The Ticket, dies at 32: 'We're heartbroken'
Continue reading...
Kott died Saturday at the age of 32, Ticket host Mike Valenti announced on the air Monday. Kott was a producer for Valenti and Rico Beard's afternoon drive-time show, and frequently contributing on-air analysis, particularly when the topic turned to his beloved Red Wings.
The Ticket said Kott suffered a "medical event" in early June that left him hospitalized for the last few weeks. Valenti delivered an emotional tribute to Kott on the air Monday.
'We're heartbroken:' 97.1 The Ticket's Kenny Kott passes away at 32
Mike Valenti: "I would always bust his chops, like, 'Man, what do you want out of life? ... And he would always say, 'No, I just always wanted to be part of a radio show."https://t.co/9lVmvjXJNc
— 97.1 The Ticket: (@971theticketxyt) June 29, 2026
"We're heartbroken," Valenti said. "Genuinely, I'm struggling to find the words for this."
"He's a part of our dysfunctional family."
Kott, a Utica Eisenhower High School graduate, was promoted to a board operator at The Ticket in December 2017, and he's been long been a staple on the popular "Valenti Show with Rico."
He was known for an infectious laugh and his deep hockey knowledge, proudly accepted his coworkers' moniker of being a member of the "Hockey Elite." As a kid, he took selfies with the Stanley Cup and Steve Yzerman. Ken Kal, Red Wings radio broadcaster, wrote on social media, "Kenny was a big hockey fan and also knew the game."
"I just want you to know what we truly thought of Kenny, beyond the jokes and the ball-breaking and the rest," Valenti said on air Monday. "I would always bust his chops, like, 'Man, what do you want out of life? What is it you want, so I can help deliver this?' And he would say, 'No, I just always wanted to be part of a radio show.' And I'd say, 'OK, well, you did that, and you're part of the best one. So, what's next?'
"I would always push him, and I said this to his wife, the reason I pushed him so hard is because I believed in him more than he believed in himself."
Kott got married in the summer of 2025.
David Hall, a producer at 97.1, worked alongside Kott for six years.
"I'm going to miss him," Hall said on the air Monday. "It's a huge loss for us, because as Mike said, we are a team. We get on each other, we get at each other, but we all love each other, and that's the important part.
"We loved Kenny and we're definitely going to miss him."
Awful to hear about Kenny Kott.
We had so many great conversations sitting outside the studio while making fun of the fact that the NHL Network was always on TV. (Because of him lol)
Kenny was a natural at radio and a tremendous human being.
Being gone so young is not fair.
— Jeff Riger (@riger1984) June 29, 2026
Jeff Riger, a host at 97.1, wrote on X (formerly Twitter) on Monday: "Kenny was a natural at radio and a tremendous human being. Being gone so young is not fair."
Last month, 97.1 The Ticket host Pat Caputo died after a battle with pancreative cancer. He was 67.
[email protected]
@tonypaul1984
This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Kenny Kott, producer at 97.1 The Ticket, dies at 32: 'We're heartbroken'
Continue reading...