Dear Agonis Club Members and Friends

​2016 Agonis Person Of The Year - Mr. Clark Kellogg

Proud Sponsor of The Agonis Club 2016 Person Of The Year
– Mr. Clark Kellogg

A Celebration Dinner Ceremony will follow the golf outing at Medallion Golf Club, and you can nowbuy tickets for Golf, Dinner or both online in advance or at the door.

​Clark ‘Special K’ Kellogg grew up in East Cleveland, Ohio, attended Chambers Elementary, W.H. Kirk Middle School (both in East Cleveland), and St. Joseph’s High School in Cleveland, Ohio, and had a high school basketball career generally regarded as the finest in Cleveland history. His 51 point game in the state championship game is still an Ohio high school state finals record. Kellogg also played in the McDonald’s All-American and Capital Classic games.

From 1979 to 1982, Kellogg played for The Ohio State University, where he earned All-Big Ten Conference and Most Valuable Player honors; in 1996, he received his marketing degree. In June 2010, Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland appointed Kellogg to the university’s board of trustees, where he sits today.

In 1982, Kellogg declared for the NBA draft after his junior year of college, and was the 1st round draft pick of the Indiana Pacers. In his first season he was selected as a member of the NBA All-Rookie Team. He is one of only a handful of rookies in NBA history to average 20 points and 10 rebounds a game. 

Kellogg has two sons, Alex and Nick. Nick played basketball for Ohio University.He also has a daughter, Talisa, who played Division I volleyball at Georgia Tech.

From 1993 to 1994, Kellogg served as a game analyst for the CBS Sports coverage of the NCAA Tournament. From 1994 to 1997, he served as a studio co-host for the early round coverage of the NCAA Tournament. In 1997, Kellogg joined CBS Sports full-time as a studio/game analyst for college basketball coverage, and was one of three in-studio hosts for March Madness along with Greg Gumbel and Sports Illustrated’s Seth Davis. 

Kellogg replaced Billy Packer as CBS lead basketball announcer beginning in the 2008–2009 college basketball season and called the 2009 NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship with Jim Nantz.

In March 2010, Clark Kellogg played a game of H.O.R.S.E. against U.S. President Barack Obama. The game, called “P.O.T.U.S.” for the occasion, was won by Obama, who had P.O.T.U. to Kellogg’s P.O.T.U.S.

In 2014, Clark Kellogg returned to his previous role as a studio analyst and continues to this day.