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Staff mourn popular sports journalist

The quiet courage of sports journalist Kevin Hingley has been remembered by his colleagues at the Kent Messenger Group, following his death on Monday, aged 42.

  • Kevin Hingley
  • His personal charm had touched everyone who knew him, as had his love and knowledge of sport, and his bravery in facing illness, including two kidney transplants and a final battle against cancer.

    Senior editor Bob Bounds said: “I had known Kevin since my early days as a trainee reporter when he was a sub-editor.

    “I was always struck by his calmness and indomitable spirit in the face of the most extreme circumstances.

    “He was a first class journalist, who could have got the top of his profession, but luckily for us he chose to ply his trade locally.

    “He was dealt a dreadfully cruel hand but never questioned that nor sought sympathy. We will all gain strength and inspiration simply from having known him. That will be his legacy.”

    Mike Scott, one of Kent’s most experienced journalists, said: “In all the years I knew him I never saw him panic or lose his temper and, although he had an ironic sense of humour, which sometimes came out in his writing, it was never used as a weapon to hurt others. He will be sorely missed.”

    Kevin had worked at the KM Group’s Canterbury office as a sports reporter and sub-editor since 1989, having joined the company the previous year on the sports desk of the Evening Post and Kent Messenger at Larkfield.

    He began his career in journalism with Associated Kent Newspapers in 1979, working at their Margate and Sittingbourne offices.

    He leaves a nine-year-old daughter, Megan, brothers Gary and Malcolm, and his mother, Shirley, who donated one of her own kidneys for his first transplant in 1983.

    He later competed several times in the British Transplant Games, in a range of events, winning a clutch of medals.

    A second kidney failure led to many more months on dialysis and another transplant, in April, 2001.

    Donations in his memory are being made to the renal unit at Kent and Canterbury Hospital.

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