Kenny Kott, a longtime producer at 97.1 The Ticket, died Saturday at 32, and the station’s on-air family spent Monday mourning one of its most familiar voices behind the scenes.
Mike Valenti broke the news during the afternoon show, where Kott had long worked as producer for Valenti and Rico Beard. Kott also chipped in on air, especially when the conversation turned to the Red Wings, a team he knew inside and out.
The station said Kott had suffered a “medical event” in early June and had been hospitalized for the past few weeks.
“We're heartbroken,” Valenti said. “Genuinely, I'm struggling to find the words for this.”
“He's a part of our dysfunctional family.”
Kott had been with the station for years and was promoted to a board operator at The Ticket in December 2017. He became a steady presence on the “Valenti Show with Rico,” which airs weekdays from 2-6 p.m.
He was also known around the station for his laugh and for what coworkers called his place in the “Hockey Elite.” Kott embraced that label, and his hockey obsession ran deep.
As a kid, he took selfies with the Stanley Cup and Steve Yzerman. Red Wings radio broadcaster Ken Kal wrote on social media, “Kenny was a big hockey fan and also knew the game.”
Valenti said Kott’s drive stood out to him over the years.
“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.
Others at 97.1 remembered him the same way. Jeff Riger wrote on X on Monday, “Kenny was a natural at radio and a tremendous human being. Being gone so young is not fair.”
David Hall, who worked with Kott for six years, said the loss hit the station hard.
“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.”
Last month, 97.1 The Ticket host Pat Caputo died after a battle with pancreative cancer. He was 67.
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