Celeste Williams Page: 2 of 3
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played for Texas, we'd do something. We'd do something on the Spurs every now and then
because San Antonio was just down the street."
After Seguin, she moved to Beaumont to work in sports information for Lamar
University, before working for the Beaumont Enterprise and Journal. She then moved to
Houston to write for the Houston Post, and then the Houston Chronicle.
"Back then, being a woman in sports, you kind of got a lot of opportunities," Williams
said. "I never had any issues. I always had really good mentors, really good bosses. There was
sometimes some jealousy, 'Well, she got a promotion because she's a woman,' or 'she got this
[or] that [because] she's a woman.' But I think that I always proved that I could do the work and
do it well."
While at the Post, Williams got her career back on the editing track. She had covered
tennis, but found she enjoyed writing headlines and cutlines and laying out pages.
She briefly worked for the Star-Telegram in the early 90s before joining the staff at the
Sporting News Magazine,where she helped lead a redesign in an otherwise relaxed atmosphere.
"Sporting News was a lot of fun. It was a bunch of Texans there," she said. "The boss
was from Borger, and I had known him. He was out in San Jose and he had tried to hire me to go
out there, but I didn't want to live out in California. But he kept up with me. ... When he got to
the Sporting News, I couldn't resist that. That was working for a sports magazine. That was the
ultimate, it sounded like."
From Sporting News, Williams moved to the Chicago Sun Times, and then served as
deputy editor of the Kansas City Star before returning to Texas with the Dallas Morning News.
She then worked a few years at the Association of Tennis Professionals Tour, but wanted to
return to the newsroom. She had a chance to be the sports editor at the Star, but the San Antonio
Express-News needed an immediate response so she became the deputy sports editor.
Williams was in San Antonio when the Spurs won the 1999 NBA Championship. But
within a year, one of her former editors was hired as managing editor at the Star-Telegram and
wanted to bring Williams on as the sports editor.
Being the first woman sports editor, she said the only obstacle she faced was the
publisher "just wanted to make sure that a chick knew her sports."
When she began her tenure at the Star-Telegram, Williams said her staff covered more
national news and competed in Associated Press Sports Editors competitions against much larger
publications. But in 2008, the Star-Telegram had its first of several layoffs.
"We've done it so many times now, I'm kind of numb to it," she said.
Her staff still tries to cover local sports she has a staffer for each professional team, for
each college, and a part-time staffer covering high schools. The rest is done by freelancers.
She said covering local sports is different from national sports, where "you get to do big
picture stuff." Maintaining objectivity in the newsroom can be difficult like when the Rangers
lost in the World Series in consecutive seasons - but the sports staff is so busy, it's hard to get
caught up as a fan.
The changing news industry has caused the Star-Telegram to do more digital work, and
Williams has led DFW OT, a digital sports magazine supplement to the newspaper. But despite
the cutbacks, Williams says her team does good work.
"I don't take it easily when they tell me, 'Hey, we're cutting your space,' or, 'Hey, we're
laying off all your copy editors,"' Williams said. "I just go and tell them what I think and when I
think they're making mistakes. But, I think, having said that, I think we do a pretty good job of
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Copeland, Alex; Gutierrez, Tony & O'Hanlon, Adrian. Celeste Williams, article, November 13, 2014; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth586985/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Frank W. and Sue Mayborn School of Journalism.