L
luckyducky
Guest
I just got off the phone with a coach and I'm not quite sure what to even think after that conversation, so I thought I'd lay a few things out and seek advice.
So I'm working on a story as a basketball playoff preview about middle school/feeder teams and my original intent was to kind of feature one program that's done it well. The program's seen a "quick" climb to success in the past four years and, as can be expected, has gotten the recruiting criticisms. I've covered the program for the past year-plus (I'm at a metro, so we have lots of schools, but I probably know this team the best of any reporter in our area/competitors) and have a good relationship with the coach and the girls.
So last week I went to one of their practices and talked to two of the girls and, for about 10-15 minutes, the coach about how he started the program and how it's helped their success, and I'd laid out my idea for the story when we'd talked. There had been no hesitations or verbal concerns. I've covered two of their games since and nothing.
So today, I e-mailed questions to the guy basically in charge of the middle school part of it. (No comments on the e-mail interview, please.) About 30 minutes later, I got a call from the HS coach and, apparently, a couple of the questions I'd emailed had concerned the other guy enough to call my coach and voice these concerns. The phone call with the coach (oh, about 20 minutes) was mostly just me saying "yeah" and "uh huh" as he kind of went off on how he doesn't want people to suddenly start copying everything they do and, you know, they've dealt with some people trying to transfer in, but they haven't had anyone transfer in and they've had people transfer out once they've gotten into the HS aspect of the program and how integral this feeder program is to their success and how there was a story last year (in another paper) that laid out some of the details of their program, more than he wished they had. I'd been pretty straightforward with this coach from the beginning and he knew I wasn't going to do that. I'd like to believe that he's just being reassured because this other guy, with whom I have no history of interactions/trust, put doubts in his head. But he was so persistent in the phone call that something about it just rubs me the wrong way.
Sorry, this is a really long post, I just had to kind of get it out there and see if anyone had feedback for me. I'm still a kid in this world, so I haven't dealt with some of these scenarios before. (edited a couple typos)
So I'm working on a story as a basketball playoff preview about middle school/feeder teams and my original intent was to kind of feature one program that's done it well. The program's seen a "quick" climb to success in the past four years and, as can be expected, has gotten the recruiting criticisms. I've covered the program for the past year-plus (I'm at a metro, so we have lots of schools, but I probably know this team the best of any reporter in our area/competitors) and have a good relationship with the coach and the girls.
So last week I went to one of their practices and talked to two of the girls and, for about 10-15 minutes, the coach about how he started the program and how it's helped their success, and I'd laid out my idea for the story when we'd talked. There had been no hesitations or verbal concerns. I've covered two of their games since and nothing.
So today, I e-mailed questions to the guy basically in charge of the middle school part of it. (No comments on the e-mail interview, please.) About 30 minutes later, I got a call from the HS coach and, apparently, a couple of the questions I'd emailed had concerned the other guy enough to call my coach and voice these concerns. The phone call with the coach (oh, about 20 minutes) was mostly just me saying "yeah" and "uh huh" as he kind of went off on how he doesn't want people to suddenly start copying everything they do and, you know, they've dealt with some people trying to transfer in, but they haven't had anyone transfer in and they've had people transfer out once they've gotten into the HS aspect of the program and how integral this feeder program is to their success and how there was a story last year (in another paper) that laid out some of the details of their program, more than he wished they had. I'd been pretty straightforward with this coach from the beginning and he knew I wasn't going to do that. I'd like to believe that he's just being reassured because this other guy, with whom I have no history of interactions/trust, put doubts in his head. But he was so persistent in the phone call that something about it just rubs me the wrong way.
Sorry, this is a really long post, I just had to kind of get it out there and see if anyone had feedback for me. I'm still a kid in this world, so I haven't dealt with some of these scenarios before. (edited a couple typos)