sprtswrtr10
Member
I've been the sports editor of a Big 12 city daily paper for almost 13 years. I cover a ton of major college sports, write columns, but I still cover a lot of preps. I'm a working sports editor that writes as much his guys and handles much of the stuff that falls through the cracks.
We've recently hired a new prep writer with boundless energy, which is terrific, but the idea that he knows the best way to do things on just about everything, which isn't. Perhaps I'll get response from youngsters like him, but also folks like me (47 years old, once upon a time I was the revolutionary, well respected, I know my ****). Because here are some things I can't imagine not doing as a prep writer.
— Keeping shots made and missed, rebounds, scoring sequence at a basketball game; not for the boxscore, but for the story. Don't you have to know what happened in the game? You might just need it. If you don't keep that stuff, you're coming up with every game story from the same narrow pallet. There's a foundation of knowledge you must be aware of.
— Keeping the full boxscore when covering prep football. Not just a scoring summary and notes.
— Seeing all digital content as secondary to the print product. Yes, tweet during breaks, use social media to connect with readers/fans, break stories with it, use it live, guide readers to your stories, maybe even get some video (though, admittedly, I will never get video). But what you cannot do is say, "I'm not going to do these things that get in the way of me tweeting while the action is ongoing, therefore I cannot stat the game; I can write my story without access to stats."
— Forgetting the that the majority of our readers still count on us for the story, thus it still has to be told fairly broadly. Though everybody may watch sportscenter and discussions of the major leagues can assume fairly extensive prior knowledge, you can't do that in the newspaper with the preps. You have to re-educate.
I am very thankful for the output of my new writer, but I am struggling with the lack of respect for the things that must be done to really know what's going on, to really write with accuracy. If a prep team lets a game get away in the fourth quarter because it shot 20 percent or turned it over eight times in the frame, how can you point out the failing without knowing the failing? You have to be armed with the information, and you have to be the source of that information.
That's about it.
Thoughts are welcome.
We've recently hired a new prep writer with boundless energy, which is terrific, but the idea that he knows the best way to do things on just about everything, which isn't. Perhaps I'll get response from youngsters like him, but also folks like me (47 years old, once upon a time I was the revolutionary, well respected, I know my ****). Because here are some things I can't imagine not doing as a prep writer.
— Keeping shots made and missed, rebounds, scoring sequence at a basketball game; not for the boxscore, but for the story. Don't you have to know what happened in the game? You might just need it. If you don't keep that stuff, you're coming up with every game story from the same narrow pallet. There's a foundation of knowledge you must be aware of.
— Keeping the full boxscore when covering prep football. Not just a scoring summary and notes.
— Seeing all digital content as secondary to the print product. Yes, tweet during breaks, use social media to connect with readers/fans, break stories with it, use it live, guide readers to your stories, maybe even get some video (though, admittedly, I will never get video). But what you cannot do is say, "I'm not going to do these things that get in the way of me tweeting while the action is ongoing, therefore I cannot stat the game; I can write my story without access to stats."
— Forgetting the that the majority of our readers still count on us for the story, thus it still has to be told fairly broadly. Though everybody may watch sportscenter and discussions of the major leagues can assume fairly extensive prior knowledge, you can't do that in the newspaper with the preps. You have to re-educate.
I am very thankful for the output of my new writer, but I am struggling with the lack of respect for the things that must be done to really know what's going on, to really write with accuracy. If a prep team lets a game get away in the fourth quarter because it shot 20 percent or turned it over eight times in the frame, how can you point out the failing without knowing the failing? You have to be armed with the information, and you have to be the source of that information.
That's about it.
Thoughts are welcome.