Need advice about a weekly

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jaxson5

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Joined
Apr 24, 2006
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76
Hey all,

I just started at a weekly a few weeks ago as their first full-time sports guys. A tad different from the freelance days at the Daytona 500. We have two high schools that we cover, but that's about it. Anybody have any advice on how to keep busy at a weekly with a sports section of maybe 2-3 pages?

Thanks
 
If you have a week between issues, you shouldn't have trouble finding content. Plenty of time for gamers, features, enterprise, etc.
 
Well, you should be able to program your life for two days off a week, which would put you in the first rank of weekly SEs.

Otherwise, cover your beat.

You'll be busy on, what, Monday and Tuesday with writing and production?

Wednesday is a good day to catch your breath and plan the next week's paper.

Thursday and Friday during the day, you can work on features and pace yourself. Friday night is crucial.

There's usually some event you need to be covering on Saturday, then catch your breath for a while on Sunday.

And then start again.
 
Thanks so far, but my main complaint is sitting at a desk for eight hours a day while only doing maybe ten hours a week worth of work.
 
jaxson5 said:
Thanks so far, but my main complaint is sitting at a desk for eight hours a day while only doing maybe ten hours a week worth of work.

Maybe I'm missing something.

Why would you be sitting at your desk eight hours a day? It's a community newspaper, right? Go out and cover the community. Broaden your conception of what "sports" entails to include more than just the two high schools. Cover the Parks and rec beat.

Whatever.

If you're getting paid a 40-hour wage for "only doing maybe ten hours a week worth of work" you'd better be careful that the bosses don't catch on. They could save a lot of money by hiring a part-timer.
 
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Hejira is right. Get out and discover the community. Don't just sit behind the desk.

And when you cover games, remember that by the time people read your story, most will already know the result or the team will have played another game.

Take a PM-daily type angle with gamers.

Try to get one straight feature (not related to any game) per week.

You can also do a short feature each week on old high school athletes who have gone on to play sports in college. Depending where you're at, there may only be a handful of D-I athletes, but many, many more smaller college athletes in non-revenue sports. Doesn't have to be a huge story either. Talk to the athlete about college life/sports, plug in a few stats, a college coach comment or two will get about 12 inches. Your readers will love it.
 
Where are you in relation to a daily newspaper? If your two schools are covered at a daily, I wouldn't even worry about doing gamers at all (particularly since it doesn't sound like you have a lot of space). Do people really want to read a story about an eight-day old volleyball match? Do a roundup hitting the two schools for the sake of posterity, but focus on features and notebooks. Also, don't be afraid to go off the beaten path for stories (though I would urge extreme caution if you start covering rec sports; almost no good can come from that, because the people who get the stories written about them will want more, and the others will start demanding the same attention). Think about your hypothetical reader and what he or she wants out of your sports section, then get to work on it. And for the love of God, don't let the squeakiest wheels guide your coverage. Too many people will write stories on people just to get them to stop calling. Rule to go by: if they don't sign your checks or they didn't die for your sins, they have no right to dictate what you do with your newshole. Give in once, you might as well fly the white flag, because once you lose control, you never get it back.
 
HejiraHenry said:
jaxson5 said:
Thanks so far, but my main complaint is sitting at a desk for eight hours a day while only doing maybe ten hours a week worth of work.

Maybe I'm missing something.

Why would you be sitting at your desk eight hours a day? It's a community newspaper, right? Go out and cover the community. Broaden your conception of what "sports" entails to include more than just the two high schools. Cover the Parks and rec beat.

Whatever.

If you're getting paid a 40-hour wage for "only doing maybe ten hours a week worth of work" you'd better be careful that the bosses don't catch on. They could save a lot of money by hiring a part-timer.

yeah, he's right on. broaden your horizons by thinking outside the box. for example, when i was at a weekly, we had another guy in the office covering another community that would go out and do a "best of" series. he would go out and find the best places in the community to golf, shoot hoops and play tennis. he would talk to people about why they're playing there and what they like about it. things like that can be kind of lame, but if dont right, you can turn it into something decent.
 
Hank_Scorpio said:
You can also do a short feature each week on old high school athletes who have gone on to play sports in college. Depending where you're at, there may only be a handful of D-I athletes, but many, many more smaller college athletes in non-revenue sports. Doesn't have to be a huge story either. Talk to the athlete about college life/sports, plug in a few stats, a college coach comment or two will get about 12 inches. Your readers will love it.

This is a good idea. I've built an In College page, which I run about once a month (nice for filling space). I just run the kid's name, list the school and sport and invite community members to email me with more names. Pretty soon you'll have a nice list going. And the college athletes always make for a nice feature story. Whatever you do, don't sit behind that desk for 8 hours a day. Get out in the community, find something to cover.
 
I hung two trophies on the wall at my last weekly stop through features. Each week, I tried to have a good feature on at least one kid. Didn't have to be much, nor in-depth. Weekly newspapering -- or community newspapering in my case -- is always about names, names, names. Get those kids' names in the paper -- if they deserve it, of course.
 
The great thing about a weekly is you can be flexible about when you work. This makes it pretty easy to be flexible with what you produce. You're only a few weeks in, so there's still plenty to learn what the pulse of the community is.

No one's mentioned a column yet (I don't think). Write one each week, focusing on sports issues that matter in your area. Once you get away from that desk, you'll find that there are plenty of topics to highlight in this way as well.

Don't be afraid to take risks.

And once the prep season starts, I'm guessing you'll be working a few more than 10 hours a week.
 
I worked for a couple of years at a Northern Virginia weekly that routinely had 12-plus (!) pages for sports ... three or four of those pages were dedicated to horse sports -- and thank goodness there were other people to handle that duty ... but that still left me with eight pages (and sometimes more) to fill.

And, of course, no wire. (Or, for that matter, Internet in those days.)

I learned A LOT about being creative and worked my butt off. And loved it.
 
jaxson5 said:
Hey all,

I just started at a weekly a few weeks ago as their first full-time sports guys. A tad different from the freelance days at the Daytona 500. We have two high schools that we cover, but that's about it. Anybody have any advice on how to keep busy at a weekly with a sports section of maybe 2-3 pages?

Thanks

I was in a similar situation as you last summer, just hired at a weekly where I cover three high schools, but found there wasn't much to report on during the summer days.
There's some great advice here, especially the "best of" series around the community. Great idea.

Summers consist of a lot of baseball, rodeos (if there are any, which is a big deal around our area) and features particularly.
While there are those lazy kids who sit around playing video games all summer long, there are several others who are staying active and doing things worth doing a story on, such as this one girl who I found out is a cycling state champion at 15 and now has a desire to compete at the Olympics.

Stories are out there, but I agree with everyone, you have to go out into the community and find them and not sit in the office and play on the Internet.

Also, at those small community papers, getting updates on athletes who are competing at the college level are good stories to tell since most people know who they are and probably wonder how they're doing.
 
Thank you all so far. I do write a column each week and try to do a feature, but it just doesn't seem enough. Again, I thank you all for your idea's so far and look forward to more.
 

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