Prep/small college blogs

Sports Journalists Forum – Media, Newsroom & Reporting Talk

Help Support Sports Journalists Forum:

ouipa

Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2007
Messages
30
City & State/Province
Athens, Ohio
Hey all,

Been a while since I last posted here, but I need some suggestions. I've been tasked by my paper to start doing a prep and small college blog out here. I've never had to blog on local content before, especially preps, and since I just got this job (my first) in the spring, I'm not completely familiar with all the players and team schemes yet. What are some good blogs I should be looking at for ideas and as a template to get me started? Any suggestions on what sort of content I should be publishing?

I cover three high schools and one D-II college. Not a lot to work with, but we just want to get the ball rolling right now. They want me to start doing some live in-game blogging during prep and college basketball games (which will be a huge change of pace, given that I won't be keeping my own stats anymore). Any links to good blogs of that nature, and any tips there?

Thanks a ton.
 
ouipa said:
Hey all,

Been a while since I last posted here, but I need some suggestions. I've been tasked by my paper to start doing a prep and small college blog out here. I've never had to blog on local content before, especially preps, and since I just got this job (my first) in the spring, I'm not completely familiar with all the players and team schemes yet. What are some good blogs I should be looking at for ideas and as a template to get me started? Any suggestions on what sort of content I should be publishing?

I cover three high schools and one D-II college. Not a lot to work with, but we just want to get the ball rolling right now. They want me to start doing some live in-game blogging during prep and college basketball games (which will be a huge change of pace, given that I won't be keeping my own stats anymore). Any links to good blogs of that nature, and any tips there?

Thanks a ton.

http://www.deseretnews.com/blogs/1,5322,19,00.html

I still don't get who would read an in-game blog of DII sports or high school sports. A manager read somewhere that blogs are the in thing and said to an editor, you should start a blog.
 
At the Buffalo News, there are two sports blogs that have pulled in over a million page views -- the Sabres Edge (started during their '07 playoff run), and Prep Talk, roughly 14 months old. I won't hesitate to say I'm a big fan -- in fact, during the deadly-dull Bills' home loss to San Fran, I sat in the stadium reading Keith McShea's live-blog of the Orchard Park football team's state-championship game on my phone. (Yes, it was more entertaining than the game in front of me.) And to kind of answer Stitch's observation, the commenters included OP alumni from around the country, plus family and friends of the players who couldn't be in Syracuse.

Aside: while I'm touting McShea and the rest of the preps staff there, I also liked the commemorative pages they put together for each of their state-champ teams: http://www.buffalonews.com/highschool/

Check out the blog, and if you have any questions, Keith's always been cool about answering e-mail. Good guy.
 
A live blog from basketball would be tough because it's much more fast-paced than football. Readers do like those things, though. I'm doing live chats from football championships this season and it's gotten a good response. I'll cross-publish some things from my blog to the paper if its newsworthy enough, but blogs are good places for rankings, breaking news such as college commitments and then just random stuff. Maybe you pick an athlete each week and ask them five random questions (favorite movie, pets, blah blah) and post that. I'm sure they'll read it and their parents and maybe their friends. Make it what you want.
 
pseudo said:
At the Buffalo News, there are two sports blogs that have pulled in over a million page views -- the Sabres Edge (started during their '07 playoff run), and Prep Talk, roughly 14 months old. I won't hesitate to say I'm a big fan -- in fact, during the deadly-dull Bills' home loss to San Fran, I sat in the stadium reading Keith McShea's live-blog of the Orchard Park football team's state-championship game on my phone. (Yes, it was more entertaining than the game in front of me.) And to kind of answer Stitch's observation, the commenters included OP alumni from around the country, plus family and friends of the players who couldn't be in Syracuse.

Aside: while I'm touting McShea and the rest of the preps staff there, I also liked the commemorative pages they put together for each of their state-champ teams: http://www.buffalonews.com/highschool/

Check out the blog, and if you have any questions, Keith's always been cool about answering e-mail. Good guy.

I like the blog. And those state championship covers are outstanding.
 
stitch - are you ripping in game blogs or live updates for high school sports?
 
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change.
Angola! said:
stitch - are you ripping in game blogs or live updates for high school sports?

In some markets, there isn't a point in live game blogs. It doesn't drive enough traffic to merit the work. And I don't see much use for D-II game blogs.

But I see a blog as an extended notebook for some schools that don't get enough ink in the print product.
 
pseudo said:
At the Buffalo News, there are two sports blogs that have pulled in over a million page views -- the Sabres Edge (started during their '07 playoff run), and Prep Talk, roughly 14 months old. I won't hesitate to say I'm a big fan -- in fact, during the deadly-dull Bills' home loss to San Fran, I sat in the stadium reading Keith McShea's live-blog of the Orchard Park football team's state-championship game on my phone. (Yes, it was more entertaining than the game in front of me.) And to kind of answer Stitch's observation, the commenters included OP alumni from around the country, plus family and friends of the players who couldn't be in Syracuse.

Aside: while I'm touting McShea and the rest of the preps staff there, I also liked the commemorative pages they put together for each of their state-champ teams: http://www.buffalonews.com/highschool/

Check out the blog, and if you have any questions, Keith's always been cool about answering e-mail. Good guy.

Off-topic: There's no Class B?
 
Zebra, the Class B team from their area didn't make it to the finals.
 
Stitch said:
Angola! said:
stitch - are you ripping in game blogs or live updates for high school sports?

In some markets, there isn't a point in live game blogs. It doesn't drive enough traffic to merit the work. And I don't see much use for D-II game blogs.

But I see a blog as an extended notebook for some schools that don't get enough ink in the print product.

We do live updates during all the high school games we cover and we do an online scoreboard, but I would tend to agree the in-game blog might be a bit much, especially for D-II.
 
That's my problem. The issue is, what do I blog about? I've been having this problem when it comes to columns, too. I work in a small market, over 1,000 miles from where I grew up, with nothing but a few small schools with kids that definitely won't make it past this level. I've been pointed to high school blogs before, but those blogs often talk about much bigger schools in much bigger markets with kids that are much more likely to make it to D-I schools (then I could blog about where this kid might be going, how he's progressing, etc. Here, I can't do that). I'm in my first season covering winter sports here, so I don't know the players well enough to know how they've done in the past and where they're going in the future, other than what coaches have told me.

I want to blog to get practice for the future, but I just don't know what to blog about! And the same goes for columns. Like I said, I need to write something people around here can relate to, and I just don't know if I've been here long enough to make personal opinions on local stuff when I've only been here for eight months. I don't have the history, context or personal connection to help readers relate.
 
Here's some something to blog about — anything.
A blog can be 6 inches or 60 inches, it doesn't matter. The day before North Podunk plays South Podunk, write a quick blog about the game and ask readers who they think will win the game. After the game, post your opinions about the game or stats that didn't make it to your story.
Be personal in your blog. Write is as if you're talking directly to the fans. Tell them how the concession stand food gave you gas or how you just bought the new Kanye West CD and it's must better than the last one.
Do some kind of rankings. Either top teams in the area or top players to watch.
Do a top 10 list. People love when you rank stuff and ask fans to post their top 10.
Do a Q&A with someone in the community each week and post it on your blog. It could be five questions or 15 questions. You say you haven't been there long enough to know you're surroundings, this will be a great way to make contacts.
Ask players silly questions you might not normally ask them related to a story and post them on your blog.
Just read other people's blogs, just about every paper has one now, and pull some ideas.
 
write then drink said:
Phoenix said:
When you blog here is no copy editor to save you.

awesome

Even better.

Phoenix said:
When you blog here is no copy editor to save you. It's not like writting a column or gamer where there's a deskie there to alter all your faulty grammar and spelling mistakes.
 
I think this is a good example of what you're looking for, http://jcsports.blogspot.com. Looks like it has been nominated for an award to two. Best of luck.
 
alan1066 said:
I think this is a good example of what you're looking for, http://jcsports.blogspot.com. Looks like it has been nominated for an award to two. Best of luck.

Too easy.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top