Joe Williams
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- Jun 28, 2007
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Thread elsewhere on ESPN's Mort and his "batting average" made me wonder about this:
What is an acceptable "batting average" for a reporter, in terms of breaking news and possibly being wrong? If you get a lot of stories first but every 10th one turns out to be incomplete, overstated or flat-out untrue, is that .900 better than somebody who is more cautious, might be first on only two or three stories in same time frame, but is never, ever wrong? What if it's .700? Or .500?
Let's assume that two reporters are neck-and-neck in most other ways, like writing ability, interviewing skills, knack for crafting a feature or an analysis.
Is being first with something an important enough value that you'll accept being wrong every so often? Or should we make sure we're not wrong, first and foremost, and then try to be first when we can with accurate stories? I'm thinking that, when you factor in rumored trades, alleged contract talks and purported draft scenarios, there are a lot of folks who -- if we really were keeping score -- would be in that .500 range or worse.
Does that matter? Should that matter? Would one way get you fired at the NY Post and the other way get you fired at the NY Times?
What is an acceptable "batting average" for a reporter, in terms of breaking news and possibly being wrong? If you get a lot of stories first but every 10th one turns out to be incomplete, overstated or flat-out untrue, is that .900 better than somebody who is more cautious, might be first on only two or three stories in same time frame, but is never, ever wrong? What if it's .700? Or .500?
Let's assume that two reporters are neck-and-neck in most other ways, like writing ability, interviewing skills, knack for crafting a feature or an analysis.
Is being first with something an important enough value that you'll accept being wrong every so often? Or should we make sure we're not wrong, first and foremost, and then try to be first when we can with accurate stories? I'm thinking that, when you factor in rumored trades, alleged contract talks and purported draft scenarios, there are a lot of folks who -- if we really were keeping score -- would be in that .500 range or worse.
Does that matter? Should that matter? Would one way get you fired at the NY Post and the other way get you fired at the NY Times?