kingcreole
Active Member
I was essentially working alone on Tuesday, which during the spring sports season is borderline psychotic. Had a part timer in, and another guy was out covering a baseball DH and wasn't back until late.
We try to run briefs on how county teams (eight schools) did when we get their results in. The main local school's boys tennis coach is usually good about bringing by the results of tournaments they play in. Well, he swings by around 9 p.m. (90 minutes before our first deadline) and drops off the results. Now, the guy who covered Local Main High left, and the SE is kind of like the tennis/golf expert and was out of town, but I told the coach we'd get the results in as well as a brief.
He tells me, "Well, this is a pretty big deal. It was our first tournament win in two years."
Well, yeah. I guess it is a pretty big deal especially because they usually play in tough tournaments. So what did I lede with in the brief?
"The Local Main High boys tennis team won its first tournament championship in two years Tuesday ..."
Boy, did that **** off the coach. He sends a scathing email to me, the SE and OUR PUBLISHER ranting about how we made it sound like that his team is terrible and can't win any tournaments.
Mind you, nothing I put in the brief was inaccurate. I don't know much about the team, beyond that they are usually decent, but this coach was incredibly pissed not only with how the brief led, but the fact that it was lumped together with other local briefs.
This on the day after Nearby Local High split a baseball doubleheader. Got nothing but boxscores 30 minutes before deadline. I didn't have time to write a brief but did get the scores in. Johnny Winning Pitcher's dad called up and literally begged me to put something in about his son throwing a complete game.
****, I hate being short-staffed. I hate tennis coaches too.
We try to run briefs on how county teams (eight schools) did when we get their results in. The main local school's boys tennis coach is usually good about bringing by the results of tournaments they play in. Well, he swings by around 9 p.m. (90 minutes before our first deadline) and drops off the results. Now, the guy who covered Local Main High left, and the SE is kind of like the tennis/golf expert and was out of town, but I told the coach we'd get the results in as well as a brief.
He tells me, "Well, this is a pretty big deal. It was our first tournament win in two years."
Well, yeah. I guess it is a pretty big deal especially because they usually play in tough tournaments. So what did I lede with in the brief?
"The Local Main High boys tennis team won its first tournament championship in two years Tuesday ..."
Boy, did that **** off the coach. He sends a scathing email to me, the SE and OUR PUBLISHER ranting about how we made it sound like that his team is terrible and can't win any tournaments.
Mind you, nothing I put in the brief was inaccurate. I don't know much about the team, beyond that they are usually decent, but this coach was incredibly pissed not only with how the brief led, but the fact that it was lumped together with other local briefs.
This on the day after Nearby Local High split a baseball doubleheader. Got nothing but boxscores 30 minutes before deadline. I didn't have time to write a brief but did get the scores in. Johnny Winning Pitcher's dad called up and literally begged me to put something in about his son throwing a complete game.
****, I hate being short-staffed. I hate tennis coaches too.