Twittering games

Sports Journalists Forum – Media, Newsroom & Reporting Talk

Help Support Sports Journalists Forum:

Idaho

Active Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2004
Messages
9,342
Just curious, what are the policies any of you are encountering in various pressboxes, practice fields, etc. when it comes to twitter and/or live blogs.

anyone using or planning on using twitter extensively in your coverage?
 
We give scoring updates as often as we can during games. That's about the extent of our game Twitter coverage, though if any breaking stuff happens (injuries, et cetera), we'll report that as well.
 
We haven't encountered any policies in the high school ranks. We're in the third week of the HS football season here, and we've hit the Twitter updates pretty hard. We've either tweeted or re-tweeted every scoring play for every game played in our county so far.
 
We do score updates at the end of every quarter for football games and scores on the others at the end of the game. We also post our stories at the end of the day with links to our Web site.

Haven't had anyone complain about it yet, but I've only done one high school game.
 
I think this opens up a great debate for media vs. Sports Info front office folk in the NCAA and pros. Anyone with a smartphone, iPhone or internet anything can "tweet" about whatever.

What if Johnny wants to tweet about the game to his friends while he is in the stands? Every inning, quarter, period? Every score? Every play?

I know a lot of these schools and leagues are trying to do away with live-blogging because they think it takes away from people going to the "team sites" but what if everyone is doing it? Some season ticket holder in a suite could easily update his tweet after ever play this NCAA football season but us media guys can only update it three times a quarter or 5 times a half or whatever it is now.

An interesting debate to have indeed.
 
When you cover "big schools" that can't even draw 1,000, you know, we just don't even think about stuff like this.
 
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.
I'm hearing the same issues on my beat -- any limitations you put in the press box basically hinder someone by credentialing them. They can't control tweets in the seats, but they can ask you not to live-blog so more people go to the official live blog during a game ...
 
On the pro and college stuff, I think it's dumb to try to give play by play. That's available elsewhere, so you should be giving analysis and stuff that isn't. Preps are obviously different.
 
I text, blog, email, talk. But I'm just not into Twitter. And I'm wondering if it isn't some fad that will sooner rather than later fade into oblivion while its originators count their profits. Just don't see any substance, and certainly very little context.
 
anotherjrcsurvivor said:
I text, blog, email, talk. But I'm just not into Twitter. And I'm wondering if it isn't some fad that will sooner rather than later fade into oblivion while its originators count their profits. Just don't see any substance, and certainly very little context.
I think there's a much better chance of somebody with deeper pockets making a more reliable, beginner-friendly version of Twitter than it fading away.
 
anotherjrcsurvivor said:
I text, blog, email, talk. But I'm just not into Twitter. And I'm wondering if it isn't some fad that will sooner rather than later fade into oblivion while its originators count their profits. Just don't see any substance, and certainly very little context.

You're not doing it right.
 
And I must not have been reading it right, because doing so was like biting into a de-salted Saltine. Nothing happening. Moved on and haven't looked back.
 
Twitter us only as good as who you follow. If follow the right people, it's great. If not, it sucks.
 
I think Twitter might be the worst invention since HDTV, and as has been established on here, I'm a man who hates HDTV.
 
NightHawk112005 said:
I think Twitter might be the worst invention since HDTV, and as has been established on here, I'm a man who hates HDTV.

Really? What's there to hate?
 
I used Facebook to give updates on a game I attended last night.

I'm a former sports scribe who decided to watch my suburban town's high school team at its rival in a nearby town. At halftime I made my way to the film crew box on the visitors' side to visit with the local access TV broadcasting crew. I wound up staying in the booth the second half.

Using my Blackberry, I snapped a photo of game action early in the third quarter and posted it on Facebook. In a couple of minutes, three women posted responses under the photo wanting to know the score and more game info. I continued to give game updates throughout the second half, and others followed up with their messages. All who replied were women from the same town where I live; they stayed home with their small kids or they didn't want to fool with the game traffic/crowd, so they logged into Facebook and became interested in the game once they saw the photo.
 
Just last night a colleague of mine was tweeting constantly from a top 25 team's football game. The SID tweeted back to him that the game was on national TV, so he didn't need to giving play by play. He didn't order him to stop, but it was a suggestion that what he was doing was "bad."
 

Latest posts

Back
Top