Jay Sherman said:
Covered wrestling for the first time on Saturday, and it went pretty well, I think. However, I'm sure there are easy tricks to the trade that some of you grizzled veterans have picked up after writing wrestling for years.
I brought a notepad, wrote down the 14 weight classes and got the lineups for both teams at each weight, then wrote notes (poorly) during the matches as to how they were scoring points or anything else that I noticed. Any tips?
That's pretty much the basis of what you've got to do. In addition to the teams' trends, try to find the patterns of the individual wrestlers. This is much easier if you've got only a couple teams to cover or you're reporting a tournament -- follow the winners and the underdogs. There are excellent stories in there just about every time.
When I'm covering a dual meet, I'll focus on one match, generally the turning point. Maybe it's the match-clincher -- when the pin puts the team up by 20 with three bouts to go; or it's a quick pin that generates two more; or it's brothers feeding off one another in the middle. Generally, there's one turning point unless, of course, it's 72-6 or something in which case, your story writes itself.
You certainly don't need to include information -- play-by-play, key moves -- on every match. I'd just highlight two or three, maybe a fourth or fifth if you really need it. Otherwise, it'll get too bogged down with detail, and before you know it, you've got 25 inches of the same stuff, more or less. If Cory "The Cory" Matthews and A.C. Slater clinch the win with back-to-back pins in the 12th and 13th matches, you don't need to mention anything other than "Drew Carey (103) and Bud Bundy (112) notched consecutive decisions to build a 6-0 lead. ..."
And it could have been strategy that led to the win. A lot of times, kids will bump up a weight class to defend against an easy pin to save some points, often swinging the win in the team's favor.
Just look for the story, Jay, and let it do the rest. You'll be fine.