Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Where has all the coverage gone!
Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Santonio Holmes sold the most expensive pair of game used gloves at $70,200. It was the same pair he wore during Super Bowl XLIII, where his game winning catch earned him MVP honors.
Holmes didn’t put up the gloves so he could make a hefty check. But he did it for a different reason. He did it for his son. Santonio Holmes III has sickle cell disease, and the elder donated all proceeds of the glove to the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America.
For one, this is a great story that goes to show that some NFL players still have a heart. But of course, the negative MLB doping story still makes headway for the day.
Why? Well it could be for the fact that A-Rod is a proven superstar whom we have looked up to since his early days in Seattle. Holmes is relatively unknown outside of Pittsburgh. This wonderful sports media world of ours is unique. Unfortunately, sports coverage has become like Hollywood reporting and getting to far into the personal, if not negative coverage of our athletes. We focus heavily into the bad things of what our “heroes” have done, and end up bypassing the good in them.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Bloggers Speak for Fans, Journalists Speak for the World
As journalist and deadspin.com editor Will Leitch had said, blogging takes a lot of work, as does writing an article for a print paper or an online publication. Leitch and many other “pro” bloggers are an exception of those writers who have a well-qualified background to be an expert.
But, of course, in the online world, we have a bevy of bloggers who act as if they are qualified writers. At times, these “writers” tend to have too much feeling and bias to a particular team or athlete, which can constitute them as not being journalists. As journalists, we are taught to not have a bias to what we write about or cover. But that bias and passion for a team or a game is what brought us to writing here in the first place.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Fans Snubbed in All-Star "Game"
The game had a rating of 8.4 percent of the market share, the second lowest in the Pro Bowl history. I guess it doesn’t help the cause knowing that there are marquee NBA matchups with the Lakers and Cavs and the Spurs and Celtics on ABC.
See the point is, the NFL Pro Bowl is a joke, well more of like a lost cause. Look at the two major papers in Chicago this past Monday, half a page of coverage and a sidebar on the game plus a small stat sheet. Look at the MLB All-Star game. A teaser on the front, full-page color splashed photo on the back, and a handful of stories, maybe more depending on how many hometown heroes participate.
The Pro Bowl has become more of like an NBA game, where the final two minutes of the fourth quarter are the most exciting minutes in the game regardless of the score. Sure it’s great seeing the best; well actually the most popular players of the NFL come together and have fun. But aren’t these “All-Stars” supposed to play like All-Stars?
Win or lose the game, players still get a hefty bonus check and a free weeklong trip to Hawaii. Not bad huh? But really, the players are just there for their bonus money, trip in paradise and oh yeah, to play a little “touch” football.
As fans, we make a big deal on which one of our favorite players makes it to the Pro Bowl. But once the game comes up, we tend to not care anymore. The NFL needs to make some changes to make its version of the All-Star game a game worth watching.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Oh God, Please Make Me a Better Story Teller!!
The NFL Draft: Finding the Talent
While flipping through USA Today’s take on the NFL Draft, I noticed a lot of their material was based on numbers and statistics. The consensus shows that the bigger the state, the more athletes are produced, usually for the reason that the state has more schools and programs.
Almost every sports freak has that burning desire to know the statistics to everything about their sports. Even in fantasy leagues, numbers mean everything. The numbers don’t lie. The USA Today even put together a compilation of the 34 biggest busts in the NFL Draft since 1988 by using their career statistics to determine the player as a bust.
Statistics are a story within themselves. They tell the good and bad of a player’s performance on the field of play. Statistics also play a role not only with players but fans as well.
Our story, which will cover the century long agony of Cubs fans; can have various aspects of statistics. Some stats we can use are; how many Cubs fans jumped off a building after they were swept for the second consecutive year? Or how many fans denounced their fandom in the Cubs? Or how many people are actually optimistic about the Cubs getting to the World Series? And no, this does not include the number of Cubs players buying their way to the Fall Classic.
Broadcast students can create charts and tables displaying statistics of the data needed for the story. And of course look good on camera; while we print journalists do most of the grunge work.