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Sportswriting Let’s play handegg and jumpball!
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What Are Sports, Anyway? I mean, what makes a sport a sport? Why do they matter so much to us?
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Let Me Be Honest With You Sportswriting is painfully cliché much of the time. What are some of the most common clichés in sportswriting that you have heard? In pairs, come up with the worst offenders. Write a short sports story that is as cliché as you can make it.
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How to Avoid Clichés Read about the sport and team to know what is already trite and overdone Talk to the coach and players outside of the season and outside of game days to know them in a relaxed setting Remember, sports stories are about people Sports stories should ask why Look for off-the-field relationships among the team that impacts what occurs on the field Winning does not always make the best story. A team trying to win its first game could make an excellent one. Sports is not always about playing the game; it goes beyond
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What Makes a Good Sports Reporter? Know sports well: the rules, strategy, team and player records, etc. Become well-informed as possible, not relying only on prior knowledge Work at detecting strengths and weaknesses of a team or individual Don’t attend games as a cheering spectator; you might miss important aspects of the game Support all opinions with facts Be informal and original as possible!
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Develop a Focus Don’t simply go write a story about hockey. What aspects of the team and its achievements and failures make it most interesting? Focus on that.
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Sports Slang and Sports Language Instead of this: “The 145-pound blazer rumbled through the giant grid of the goal line for a sweet six points,” … …write this: “Senior running back Jonathan Belsher leapt over the defensive line from the one yard line to score the game-winning touchdown.”
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Sports Slang and Sports Language If a phrase is so ridiculous that no one would say it, then avoid it. Nobody says, “grid mentor” to speak of a football coach. You shouldn’t, either. You don’t say “ice master” to speak of a hockey coach. Use the specialized writing of the sport without getting too technical. For instance, a “jumper” wouldn’t need explanation, but a “swing backside on a lost post pick” would.
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Statistics Stats are important to a sports story, but don’t get carried away. Rather than say the running back “had a good day,” explain that he “ran for a season-high 220 yards and two touchdowns.” Place statistics in context of the sport, too, so reader knows what they mean.
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Preparing to Write Consider these aspects when starting at your story: Significance of event. Is title at stake? Probably lineups and changes Records of teams and individual players Compare records of teams Tradition and rivalry Weather conditions Systems of play and each team’s strategy Rankings Individual angles, like star players Coaches’ statements Who is favored Crowd antics, new uniforms, etc. Check pg. 105 in SJ
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Types of Sports Stories Advance story : gives insight into upcoming game, builds anticipation, answers 5 W’s and H Trend story : what’s gone on recently and why? While focusing on the past a bit, keep in mind the future is more interesting to readers Sports news: what affects the sport beyond the actual game Game story: tells story of game; looks for key moments, stats, or trends to weave this story Sports feature: story beyond or behind the game; focuses on human interest; pg. 111 in SJ
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