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Covering sports like a pro Kansas Journalism Institute June.2011 Rod Satterthwaite.Dexter High School.
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Ten tips 1. Don’t cover old news 2. Don’t use cliched quotes 3. Use 3-5 meaningful quotes per article 4. Avoid pro/college sports stories without a local angle 5. Don’t just cover games
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Tips continued... 6. Expand your definition of sports 7. Don’t bore your reader 8. Don’t be a cheerleader 9. Make your leads count 10. Make your ledes count
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Out with the old 1. 1. Don’t cover old news. Concentrate on the future angle or develop the feature angle to old news.
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Get rid of the coach-speak 2. 2. Don’t use cliche quotes. (“He gave a 110 percent.” “We played hard, the other team just wanted it more.” “We didn’t win a lot, but we had fun trying.” “We have some very good athletes, and if everybody works hard, then we could win a lot of games.”) Look at these examples: Don't use quotes like thisDon't use quotes like this
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Every story needs quotes 3. Try to use 3-5 meaningful quotes per article.
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Leave the pros to the pros 3. Cover your school. Avoid pro/college stories unless they have a local angle.
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Think before and after 4. 4. Cover practices, locker rooms and post-game activities to get the full flavor for the story.
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Expand your coverage 6. 6. Go beyond the obvious (club sports, hobby sports, extreme sports, overlooked players, those who work hard in practice, trainers, etc.)
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Don’t bore your reader 7. Rosters are not newsworthy
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Leave the cheering to the cheerleaders to the cheerleaders 8. Not every player or team is outstanding
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Ledes matter 9. 9. Don’t lead with the date.
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Ledes matter, part II 10. 10. Don’t lead with the name of the town, the name of the school or the name of the team.
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Some story ideas... adapted from Bobby Hawthorne’s The Radical Write(used with permission) 1. Weird things you find in lockers 2. Cheapest things to do after a game 3. Practice war stories 4. The teammate from Hell 5. Creative ways to make fun of your coach Team trips Strange superstitions Things coaches hate to hear from teenagers Things teenagers hate to hear from coaches Useless things coaches say to players White lies players tell their coaches Characterisics of effective coaches A horrible game Things coaches to do embarrass their players Things players do to embarrass their coaches
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More column ideas... 6. Team trips 7. Strange superstitions 8. Things coaches hate to hear from teenagers 9. Things teenagers hate to hear from coaches 10. Useless things coaches say to players 11. White lies players tell their coaches Characterisics of effective coaches A horrible game Things coaches to do embarrass their players Things players do to embarrass their coaches
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And some more ideas... 12. Characteristics of effective coaches 13. A horrible game 14. Things coaches to do embarrass their players 15. Things players do to embarrass their coaches
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Some examples Tell me what you think of this story: "It doesn't get any tougher than this" by Rick Reilly "It doesn't get any tougher than this" by Rick Reilly"It doesn't get any tougher than this" by Rick Reilly
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One more example... What about this: "Her left foot gone, cheerleader cheers on" by Mitch Albom "Her left foot gone, cheerleader cheers on" by Mitch Albom"Her left foot gone, cheerleader cheers on" by Mitch Albom
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Thanks and contact info. Rod Satterthwaite, Dexter High School sattertr@dexterschools.org 734.424.4240 x. 7407
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