+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

Date post: 15-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: rahul-antill
View: 226 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
27
Covering Sports News Writing
Transcript
Page 1: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

CoveringSports

News Writing

Page 2: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

What do you need to know about writing

SPORTS?

Page 3: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

Sports writers must know …

● the rules and basics of playing and scoring the sport they are covering

● who are the key players on the team(star seniors, up-and-coming underclassmen, returning individual winners from last year, etc.)

● how the team did last year

● what statistics are typically kept for this sport and what they mean

Page 4: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● the schedules for the teams they cover (update with results throughout the season)

● when is the perfect time to reach players and coaches for features

● the coaches

● what other resources are available: stats, videos, other info online?

Sports writers must know …

Page 5: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●winning isn’t everything

●players = stories

●non-players = stories and sometimes coaches = stories, too

●losing = tasteful stories

In school sports

Page 6: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●advance or preview●game coverage●briefs●news features

Most of the stories you write will NOT be game stories … why?

Types of sports news stories

Page 7: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

Timeliness: The outcome of the game is known, so it’s not news because it’s not that interesting anymore.

Another game might have already happened, changing stats reported in a previous game story.

Why game stories aren’t so great

Page 8: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

On the other hand, there is nothing like reporting on a significant game to sharpen your sports writing skills.

Beginners, particularly, can learn a lot from covering a game. It’s GREAT practice — and awesome for keeping websites up to date.

Why game stories are helpful

Page 9: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

Plan and prepare before the game. ● Talk to the coach and let him/her know you’ll

be covering a game. Ask what to expect, who to watch, any trends developing.

● Get a team roster with player names andjersey numbers.

● Know the stats and find out who will be the statistician for the game. Make arrangements ahead to get the end-of-game stats when the game ends.

● Use email or social media to contact the coach of the opposing team to get a roster.

Covering games

Page 10: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

During the game ...● Watch carefully. Note the big plays and

scores.● Tweet results or big plays as they happen,

using players’ names (you have the roster with you!).

● Observe the opposing team, too. You should know who their key players are, and have the roster of that team as well.

● Do not express your opinion in tweets or coverage. You are acting as an outside observer, not a fan.

Covering games

Page 11: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

After the game ...● Get the end-of-game stats from the

statistician and get to the locker room to gather quotes from the players while the emotion is still running high.

● Use your notes and your tweets to help you organize a chronology of the game.

● Take a deep breath. What was the most important thing that happened? After you have your notes and quotes, stop and think about what the lead is.

● Write quickly. Your goal should be to have the game story online within 12 to 24 hours of the game ending.

Covering games

Page 12: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● If something extraordinary happened in a game that everyone is talking about, such as an injury or an unexpected rout of a favored team, write the most up-to-date information — looking forward, not back.

● Write about an individual player or group (offense, defense, offensive line, etc).

What’s (often) better than sportsgame stories

Page 13: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● Look for trends across several games. A strong offense, challenges on the defense, injuries, stars or outstanding players, recurrent problems or issues?

● Find out who keeps the team’s stats and get to know that person. The statistician is your new best friend.

● Always know where the team ranks in the district, region and state.

Better than game stories

Page 14: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●Keep up with team statistics and use them in your stories. This is especially important in game stories, but you need it for all sports stories.

●If a player or team breaks or ties a school or local record, you need to make that a big part of your story. It’s probably your lead.

●If a player or team makes it to regional or state competition, that’s a news story too.

Know the stats

Page 15: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● You cannot write a good sports story from someone else’s memory.

● You must be present to know what happened. Take notes and make photos while you are watching.

● Spend time after games to speak to the players and coaches. It’s best to get them while they are still thinking about the game.

Watch the team practice, play

Page 16: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

You cannot write a good sports story from

someone else’s memory.

You have to be there.

Worth saying again

Page 17: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● Don’t just say “Joe Smith”Say “tackle Joe Smith”

● Identify the player’s position. In captions, use the jersey number, too.

● Don’t use numbers for grade or year of graduation — sports have plenty of other numbers already.

● Make every attempt to identify the other team’s players, too.

Identify players in the story

Page 18: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● Scores are numerals separated by hyphens (12-6, not 12 to 6).

● Records are numerals separated by hyphens (8-2, not 8 and 2).

● The winning score always comes first, even if your school didn’t win.

Use AP Style for scores

Page 19: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●Even in sports writing, a clear distinction must exist between reporting the news and expressing an opinion.

●If you are writing an article about how the team is doing or a profile of an athlete, you must remain objective.

●If you are writing what you think about the team, the players, the sport or the game, that’s a commentary, not news.

Do not editorialize

Page 20: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● Don’t write “our” team, write about “the” team.

● Never congratulate a team on its win in your story, or say it was a good try if the team lost.

● What’s the word for this?

editorializing

Do not be a cheerleader

Page 21: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●athletes and health (conditioning during the season or off season; prevention and care of injuries)

●what it’s like to: warm the bench, lose eligibility, be injured the whole season, lose in the finals, be scouted

●recreational and “extreme” sports●non-school sports students play, such as

equestrian, water skiing, bicycle racing,figure skating

●how and why coaches become coaches

Story ideas

Page 22: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●how much it costs to play a sport●how much it costs the school to run the

athletic programs●what happens in the weight room●generations of athletes in the same family●athletic booster club●multiple-sport athletes; students who play

school sports in all three seasons●students who play club sports during their

sport’s off-season

Story ideas

Page 23: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●maintaining the athletic fields, courts, playing surfaces, scoreboards

●how athletes prepare for the final game of their high school career

●coping with sports injuries●the college recruiting process●alumni who are playing sports in college

on scholarship

Story ideas

Page 24: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

● Working with a partner, brainstorm five sports story ideas for your newspaper or yearbook. Use specific examples:

• sport• athlete• angle

● Turn in your ideas by the end of class.

Assignment 1: story ideas

Page 25: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

Write your story

● Using the list of ideas you brainstormed with a partner, choose one idea that you can write.

● Use the Story Prep Worksheet to plan your story.

Assignment 1 extension

Page 26: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

●Using other student media, previous issues of your publication, or prep sports coverage from local professionals, find a well-written school sports news story.

● Summarize the story. Be sure to include:-   headline-   byline-   date published-   name of publication- the 5W’s and H

Assignment 2: sports coverage

Page 27: Covering Sports News Writing. What do you need to know about writing SPORTS?

Next, write a half-page reaction to the story.Discuss the following:

• the way the story was written and reported; what the reporter had to do to get this story

•   why this story is news (news values)• why you are sure this is news, not

opinion•   what was not included and could or

should have been in the story•   how a similar story might be written for your publication

•   other thoughts, opinions, insights or reactions

Assignment, continued ...


Recommended