Bob Kravitz

An Interview with Bob Kravitz

An Interview with Bob Kravitz

“On the Dungy column, I felt that Tony’s personal choices were fair game because he had spent so much of his life guiding others on the personal choices they make..Just because Tony is a man of faith doesn’t mean he’s above criticism.”

“I think listening is a highly underrated skill in our business. Listen to your sources. Listen to your inner voice. Don’t do interviews; have conversations.”

Position: Columnist, Indianapolis Star.

Born: New York, 1960.

Education: Indiana, 1982, journalism

Career: Bergen Record, San Diego Union, Pittsburgh Press, Sports Illustrated, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Rocky Mountain News, Indianapolis Star 2000 –

Personal: Married, two daughters

Favorite restaurant (home): Sullivan’s Steakhouse. “Nothing fancy – just steak and potatoes and great martinis.”

Favorite restaurant (road): any Legal Seafoods, Boston.

Favorite hotel: Marriott Riverwalk, San Antonio. “You’re 15 steps from all the madness.”

Bob Kravitz, excerpted from the Indianapolis Star, January 22, 2008.

I am uncomfortable.

I am uncomfortable because I simply can’t talk myself out of writing the following words, words that will incur the near-universal wrath of a city that has come to revere Tony Dungy, not only as a coach but as a man: I think that by returning to the Colts, and doing so after his entire family moved out of Indianapolis and back to Tampa, Fla., for reasons he prefers remain private, Dungy has revealed himself as something of a hypocrite.

As one of the chief spokesmen for All Pro Dad, an organization dedicated to strengthening the bonds of fathers with their children, he has spoken passionately about the importance of men putting their faith and family first, before football and all else.

So I don’t understand:

What came first here?

If family is really first, doesn’t Dungy decide to live in the same city with his wife and children? Remember, Dungy not only has one adult daughter and a high school-age son. He and his wife also have three little ones, a first-grader, a kindergartener and an infant.

Dungy said Monday that he had the support of his family, but my guess is the three youngest ones didn’t have much input.

Again, I’m uncomfortable. I’m uncomfortable about passing judgment on anybody or anything deeper than a decision to punt on fourth-and-2. I’m especially loath to pass judgment on the way another man handles his personal business.

But Dungy has used his pulpit as a head football coach to advise others in the art of fatherhood, and has left himself open to charges of hypocrisy.

Q. What was reader reaction to the ‘I am uncomfortable’ column – you predicted ‘near-universal wrath’?

A. Sometimes you write a column and you’re surprised the next day by reader reaction. Not this one. As I walked out of the Colts training facility, I told one my comrades with the Star, “The shit’s gonna hit the fan tomorrow.”

I probably spent more time tweaking that column than any other I’ve done. I try to be careful with everything I write, but I knew all hell was gonna break loose, so I tweaked it more than any other column. I’d be lying if I didn’t say it was hard to write. Tony Dungy is universally beloved not only here in Indy but everywhere. This wasn’t like ripping Mike Vanderjagt. This is Tony “Quiet Strength” Dungy. I might as well have taken a shot at Mother Theresa.

But I felt strongly about this issue, and I knew several other people – journalists and civilians – had the same nagging questions. But they weren’t in a position to communicate those concerns. If I was taken aback by anything, it was the fact I received a handful of e-mails from former college buddies who sent me really nasty missives.

Q. How difficult was it to write?

A. When I initially sat down to write it (after two hours of internal debate and some conversations with folks in the press room) it came pretty easily. I felt strongly about the issue. But after I got it down, it took hours to finish it off. I didn’t want to leave any small holes in the argument. I wanted people to understand that I felt uncomfortable broaching this subject. And I wanted to make sure it was written with such precision that there would be no issues of misinterpretation. Ultimately, the only column I wrote that was more difficult was the one the day after his son committed suicide.

Q. Dungy’s reaction?

A. Actually, I told Tony the day I wrote it that I was going to do this column. I told him I didn’t want to blindside him because I have too much respect for him. He was great about it, as you might expect. He said he understood how some people could reach the conclusion I reached, but he did what he had to do. Now, this was before the column. I haven’t seen him since because the Colts are all scattered around the country. But my guess is, when we see one another at mini-camp this summer, it will be business as usual.

Q. Other difficult columns you’ve written?

A. There have been a bunch, but not many come immediately to mind. In Denver, I accidentally discovered that Dante Bichette had quite a rap sheet of domestic violence. He had gotten his life together in recent years, but right after OJ, this was a column that had to be written. That was tough because Dante was one of the most popular guys on the team, plus he was popular with the media covering the team. We had to be separated a few times that next spring training.

Q. Any columns you wish you had a do-over?

A. There have been a number I wished I had back, but not because I wrote something harsh about somebody else. Mostly wrong-headed observations: In 1998, insisting the Broncos were cooked after a loss in SF. They went on to win the Super Bowl. In 2006, writing the Colts were done after they lost to Houston. They went on to win the Super Bowl. In 1996, writing the Broncos ought to think about trading John Elway. But, then, I think every columnist in America has a handful or two of those kinds of columns.

Q. Guidelines on sensitive issues?

A. Like almost everything in journalism, the rules aren’t specifically codified. Ultimately, it becomes a matter of personal judgment — not just the columnist’s judgment, but the editors’ judgment as well.

On the Dungy column, I felt that Tony’s personal choices were fair game because he had spent so much of his life guiding others on the personal choices they make. If this happened with Jeff Saturday or Marvin Harrison, I wouldn’t have uttered a word. But this was happening less than a year after the publication of a best-selling book in which he spoke quite eloquently about the primacy of family. Just because Tony is a man of faith doesn’t mean he’s above criticism.

Q. You’re known for being more judicious than confrontational – is that fair to say?

A. I think the Colts, Pacers and IU administration would argue I’m over-the-top confrontational and not at all judicious. I prefer the former, though. I like to think I take my shots when they’re warranted, but I don’t live on a diet of beanballs. I like to think I’ve got several different pitches in my arsenal.

I went to the US Swimming Nationals here in Indy and wrote a column on a lifeguard who was charged with watching over a pool of the world’s greatest swimmers. I thought that was funny, and the column worked out pretty well. I think if you dedicated every column to yelling, it becomes transparent and readers tune you out. That’s why I like Plaschke (LA Times), Posnanski (KC Star), Bianchi (Orlando Sentinel) and those guys so much. They can write anything.

Q. Who do you read to keep up with sports?

A. I admit I call up sportpages.com, check out the top 10. If I have the time on a given day, I’ll check out Posnanski, Plaschke, Jay Mariotti (Chicago Sun-Times) just to see who he’s eviscerating that day, Michael Wilbon (Washington Post), Whitlock (KC Star), Sally Jenkins (Washington Post), Mike Bianchi and Michael Rosenberg (Detroit Free Press). I’ll also make it a point to check out any long feature written by Wright Thompson (espn.com), who I’ve followed since he was in college. Oh, and Albom (Detroit Free Press), whether he’s writing sports or something else. He’s still got an incredible touch. I’m also starting to check out deadspin.com and sites like that.

Q. How do you pick columns – are you influenced by web hits?

A. It’s usually a no-brainer, really. I just look for the hottest issue of the day. Sometimes that can be a little difficult in this market, with two major league teams and colleges. But I try to keep it local, while occasionally touching on national subjects. I try to think like a reader: When I pick up tomorrow’s paper, what do I want my columnist writing about?

As for web hits, I think you’re going to be influenced to some degree, but it’s dangerous to become a slave to those talkback items. This past Sunday, I wrote a rare feature column on a Bosnian player for Purdue. I got 80 talkbacks. I usually get 800. But it was a good, solid column, and sometimes you write pieces like those, and you’re not going to get much feedback.

Q. Advice for wannabe columnists?

A. Write a lot. Write for your junior high school paper. Your high school paper, and college, and get internships during the summer. And read. Read a lot. And I’m not talking about sports books, although there are several good ones out there. Read the classics. Read William Styron. Read Norman Mailer. Read Tom Wolfe. Read the great craftsmen (and women) of the English language.

Finally, learn how to listen. I think listening is a highly underrated skill in our business. Listen to your sources. Listen to your inner voice. Don’t do interviews; have conversations.

Bob Kravitz, excerpted from the Indianapolis Star, August 3, 2007:

For a couple of years now, I’ve been on a mission. I have looked the world over for someone who has a cushier gig than Indianapolis Colts punter Hunter Smith, who gets less work than a tailor in a nudist colony.

Well, this week at the ConocoPhillips
USA Swimming Championships at the Natatorium at IUPUI — our slogan, “If you can breathe here, you can breathe in Beijing” — I finally found her.

The owner of the world’s easiest job.

Her name is Allouri Stahley. She is a 22-year-old IUPUI student, born and raised in Greenwood.

Her job:

Lifeguard.

At the U.S. national swim meet, where the pools are filled with the country’s greatest swimmers, including Michael Phelps and Dara Torres.

Is there a less necessary job on the planet?

Outside of, I don’t know, being a Viagra rep at Lilith Fair?

It’s like being an auto mechanic in Amish country.

It’s like being Dick Cheney’s joke writer.

It’s like being Rosie O’Donnell’s personal trainer.

It’s like . . . oh, never mind.

At this meet, the only ones getting less action than the lifeguards are the docs at the liposuction concession.

This is Stahley’s third major meet in Indianapolis. She hasn’t had to save anybody. Yet.

“I think a girl slipped in the bathroom here the other day,” Stahley told me. “But I’m not a hundred percent sure.”…

(SMG thanks Bob Kravitz for his cooperation)

Dave Hooker

An Interview with Dave Hooker

An Interview with Dave Hooker

“Those are U-T’s guidelines and they can suspend me if they like but they can’t be my guidelines. Ninety-nine percent of the time my guidelines fall perfectly in line with U-T…They say they’re going to enforce this from now on. If they do they’re going to have more suspensions on their hands. There are times you can’t go through the SID to get the story.”

“I don’t know if what U-T did was legal…in some ways the legality can be inconsequential. If you force your way through the courts and you go over there and they don’t want you what kind of cooperation are you going to get?

“I see some of the biggest homers being some of the worst journalists covering teams….you cover a game and get mad at the team because they let you down and you rip them more than an objective journalist would.”

Dave Hooker: Interviewed on October 17, 2006

Position: U-Tennessee beat reporter, Knoxville News Sentinel; radio host, The Sports Animal, AM 990

Born: 1974, Knoxville, Tenn.

Education: U-Tennessee, 1998, communications-broadcasting

Career: WNOX radio 1998-2004, Knoxville News Sentinel 2004 –

Personal: married, two children

Favorite restaurant (home): Nama, Knoxville “we didn’t have sushi until two or three years ago – now we got a couple places”

Favorite restaurant (road): Jim ‘N Nick’s Barbecue, Birmingham “Best barbecue I ever had. If I was sittin’ on a lot of money I would open one here.”

Favorite hotel: Marriott Riverwalk, San Antonio “I spend a week every January. Great atmosphere, lots of fun.”

Suspended: By University of Tennessee, for violating “access guidelines” in interviewing an injured U-T football player on October 4, 2006. The interview was not approved by the U-T Sports Information Department. U-T revoked Hooker’s media credentials from Oct. 11 to Oct. 23, 2006.

Q. Are you suspended by U-T as we speak?

A. Yes.

Q. How are you staying busy?

A. Half of my job is covering recruiting – we just amped that up a bit. I still host the sports radio show the News Sentinel sponsors, 10 a.m. to noon, Monday through Friday.

Q. Do you talk about your suspension on your show?

A. That was a pretty big topic Wednesday – the day it happened. I could stoke those fires if I wanted but I want to move on.

I’ve been doing radio for ten years and I can’t remember being as uncomfortable as I was doing that Wednesday program. I was so angry at first I wanted to walk out.

Q. Angry at what?

A. U-T – that I had to deal with their nonsense.

Q. What was the public’s reaction?

A. Mixed. Of the 25 or 30 people who called all were supportive except one or two. On our website – the blog format – it was 50-50 if not slanted more towards supporting U-T. Some message boards on opposing sties were a little harsh towards me. There’s often a tendency for fans to side with the institution. They don’t realize it limits the information they get in the long run.

The response from other reporters has been tremendous. I’ve heard from reporters in 15-20 states. Rolling Stone Magazine, which is doing a season-long look at the Vols, asked me for a quote.

Q. U-T said you violated “accepted guidelines” of access. Accepted by whom?

A. Them. I think most of the time we’re not New York City or a market that goes overboard pursuing these athletes. I think we understand they are student-athletes and have more to their lives than talking to media and playing football. Our group of reporters is fair, but there are times you have to break the rule – that’s been true in the past and it will be in the future.

Those are U-T’s guidelines and they can suspend me if they like but they can’t be my guidelines. Ninety-nine percent of the time my guidelines fall perfectly in line with U-T. But there are going to be issues. It’s natural to have an adversarial relationship between the hometown paper and the university.

Q. Did U-T over-react?

A. If you’re talking strictly of this one incident I would say yes. This week they started to say it was a cumulative effect. I’m supposed to get some sort of apology for things they said about me, but I haven’t yet.

Q. What “things” did U-T say about you?

A. There are two versions of how I got the interview. One is that I ambushed this severely injured athlete on the street – it wasn’t true. I went through an intermediary at U-T who called him and who said he was open to talking. Once I provided the tape and you could hear the cell phone and it was ringing they dropped the whole story. Then they said I took advantage of being over there during another interview session – they used the terms “underhanded” and “dishonest” – they’re going to retract some of that language, I believe.

Q. Can you pursue a legal remedy?

A. I don’t know if what U-T did was legal. Seems like it’s public property of a state-funded institution. I’m told their counsel said it was legal – they tend to err on the side of not getting courts involved so they certainly believe it was. I haven’t met with an attorney with respect to that. The other thing is that in some ways the legality can be inconsequential. If you force your way through the courts and you go over there and they don’t want you what kind of cooperation are you going to get?

Q. Isn’t that the difference between covering City Hall and State House and covering sports?

A. Yes. Some have criticized the Sentinel for not taking a stronger stand. But they backed me 100 percent and I understand where they’re coming from. As long as the attacks on my integrity are retracted I think we can move on from this – although it’s not going to be long until there’s another issue. They say they’re going to enforce this from now on. If they do they’re going to have more suspensions on their hands. There are times you can’t go through the SID to get the story. Maybe a kid is transferring or a kid is suffering from a season-ending injury, as in this case. Maybe a guy gets in trouble and is about to be thrown off the team and the only way to confirm it is through him. The rule is to keep you from calling players to ask about a game – at times it’s appropriate. Reporters generally are respectful – that’s why it’s a shame they came down so hard.

Q. What kind of college football town is Knoxville?

A. The best way I would describe Knoxville is that the day after a big loss by U-T you can tell because everybody in the community is a little bit down. The day after a big win is just the opposite – it has that much effect on the community and the atmosphere.

Q. Can you be a fan and work in the business?

A. I don’t think so. I purposely laid that aside. I was a U-T fan growing up but I set that aside when I graduated from college. I remember going to the Orange Bowl in ’98 and saying that’s the last U-T game I go to as a fan. If I had gone to a job somewhere else maybe I wouldn’t stand by that. I see some of the biggest homers being some of the worst journalists covering teams – not U-T necessarily. You cover a game and get mad at the team because they let you down and you rip them more than an objective journalist would. This latest incident – if I was a fan of U-T I would have been crushed. But I understand they see things one way and I see them another and we move on.

Q. How competitive is the beat?

A. Very. You’ve got the News Sentinel, the Tennessean in Nashville, and the Chattanooga Free Press. Jimmy Hyams, at the local radio station (WNML) is one the best reporters I’ve come across – sometimes we think of sports talk guys as yukking it up – not him. I think it’s pretty darn competitive. You do have the Titans now – that takes some of the space and resources, but U-T is still really significant. I don’t see that changing anytime soon.

Q. Are you competitive with the Rivals.com and Scout.com websites?

A. They’re probably my main competitors on the recruiting side. Down here they go by volquest.com and Tennessee.scout.com.

We try to be aware of what they’re doing. Even though they cater to a small fan base it’s still a fan base you want to respect you. Those are fans paying to access our website every month. That’s what allowed the Sentinel to hire me.

Q. How’s your paid website doing?

A. Extremely well. Technically, I’m on the online budget. We were test-marketed for Scripps – you’ll see more people doing it in the future. Quite honestly, it’s because people like Rivals and Scouts have made money in the past.

Q. How much pressure are you under to be first?

A. To me personally that pressure comes from within – I’m just that type of person. Will I have editors call me and say how did such-and-such get this? Yeah, that happens, but it’s not a case where I feel threatened. There’s definitely pressure – we’re expected as the hometown paper to break every single story. It’s not realistic but we don’t like to let even one slip by.

Q. How many reporters do you have on U-T?

A. I’m not actually the beat reporter – it’s a co-beat system. The beat reporter is Drew Edwards – it’s his first year on the beat. My focus is recruiting but obviously there is breaking stuff I do. Drew and I are over there every single day. The Tennessean has Chris Low – he has the most time on the beat. They’ll hire a part-time person to be there as well. For U-T media day we’ll have other feature writers and column writers as well.

Q. Is TV a factor?

A. In some TV markets they’re competitive in breaking news but that’s not the case here.

Q. You were a broadcast major – how did you end up in print?

A. John Adams, the sports editor, came to me in 2004 and asked me to cover recruiting. They were hiring a new person because they were starting a new website, a paid website. It morphed into a 50-50 deal covering the team.

I had started writing for a small suburban paper while I was at the radio station – to make a little extra money. That turned out to be a good thing, otherwise I wouldn’t have had enough to show John.

Q. Do you prefer print or radio?

A. There are certain redeeming qualities in print I appreciate and would like to be associated with. I like both a lot though. It’s hard to pick between radio and print – it’s a fun challenge for me. To be honest, it’s a little daunting at times. I’m working with people I grew up reading, like John Adams, Mike Strange – I also read the late Gary Lundy. It’s intimidating – Mike is one of the best game-story writers in the country – John is a very good columnist. Having my stuff next to theirs makes me feel like a broadcast guy again.

Q. How do you educate yourself?

A. I look at sportsbriefs.com a lot – before going on the air. I read a lot of online newspapers. At the beach I like to read the classics – but my lion’s share of reading is in newspapers across the country. I don’t know how anybody did talk radio before the Internet. To be able to read about the Dodgers’ fourth pitcher in Knoxville is awesome. I bounce all over the place. Newslink.org has all the papers in the U.S.

Q. Any desire to work in a big-city market?

A. I would like to stay in the south – I hate cold weather. I love the passion of college football in the south – it’s pretty tough to match. I go to Atlanta frequently on business and I don’t see the passion for the pro teams that I see for college teams. I’ve sat in NFL stadiums where people talk about salary cap money and don’t care if the team is 2-8. That’s odd to me.

Q. Career ambitions?

A. I have ambition just to be the best at whatever I’m doing at that time. I don’t have real specific goals to be a lead columnist or sports editor or host of a national radio show – just because I never thought I’d be a writer. I feel blessed to have this opportunity, and at this point I just want to be the best journalist I can be and see where life leads me. So far it’s been fun.

(SMG thanks Dave Hooker for his cooperation)

UT suspends KNS writer

University says Hooker interview with Inky Johnson violated policy

By STEVE AHILLEN, ahillen@knews.com

October 11, 2006

The University of Tennessee suspended media privileges for Knoxville News Sentinel sports writer Dave Hooker on Tuesday citing its concerns involving a story written by Hooker on injured football player Inquoris “Inky” Johnson.

In a letter delivered to the News Sentinel and signed by associate sports information director John Painter, Hooker was informed that his suspension will last until Oct. 23 and will cover “all Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday access in the Neyland-Thompson Sports Center, as well as all practice, post-practice interviews, community service appearances and the UT-Alabama game.”

Johnson received a possibly career-ending injury in the Air Force game on Sept. 16. The Tennessee Sports Information Office received numerous requests for interviews from area media. Media outlets that requested an interview were informed Johnson would be made available when possible.

The UT athletic department has published guidelines stating that all player interviews must be set up through the sports information office.

Working through a source within the UT athletic department over a course of several weeks, Hooker was able to arrange an exclusive interview with Johnson. The interview was conducted with Johnson by phone on the night of Oct. 4 and the story was published in the Oct. 5 News Sentinel.

News Sentinel editor Jack McElroy defended Hooker’s reporting on this story.

“Dave is an enterprising reporter who works hard to break news for our readers,” McElroy said. “Although this was a positive story about a great player, Dave got whistled for a false start. There was certainly never any intent to harm Inky Johnson or the UT athletic program in any way. The News Sentinel regrets UT’s decision in taking this action but looks forward to continuing to provide fans with comprehensive coverage of the Vols.”

In his letter to Hooker and the News Sentinel, Painter said the athletic department is concerned about the precedent set by Hooker’s story.

“Your action has caused not only the UT Athletics Department but also your colleagues to doubt your ability or willingness to follow accepted guidelines for access to Tennessee student-athletes,” Painter wrote.

“In this case a very hard and fast guideline was broken and we felt we had to act,” UT men’s athletic director Mike Hamilton said in a phone conversation Tuesday.

UT director of public relations Tiffany Carpenter said Tuesday that there have been two other incidents in which a member of the media was denied press privileges, one involving Hooker.

Brent Hubbs of Volquest.com and the Vol Network, was suspended for bowl week in 1998 for publishing what was said between a coach and player at practice, Carpenter said.

Hooker was suspended for a week or less in 2004 while an employee of Citadel Broadcasting over a “player accessibility issue,” said Bud Ford, UT associate athletic director for media relations.

Executive sports editor Steve Ahillen may be reached at 865-342-6259.

Mike Hutton

An Interview with Mike Hutton

An Interview with Mike Hutton

“Mostly it’s my introspection about coaching my daughter’s team. I didn’t have to make a bunch of phone calls – I just wanted to connect with different types of readers…You want to be read and for people to tune in.”

“I don’t cover Indiana day-to-day like the Indianapolis Star and the Bloomington Herald Times. I get down there 10 times a year…I also cover Notre Dame football and usually write two columns a week. I cover high schools as well. There’s no way I can sit here and go toe-to-toe…”

Mike Hutton: Interviewed on April 3, 2008

Position: Indiana and Notre Dame beat reporter and columnist, Post-Tribune of Northwest Indiana

Born: 1966, Valparaiso, IND

Education: Marquette, 1989, B.A.; Purdue-Calumet, 1993, M.A., English

Career: Times of Northwest Indiana; Chicago Tribune 1995; Post-Tribune 1997 –

Personal: married, three children

Favorite restaurant (home): Bistro 157, Valparaiso, “an upscale place where my wife and like to go to get away for the night”

Favorite restaurant (road): Grazie, Scottsdale, AZ., “New York pizza – great wine bar – outside the Hotel Valley Ho”

Favorite hotel: Valley Ho, Scottsdale; Westin, Indianapolis

Posted by Mike Hutton on post-trib.com, January 14, 2008, 11:44 a.m.:

Game slippage.

I figured that was the best way to introduce my new blog about coaching my daughter’s 5th grade basketball team.

I’ve never coached basketball, she hasn’t played. Neither have the majority of the 16 players we have split up into two teams for the Northwest Indiana CYO League.

Her name is Sara Hutton, my name is Mike Hutton. You can call me Mike. Or coach if you like though I’m probably barely qualified. I have to admit, though, I like the title. It’s Sara without an H by the way. That’s exactly what my wife told the nurse her name was about a minute after she was born. Neither of us had a clear idea of what we’d call her.

“What’s her name,” the nurse asked.

“Sara,” my wife said.

“With or without an H ?” she asked.

“Without,” she said.

So there you have. Our running 11-year inside joke.

Anyway, I like the term game slippage, introduced to me by Greg Kirby, assistant women’s coach at Valparaiso. On December 31st of all days, I had a slight panic attack. We had our first game in six days, just two practices under our belt and no real offense and no real idea of executing the most basic concepts: how to inbounds the ball, shoot a free throw, line up for a jump ball, etc. I called VU coach Keith Freeman in the middle of the day who referred me to Kirby for an extended practice plan. He gave me all these great drills for practice and then at the end of the conversation, he told me it probably wasn’t going to make a difference.

“Game slippage,” he said.

“What’s that,” I asked

“The idea that most everything they learn in practice they forget when they actually play,” he said.

Kirby was right. Our first game was nothing like our last practice, where I had them run one play about 20 times to make sure they knew something.

St. Mary’s from Crown Point beat us 25-0. They had some girl that looked like she was 8 feet tall on the team. They actually lined up before the game and shot lay-ups, like college teams do.

We had to scurry to make sure our girls left the lockerroom in time for the second half.

Game slippage, I figured. It’ll get better.

Q. Why write about your daughter?

A. I just thought it would be interesting. It’s different than the standard inside stuff on Indiana or Notre Dame – that’s great too. I knew I couldn’t do it all the time – just because I didn’t have the time – but I will pick it up again next year.

You get some non-traditional readers, not just sports readers. You get mothers and fathers who have kids participating in sports or who coach sports. I kind of feel like a real coach – there were things that happened that I thought about including in the blog but I just didn’t go there. I was afraid some parent would read it and get pissed off. We had roster changes that caused consternation – some of those little issues you sort of hear about as a reporter but never really experience until you become a coach. I weighed whether I should write about a couple things – at the end there were two things I didn’t blog about.

Q. How did it come about?

A. I wanted to do something different. We just kicked off the blog at the Post-Tribune this year – we’re a bit technically challenged – and I thought it would be a way to do something different. There’s freedom on the Internet – you have the space and you’re not constricted by whatever conventions a typical section has accumulated over the years. There’s a kind of freshness – at least for me.

Mostly it’s my introspection about coaching my daughter’s team. I didn’t have to make a bunch of phone calls – I just wanted to connect with different types of readers. The whole blogging thing is really interesting. We’re trying to figure out what works and what doesn’t. Will people care about it and read it? You want to be read and for people to tune in. I try to be unconventional in some of my story approaches.

I have to wrap it up – probably with one more.

Q. What’s been the response?

A. It’s been good from the people who see me. They say they really like it, and they like that it’s not controversial.

Q. How does your daughter like it?

A. She doesn’t know about it – I haven’t told her. The only thing she knows on the web is a game fifth graders play. I’m debating whether to tell her – I’m afraid it might make her self-conscious. Maybe I’m being over-protective. Maybe I should tell her to read it and see what she thinks.

Nobody I coach with has said anything about it. I haven’t publicized it. Most of the people I work with or are on the team read the hard copy of the paper.

Q. Is your blog edited?

A. No. It goes straight in. In the first one there were two typos and I had to correct it. I self-edit. The first few were raw because I wasn’t thinking about it. Now I remember that I have to edit as well as write. I treat it like it was hard copy for the paper.

Q. Do you mind the additional work?

A. It’s something I wanted to do and everybody on the staff wanted to do for about a year. Nobody is cracking a whip and saying you have to do x number of blogs per week – it’s left up to us. Generally they like us to do two or three a week. I haven’t because I’m just so busy.

I read Joe Posnanski’s blog (KC Star) – it’s so long – I wonder how he has the time to do that. It shows he’s pretty talented. I read him any time I need to get in the mood to write.

Q. Who else do you read?

A. Bob Kravitz (Indianapolis Star). I’m from Indiana and I have to see what he has to say. I grew up reading Bernie Lincicome (Rocky Mountain News) and I still tune in to him. I liked Skip Bayless (ESPN) when he was a newspaper columnist as opposed to a personality. TJ Simers (LA Times). All the Chicago guys – Jay Mariotti (Sun-Times), Greg Couch (Sun-Times), Rick Morrissey (Tribune). Dan LeBatard (Miami Herald). My reading is probably more topical than anything – or if something is in front of me. Some topics interest me, and if I know LeBatard has weighed in I’ll go see. But always the Chicago folks and Kravitz.

Q. Any blogs on Indiana?

A. Terry Hutchens (Hoosiers Insider) has a great blog. He’s the beat writer for the Star.

Q. Non-mainstream media?

A. Notre Dame has great independent freestanding site called ndnation.com – it’s got links from everywhere. There’s a guy called The Rock who writes a pretty darn good column. Whoever does the site does it on their own time – it’s pretty well done. It isn’t a Rivals site where people get paid – it’s a site fans put together. The nice thing is they have links to every story written in every newspaper, with the exception of the South Bend Tribune. Apparently they got into some sort of tussle over linking.

Q. Do sites like that hurt your outlet?

A. Not specifically. We’re torn between acknowledging they exist and admitting we have to check them all the time and follow up on stuff. There are so many crazy and ludicrous posts on there it’s bothersome. Obviously people have legitimate tips and know things. It’s really for hard-core fans. Such a small percentage of people have a Rivals account where they can get Notre Dame stuff – at least where we circulate I can’t imagine many of them go to Rivals. I think a lot of our readers know about ndnation.com but I don’t know if they really keep up with it. I just don’t see that it affects what we do in the daily paper. Maybe some day it might but I’m not sure how or when that might be.

Q. How much did you do on the Tom Crean story?

A. For us it’s a little different. We’re in the northwest corner of the state. I don’t cover Indiana day-to-day like the Indianapolis Star and the Bloomington Herald Times. I get down there 10 times a year. My approach is different. We’re a 65,000 daily – I do more broad strokes and more analysis and less reporting, frankly, than what the bigger papers do. I’m trying to get hold of (interim head basketball coach Dan) Dakich – he was born in Gary. There are two papers here and one of us will get him first. We used to be the Gary Post-Tribune but the Gary was dropped 40 years ago. He went to Andrean High School in Merrillville – everybody knows him around here and he’s a popular figure.

I also cover Notre Dame football and usually write two columns a week. I cover high schools as well. There’s no way I can sit here and go toe-to-toe with the Star or the Herald Times – it’s not feasible. We’re geared toward the Chicago market – our pro coverage is all Bears, Bulls, Cubs and Sox. Purdue basketball turned out to be big for us – three of their freshmen were local kids who turned out to be a big part of the team.

Q. Is Tom Crean worth $2.3 million per season?

A. I think so. Full disclosure – I’m a Marquette grad. I thought they should have hired him two years ago. I suspect the president, Adam Herbert, at the time wanted Kelvin – that’s just my instinct, I don’t know for sure. At the press conference Crean hit a home run – he just connected with the fans and alumni and administrators in ways they seem to be starved for. He’s got a great record of recruiting players – Milwaukee is not a basketball Mecca – it’s colder than Chicago and it’s windy. They don’t really have a strong program despite winning the national championship 30 years ago – their play has been uneven with the exception of when Crean and Kevin O’Neill were there. He got a lot of under-the-radar kids to go there. Players improve under him and really like to play for him. If things break right, he could be one of the great coaches. We’ll see.

Q. Play the role of shrink. Why couldn’t Kelvin Sampson follow the rules?

A. Great question. In his own mind I don’t think he thought he was doing anything wrong. When he was hired he got up there and said ‘I made a mistake and this would never happen again’ – it all seems so insincere now. He staff did exactly the same things he did at Oklahoma that he said he wouldn’t do. There’s no way to rationalize it or describe it, except to say that he just didn’t think making the extra call was really making the call in his mind. Or not being able to monitor his staff adequately, or whatever he did – we’re not quite sure at this point.

I did read the NCAA report – it detailed calls to some kids from assistants that shouldn’t have been made. I have to believe he knew about them. He had said earlier to Bob Kravitz, “Everybody does it and I will too”. We have no choice but to think that, since he hasn’t said anything on the matter. We try to make sense of these things any way we can – even though it’s not life and death.

Posted by Mike Hutton, on post-trib.com, February 18, 2008, 9:41 a.m.:

My daughter rang me on my cell phone last week in Indianapolis to tell me she had made a foul. I was down there covering the state swim meet.

“I don’t know what I did, dad,” she said. “The referee said I pushed her.”

She was excited. I was excited for her. Just wish I could’ve been there to see it in person. So far, the St. Paul Panthers have learned about five plays, (blue, panther, stack one and stack two and one other I can’t recall the name of ) endured a somewhat disruptive midseason player switch and won a couple of games (one by forfeit) since we last visited.

Sara (without an H) has had one shot in a game, made a basket in practice, learned how to make a lay-up and tied up a couple of players for a jump ball. She also has developed an interest in actually watching basketball on television with me. Sunday, we huddled around the television and watched Luke Harangody and Notre Dame play Rutgers. We play our last game Saturday and then it’s tournament time. I’ll get back to you then.

(SMG thanks Mike Hutton for his cooperation)

Eugene and the Phone

By Mike Hutton on February 2, 2008 8:25 AM | Permalink
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Eugene Wilson failed to do a phone interview I requested of him via the Patriot’s media relations staff. The public relations staff had no reason to believe he wasn’t going to call back during designated media time for athletes last week.

That wasn’t surprising. My experience is that Wilson just doesn’t return phone calls for interviews to writers of his hometown paper unless his dad, Eugene Sr. helps out. (His dad, by the way, is unfailingly cooperative in these matters). Once, after multiple calls to both the Patriots and his parents, I got him briefly on the phone for an interview the first time the Pats played in the Superbowl.

Doing a story on him for Sunday’s paper would’ve been a nice compliment to the story we had on Bob Kuechenberg.

I don’t expect readers to have sympathy for me because someone didn’t return a call. Happens all the time in journalism. That’s part of the job. However, we’ve fawned over Wilson, helping him publicize his summer football camp (that he no longer does) one year and we put a story in the paper about Eugene Wilson night at a Merrillville basketball game a couple of years ago. I hoped he would see fit to return the favors, not for me but for our readers, who certainly would like to hear from him about what it means to play on a team that is going for a perfect season. This brings me to a larger issue: Do athletes owe their hometown anything ? Should they return our phone calls ? Do you want to hear from them in the newspaper ? Glenn Robinson has been criticized for not giving back enough to the community ? To be fair to Wilson, he’s not the only athlete who selectively chooses who he wants to talk with and it’s not fair to say that just because an athlete doesn’t return a phone call that doesn’t mean he or she isn’t in some way giving back to the place they grew up in.

mhutton@post-trib.com

he Post-Tribune had its beginnings in 1907, when The Gary Weekly was established to serve the brand-new steel industry rising on the shores of Lake Michigan.

On Labor Day, 1908, the Gary Weekly became a daily. The Gary Tribune was located on the corner of 5th and Washington in downtown Gary.

On March 9, 1910, J.R. and H.B. Snyder purchased another daily paper from the mayor of Gary, Thomas Knotts. That was the Gary evening Post. They merged with the original Gary paper in July 1921, starting the Post-Tribune as a newspaper.

In August 1966, the Snyder heirs sold the paper to Northwest Publications, Inc., part of a brand-new nationwide newspaper company, Ridder Publications. The “Gary” was dropped from the masthead as a regional newspaper flourished. In 1974, The Post-Tribune became part of the former Knight-Ridder chain.

In June, 1986, the publishing cycle changed to a seven-day morning edition, from a weekday evening and weekend morning edition.

On Feb. 2, 1998, American Publishing took over and has become the chain which is now the Sun-Times News Group.

About the Sun-Times News Group

Sun-Times News Group (“STNG”) is dedicated to being the premier source of local news and information for the greater Chicago area. Its media properties include the Chicago Sun-Times and suntimes.com as well as newspapers and websites serving 120 communities across Chicago. STNG’s parent company is Sun-Times Media Group, Inc. (NYSE: SVN) (www.thesuntimesgroup.com
).

Mike Hutton, named best sports columnist in the state by the Hoosier State Press Assoiciation in 2007, has worked at the Post-Tribune for 11 years. He covers Notre Dame football, Indiana basketball, local golf and high school sports. Check out Mike’s blog to see what’s on his mind.

Crean touts tradition in first day on job

April 3, 2008

Recommend

BY MIKE HUTTON
Post-Tribune staff writer

Shaking hands, cracking jokes and preaching about the value of family, Tom Crean was officially introduced as the Indiana basketball coach Wednesday in an upbeat 40-minute press conference in the bowels of Memorial Stadium.

Crean was swayed away from Marquette after nine successful years where his team made the Final Four in 2003 and the NCAA Tournament five times. He left because he believes IU is one of the premier programs in the country.

“Maybe some people rank Indiana in the top three, some in the top five and some in the top 10,” he said. “I rank it No. 1.”

The program might be the best in his mind but it’s definitely not that good in its current state.

Letters of allegations by the NCAA were sent to IU officials in February, outlining recruiting violations, some of them major, against former coach Kelvin Sampson. IU censured itself by eliminating a scholarship and firing Sampson.

It’s possible that more sanctions could follow this summer after IU answers the allegations.

Aside from an appearance in the NCAA championship game in 2002, the Hoosiers have endured a rocky 15-year ride that started with the end of Bob Knight’s tenure and went through runs by Mike Davis and Sampson as head coach.

To be certain that Crean has plenty of time to fix the problems, he agreed to an eight-year $18.24 million contract. That averages out to $2.3 million per season.

Crean said the reason for the move wasn’t a business decision.

“This was a heart decision,” he said. “I walked away from an incredible job to take another incredible job.”

Crean said that he received a call from Eddie Fogler, the former South Carolina coach, on Sunday gauging his interest in the job after Tony Bennett, the Washington State coach, had rebuffed overtures from IU. Fogler was hired by the search committee as a consultant.

“When Mr. Fogler calls, you’d better listen,” he said. “I listened and I thought, ‘It’s Indiana. It’s Indiana.’ That’s the premise I worked with (in making my decision).”

Crean will have plenty of personnel issues to deal with.

Eric Gordon, the Big Ten freshman of the Year, has a news conference scheduled for Monday to say whether he is going to declare for the NBA draft.

D.J. White, the Big Ten player of the year, will be gone.

Two other starters — Jamarcus Ellis and Armon Bassett — were kicked off the team on Monday by interim coach Dan Dakich after they missed a mandatory meeting, according to the Indianapolis Star.

The departure of all four of those players would leave IU without any returning starters from a team that went 25-8 and lost to Arkansas in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Despite all the immediate obstacles, Crean said he promises to work hard to make IU basketball consistently great again.

“I have no timetables, no immediate goals,” he said. “We’re going to work hard to build the program the right way.”

Contact Mike Hutton at 648-3139 or mhutton@post-trib.com
or go to his blog at: blogs.post-trib.com/hutton.

Thanks for thinking of me. I read the interviews you put up on the site regularly. It’s well done. Wasn’t sure if that was the same site I was thinking of when you initially e-mailed. Anyway, I’m back. My phone numbers are (219)477-4531 (H), (219)613-0141 and (219)648-3139. Let me know how you want to proceed.

Kevin Iole

An Interview with Kevin Iole

An Interview with Kevin Iole

“There’s a certain gene in a person who is willing to get in there and get punched in the nose and risk many things to get a paycheck. That’s what makes them interesting – they have a different personality than the average person.”

“On a given night you might make a choice, but you don’t have to say only MMA or only boxing. During De La Hoya-Mayweather they said it was a fight to save boxing. I wrote a column saying that was ludicrous. Writers take an easy way out thinking there’s a conflict – fans don’t buy into it.”

“You have to do quality journalism to be a good boxing writer. I don’t think it’s widespread, unfortunately. A lot of Internet sites that cover boxing have very loose standards of journalism. It’s disappointing. To give readers quality work you need the same standards you use covering government or major league baseball or the local municipal elections.”

Kevin Iole: Interviewed on June 22, 2007

Position: Boxing and mixed martial arts writer, Yahoo! Sports.

Born: 1959, Pittsburgh, Pa.

Education: Point Park College, 1981, journalism and communications

Career: Valley-News (Pa.) Dispatch 1979-82; Burlington Free Press 82-90; Las Vegas Review-Journal 90-2007; Yahoo.com 2007-

Personal: married (Betsy)

Favorite restaurant (home): Craftsteak Steak House, MGM Grand Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, “Kobe beef platinum – you can’t beat it”

Favorite restaurant (road): Corky’s Ribs and BBQ, Memphis, “dry ribs”

Favorite hotel (home): Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas “great selection of restaurants”

Favorite hotel (road): Omni, LA “lots of good places in walking distance”

Kevin Iole, excerpted from Yahoo! Sports, June 23, 2007:

LAS VEGAS – B.J. Penn spent the last 5 ½ years facing some of the world’s finest fighters, in weight classes ranging from lightweight to light heavyweight.

It was all, though, for one reason, he said.

“It was to get me back to Jens Pulver,” said Penn, who unexpectedly lost a bid for the lightweight title to Pulver in a 2002 fight and has chased a rematch ever since.

He got it on Saturday at the Palms Hotel in the finale of the UFC’s reality series, The Ultimate Fighter. Penn and Pulver served as coaches on the show and agreed to fight on Spike TV in the live finale.

Penn dominated the fight from the beginning, punishing Pulver mercilessly, before submitting him on a rear naked choke at 3:12 of the second round.

It was a one-sided beatdown as Penn showed the varied skills that have led UFC president Dana White to call him the most talented mixed martial artist in history.

He excelled in the standup, took Pulver down repeatedly and had a series of submission attempts before finally sinking in the choke.

Q. What are your beat responsibilities?

A. I am the mixed martial arts and boxing columnist. My job is to deliver personal and personality insights into my sports, which are the most individual sports compared to others out there. They are made up of very unique individuals. I don’t get caught up in who has the best look hook or who is the better body puncher. I’d rather tell how they got there and who and what they are. That’s what I do – I find out things and write about people who are putting their lives on the line to making a living.

Q. Is danger one of your themes?

A. It’s like talking to a high-wire artist. You would ask them “Why walk across a rope 200 feet in the air?” That’s why people watch it. There’s a certain gene in a person who is willing to get in there and get punched in the nose and risk many things to get a paycheck. That’s what makes them interesting – they have a different personality than the average person. Diego Corrales was a great example – he was the lightweight champion who died a month ago (in a motorcyle crash, while driving intoxicated). He was extreme about motorcycles. He loved all extreme sports. He jumped out of airplanes. Those are the traits that make fighters interesting personalities.

Q. Is your beat competitive?

A. It is. The problem now is as boxing/MMA writer I have boxing matches and UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship) fights – two big and different demographics. There are a lot of solely MMA writers and solely boxing writers, but I’m doing both. Both are very competitive. At Yahoo we compete with Fox and espn.com. I like to think we provide the best content for the combat sports.

Sometimes I have to make a tough decision. I’m going to a MMA fight tomorrow instead of the Hatton-Castillo fight, even though I’ve written a couple of columns on Hatton-Castillo. Every fight I do I have a standing feature – I rate the fighters in different categories and I still do that. But the night of the fight I’m going to the MMA fight, just because the numbers support it. AP is my partner – Tim Dahlberg will cover the boxing match. There’s no such option at the MMA fight. I can better serve my readers doing the MMA fight.

Q. AP doesn’t have an MMA writer?

A. No. Only recently is it putting out the results of the fights – short briefs as opposed to stories. MMA is an education process. Lots of people perceive it as a no-holds-barred sport – they don’t understand it. That’s certainly been the case with AP. It doesn’t realize how popular it’s become. Nor do most people realize what it truly is. One reason it’s growing in popularity is that as people get more educated they are able to educate their friends and neighbors.

Q. Don’t the two sports compete against one another?

A. It’s similar to college basketball and the NBA. You don’t have to be a fan of one and not the other. On a given night you might make a choice, but you don’t have to say only MMA or only boxing. During De La Hoya-Mayweather they said it was a fight to save boxing. I wrote a column saying that was ludicrous. Writers take an easy way out thinking there’s a conflict – fans don’t buy into it.

There’s a distinct market for both and then an overlap. Some hard-corse boxing fans, especially the older demographic, is not going to be apt to look at MMA. They say it’s brutal. John McCain called it ‘human cock-fighting’. They won’t take the time to understand what MMA is. The younger kids have grown up with it and are more open-minded. Those are the people who will be fans of both – give them a good boxing match and they will watch it.

Boxing’s challenge is to not have one-sided showcase fights. That’s a phenomenon of the last 10 years. HBO is guilty of that. They’ll put guys on against guys they know they can beat because they’re leaning toward a match-up down the road. The fights are non-competitive. There are so many options now fans don’t want to see one-sided fights. They want competition, where their hero might lose. It’s forcing the boxing promoters to take a look, and certainly the TV networks. Roy Jones and Rick Frazier (Jones, TKO 2, January 9, 1999) will not be tolerated anymore.

Q. You’re saying MMA fans would watch good boxing matches?

A. I think they would. Maybe some wouldn’t. They’ve been conditioned not to. Dan Raphael (espn.com) and I have been two of the loudest critics of HBO for some of the fights they have put on. Now it’s trying to address that – not totally in the right way – but it’s working on it. It needs to really provide competitive quality fights to compete with MMA. The nature of MMA is such that there are so many ways to win and lose you never know what will happen. In boxing there’s only one way. In MMA even when fighter A seems to be winning fighter B always has a chance. In boxing it’s unlikely the physically superior guy is going to lose. In UFC every single title has changed hands in the last year.

Q. How many UFC titles are there?

A. Five. Heavyweight, light heavyweight, middleweight, welterweight, lightweight.

Q. How did you get into this niche?

A. I’ve been a reporter for 27 years now. I was at the Review-Journal for almost 17 years. I worked in Vermont for seven years before Vegas. I covered the Golden Gloves. I grew up in Pittsburgh, which was a big fight town at the time. I covered Holmes-Snipes (1981) for a small paper. I always loved boxing. I got a great opportunity at the Review-Journal. For a number of years I did sidebar work with Royce Feour, and if there were two cars I did the card opposite him. In ’96 I took over the main event type of stories.

Q. Does boxing reporting require a different set of skills?

A. I don’t think so. You have to do quality journalism to be a good boxing writer. I don’t think it’s widespread, unfortunately. A lot of Internet sites that cover boxing have very loose standards of journalism. It’s disappointing. To give readers quality work you need the same standards you use covering government or major league baseball or the local municipal elections.

Q. Is there a watchdog aspect to reporting on combat sports?

A. I think so. There’s so much potential for abuse. There’s no barrier to anybody saying “I’m a boxing promoter.” You can buy a fax machine and set up shop. If you’ve got the money in boxing they welcome you with open arms and you can become a major player overnight. As a result we in the media have to scrutinze and look out for the best interests of the fighters because there’s no one else to protect them.

To a lesser degree that’s true in MMA, but a much lesser degree. UFC is the dominant promoter and acts as its own sanctioning body. Because UFC is so dominant it has a chilling effect – there isn’t a lot of competition. UFC bought out three competitors in the last year. One was a Japanese organization, for what was believed to be $70 million. Also the World Fighting Alliance and World Extreme Cage Fighting. It would be difficult to go into business and throw up another show. The UFC brand is so dominant it’s pushed out other potential problems.

Q.Who do you read and where do you go for information?

A. I try to read Bill Plaschke (LA Times) and Tim Dahlberg (AP) every day. Bill has such a fun style to read. Tim is also excellent – he really sets a standard for columnists. As a native Pittsburgher, I read Bob Smizik (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). He always has strong opinions.

Q. What about websites?

A. Yahoo.com sports. Michael Katz (BoxingScene.com) was one of the great writers – now he’s kind of winding down, but I still make it a point to read what he writes. Lance Pugmire (LA Times) has interesting angles. I know if Lance writes something it’s going to be a fun read. Sweetscience.com and Maxboxing.com. I make it a point to check around and see what guys are writing. I know if Lance writes something it’s going to be a fun read.

Q. When are Google and AOL going to challenge Yahoo! Sports?

A. I wonder. Certainly from Google’s standpoint it’s a big questionmark. They’re making so much on advertising that I wonder. But going into the future it might be something they try to do. It would be interesting if that happens.

Q. Do search engines get decent pressbox seating?

A. My first fight for Yahoo was De La Hoya–Mayweather. I’m there for the most trafficked sports website in the world. I had covered for the Review-Journal for how many years, and always sat in the front row, and I wrote more words on that fight than any person alive. Yet I moved from first row to fifth. Dan Wetzel, our sports columnist, said “You moved up in terms of circulation and impact and down to the back of the pressbox. And at home they did that to me. Subsequently that has changed.

(SMG thanks Kevin Iole for his cooperation)

december 30, 2006

BOXING: Tyson’s rags-to-riches-to-rags story was ESPN-born and bared

Twenty years ago, there were thousands of young American boys who dreamed of being Mike Tyson.

Today, I’m pretty sure not even Mike Tyson wants to be Mike Tyson.

Tyson was arrested early Friday in Buckeye, Ariz., the latest in an arm’s-length list of battles with the law.

It was big news, of course, on ESPN on Friday, despite the fact that the so-called “worldwide leader in sports” pays about as much attention to boxing as it does to curling.

Boxing skills, knockout power, defensive artistry and a granite chin won’t get you airtime on ESPN. Getting arrested with a couple of bags of cocaine in your back pockets will.

The first 20 years of Tyson’s life began very low — he was born into poverty, was a petty thief and was sent to reform school for incorrigible boys — before ending very high. At 20 years old in 1986, he became the youngest fighter in history to win the heavyweight title.

Tyson’s second 20 years began very high — he won the undisputed title and knocked out previously unbeaten Michael Spinks in one of the most anticipated bouts in history in just 91 seconds — but they’re destined, it appears, to go full circle and end very low.

He has little left of the $300 million he earned in the ring. It has been 10 years since he has had a title belt around his waist.

His only salable skill, it seems, is being Mike Tyson.

Being Mike Tyson — in a word, being outrageous — is his only way to make a living. It’s also a guarantee of future appearances on the “worldwide leader.” But instead of appearing with gloves around his fists, he’ll be shown with cuffs around his wrists.

Tyson never was the maniac that many thought him to be or that, in later years, he portrayed himself to be. He was surprisingly insightful and had a kind heart. He was always a sucker for an ex-fighter with a sob story.

He’s the one with the sob story now, but no one is listening. None of his so-called friends has heeded his many pleas for help.

But he became what he is because that’s what sold. Just being a knockout artist, even one of the greatest of all time, wasn’t enough. The more outrageous he was, the zanier he acted, the more attention he received and the more money he made.

There was no reason that his 2002 fight with Lennox Lewis should have been the largest pay-per-view bout in history because it was clear to anyone with even a basic understanding of the sport that Lewis was, by that stage, the superior fighter. Tyson hadn’t had a meaningful win in more than five years.

But it sold 2 million pay per views because Tyson was, well, Tyson. He threatened to rip Lewis’ heart out and swore he would eat his children. He acted like a lunatic, all in the name of pitching a fight, and we loved it.

He’s still acting like Tyson, though he no longer makes any fighters melt, and, of course, no one is buying.

Acting like Tyson now is a sure way to wind up back on ESPN. And that’s not a good thing.

In his prime as a fighter, Tyson had blindingly fast hands and the power to knock over a horse.

He put punches together in combinations that heavyweights rarely did. He was a master at hooking to the body, though everything he threw to the head got a lot more attention.

But as the hands slowed, the power faded ever so slightly and the mystique that surrounded him was lifted.

He was a decent, though hardly great, fighter, with as many flaws as strengths.

With few actual fighting skills, his bizarre behavior suddenly wasn’t seen as a ticket-selling opporunity but, rather, it became a law enforcement situation.

Tyson became this mythic figure in part because of the power of ESPN. He was a staple of the still-fledgling network in his pre-title days, running off a series of spectacular knockouts.

Tyson is proof that boxing is not dead, or even dying. ESPN helped build the legend by showing his first- or second-round knockouts on a biweekly basis.

His knockouts weren’t fly balls that scraped the back of the fence as they left the park. They were always Reggie Jackson, upper-deck shots in the final game of the World Series.

A nation grew transfixed watching, and the legend of Mike Tyson was born.

ESPN is no longer part of any basic cable service and it has the broadcast rights to televise NFL, NBA and Major League Baseball games. It has more important things to worry about than showing a boxing highlight.

Michael Gerard Tyson isn’t going to grace ESPN’s airwaves any longer for anything he does inside of a boxing ring.

Sadly, though, he’s probably going to have a recurring role on the network that made him famous.

Kevin Iole’s boxing column is published Saturday. He can be reached at 396-4428 or kiole@reviewjournal.com.

Jim Jenks

An Interview with Jim Jenks

An Interview with Jim Jenks

“We’re in this world right now where the NFL doesn’t want to give newspaper people video access because they’re saving that for themselves…We understand we can’t shoot game action, but our problem is that we can’t shoot Andy Reid in a post-game news conference. TV does that – why can’t newspapers?

“The hard part has just been trying to convince people that there’s more to do – breaking down those old walls of “this is how it’s always been”. We need to integrate the web and mobile into daily tasks. In a union atmosphere change like that does not come easy…”

“We’ll talk about opening up relations between sports editors and advertising departments…Can we challenge the rule of church and state to get more money in here but yet not destroy that wall? Can we get people to think about it on both sides of the fence?”

“No matter what talk radio does they still get their information from newspapers every day. Talk radio hosts aren’t in the lockerroom every day. It’s still the papers that break most of the news stories – that’s what we have to protect.”

Jim Jenks: Interviewed on November 7, 2006

Position: Executive Sports Editor, Philadelphia Inquirer

Born: 1961, San Antonio, Texas

Education: Western New England College

Career: Springfield Morning Union 1979-83, Lakeland Ledger 83-84, Fayetteville Times 84-85, Odessa American 85, Tampa Tribune 85-88, Hartford Courant 88-90, Newsday 91-94, Santa Rosa Press Democrat 94-96, Starwave Corp. (nascar.com, nfl.com, ESPN.com) 97-00, ESPN TV 00-03, Philadelphia Inquirer 03 –

Personal: married, four children

Favorite restaurant (home): Gus’s Lunch Truck, “He’s an institution here – great chicken salad”

Favorite restaurant (road): Metropolitan Grill, Seattle, “service is impeccable and the food is great”

Favorite hotel: Bellevue Club, Bellevue, Wash.

Professional Organizations: President, Associated Press Sports Editors

From the Philadelphia Inquirer, November 9, 2006:

The Inquirer’s new editor, Bill Marimow, returned to an enthusiastic welcome today in the newsroom where he had won two Pulitzer Prizes decades ago.

He will replace Amanda Bennett, who stepped down by “mutual” agreement with new publisher Brian Tierney.

With the paper facing a costly fall in national advertising and tough union contract talks with a Nov. 30 deadline, Marimow warned of “painful” staff cuts and narrower horizons at a paper that once prided itself on national and foreign coverage, as well as in-depth local reporting.

“We have to figure out how to thrive in an era of reduced resources,” Marimow told reporters and editors crowding the paper’s Broad Street newsroom and an overhanging balcony, as he stood beside Tierney and Bennett.

Tierney has said that as many as 150 of the 415 Inquirer newsroom jobs could be cut, though “it doesn’t have to be that bad” if he gets savings from new union contracts, changes to vendor contracts, and more flexible work rules for advertising salespeople.

Q. You’re under new ownership – what has changed?

A. Nothing really has changed yet. We are in the midst of collective bargaining negotiations and that is the new ownership’s priority – before they can do anything else.

Q. Are you looking at layoffs in your department?

A. The new owner – Brian Tierney – has said the paper is looking at potential layoffs. So, yes, we are.

Q. Is there tension?

A. It doesn’t feel like tension – there’s definitely anxiety. But it’s not toward me as management – it very much feels like we’re all in this together, at least from my perspective. I spent much of my weekend fielding phone calls from the staff. They were asking, “Where are we at?” I didn’t feel any tension toward me. I felt a lot of anxiety of the “what does it mean” sort.

Exempt people could be involved in layoffs too. I don’t know that I’m safe.

Q. How important is sports coverage to the Inquirer’s survival?

A. The Philadelphia market is possessed about its sports team so you would figure it would play a very prominent role.

The Eagles are far and above the most popular team in this market judging by local TV ratings. The success of the Eagles and ours go hand in hand. There is an old NASCAR adage, “Win on Sunday – Sell on Monday”. That works in this market.

Q. The Eagles’ success – isn’t that a tenuous lifeline for the Inquirer?

A. Yes. When you talk about newspapers in general “tenuous” is a good word. Circulation has increasingly gone down – so have ad revenues. So, yes, it’s not the only thing we have to count on – we do have to count on ourselves to sell more ads and find new ways to present journalism, and to find new distribution points. A lot of papers are going through this now. Everybody has basically fooled around with the web for 10 years and nobody has a helluva lot to show for it.

Q. What is the Inquirer doing to increase revenues?

A. One thing we’ve done here – and hope it catches on – is mobile service. We’re serving our news out on wireless PDAs and cellphones – pushing it out through a WAP site or an SMS text messaging service. It allows you to charge for content, unlike the web – we gave it away for free and can’t figure out how to get it back.

Our mobile service is in its infancy but that’s where we’re going. Kids were not a targeted audience in the past but they will be now – from high school on up. They do a lot of stuff through their cellphones – we need to be an information provider through their phones. We need to get back what we had when papers were dominant.

Q. Didn’t ESPN have a bad experience with a mobile news service?

A. Yes. Theirs was a business decision to provide hardware and software. We have a third party relationship with Cingular and Verizon and other service providers. ESPN tried to do the hardware – but how many people with good service are going to switch over to a whole other phone and service provider? With ours you don’t have to worry about that – we push our information to your service provider.

Q. Is anybody else doing this?

A. Not in the way we are. Look at USA Today, Washington Post and New York Times – you’ve seen their commercials – they say “text us and we’ll give you information”. It’s a two-transaction process. With ours we push you the sports news we think you need to know. For Eagles games we push you the scores as they happen. We give you signings, trades and other scores. Anything else gets put up on the WAP site – a wireless device website you can go to at your leisure.

Q. Cost?

A. It’s $2.99 a month for non-subscribers and 99 cents for subscribers.

Q. What issues are in front of APSE (Associated Press Sports Editors)?

A. We’re in this world right now where the NFL doesn’t want to give newspaper people video access because they’re saving that for themselves. They see it (video) as a money-maker and we see it as a money-maker. As we figure out our distribution points we see it as a necessity. I wrote a letter this morning – as president of the APSE – to (NFL Commissioner) Roger Goodell to request a meeting on ways we can work together on this.

Q. What are your APSE members saying about access problems?

A. It’s mixed all over the place. Some teams are more aggressive – it’s inconsistent across the board. We’re trying to help some papers and get some definitive answers. We’re concerned that as the NFL Network and nfl.com get more involved there will be less access for us. This is mostly about video – audio isn’t a problem. We understand we can’t shoot game action, but our problem is that we can’t shoot Andy Reid in a post-game news conference. TV does that – why can’t newspapers? We haven’t gotten a definitive answer. We know the answer – they want it exclusively for their website – but they have not said that.

Q. What other concerns are you hearing from sports editors?

A. Figuring out how to make money – not for APSE as an entity but for individual newspapers. My APSE legacy project is how to make the sports department a better revenue producer. I get tired of doing great special sections – which should be filled with advertising – but are filled with none. But look at some of the southern papers – they’re filled with advertising and having great success.

I’m talking with the Newspaper Association of America – which is independent of any chain – I’m working with it to prepare a presentation for the APSE regional meetings. The idea is to reach out and touch people – show them different ad strategies and sponsorship strategies. We’ll talk about opening up relations between sports editors and advertising departments – we find that a lot of sports editors don’t talk to the ad folks. How is the message being communicated? Can we challenge the rule of church and state to get more money in here but yet not destroy that wall? Can we get people to think about it on both sides of the fence?

Q. Why is the Washington Post said to have the best newspaper website?

A. They do a good job of cross promoting – Page 2 tells you what they’re doing on the website. They’re trying to do video – to appeal to all the senses that you can on the web and that you can’t in the newspaper. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution also has a good one.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has put its Packers content behind a firewall. That’s something we could look at – people might pay for it on the Eagles.

This is where Knight-Ridder made a fatal mistake. It had all these great markets and it went out on the cheap and created a single (web) template for all of them – they all looked the same. You can’t do that. The web is about nuance. Collectively we all just blew it.

Q. As a sports editor what are your toughest coverage decisions?

A. I wouldn’t call coverage decisions tough – it still comes down to balance as our space shrinks and the paper gets smaller. Our four major pro sports have been maintained. The high schools have been cut a little but generally have been maintained.

Colleges probably have taken the biggest hit in my time here. But it’s not so much a coverage decision – we’re going to cover what we said we’re going to cover – it’s how much you get in the paper. We haven’t given up on anything – we’ve just scaled back the amount of coverage. We used to cover St. Joe’s, Temple and Villanova home and road. Last year we covered just Villanova home and road and we would look to get a stringer for Temple on the road, even though it was John Chaney’s last year and we had to keep an eye on it. St. Joe’s we relied on wires for the road and covered them at home.

Q. Your toughest personnel decisions?

A. Not too many – I haven’t had that many hires. The hard part has just been trying to convince people that there’s more to do – breaking down those old walls of “this is how it’s always been”. We need to integrate the web and mobile into daily tasks. In a union atmosphere change like that does not come easy and it’s almost done on a person-by-person and case-by-case basis. We’ve got to get a handle on integrating all these new distribution outlets and new responsibilities, such as gathering audio, which reporters had never done before.

Q. How do your reporters feel about gathering audio?

A. You’ve got to find people who will do it and put them in the right spot. We have not forced anybody to do anything they’re not comfortable with outside of the union contract.

Our Eagles beat reporter – Marc Narducci – is the primary one. He carries a digital tape recorder and microphone. He’s got software on his computer that enables him to edit it and send it to the website – where they post it.

This is what we have to do to survive – it’s a new business.

Q. Does this alter the relationship between the beat reporter and the Eagles?

A. I don’t think so. As a reporter you put the mike in front of them anyway – all you’re doing is cutting that into sound bites – but they’re not seeing that. To the team the reporter is doing nothing he wasn’t doing before. They’re used to seeing newspaper and TV people carrying recorders. Correspondents from Phillies.com and Eagles.com do it as well.

Q. Does nfl.com do journalism?

A. They won’t break the negative. They won’t tell you Donovan McNabb had a below-average game. There was a time they wouldn’t even call a backup quarterback a “backup” – they didn’t want “backup” in there because it meant he was behind somebody and it could be looked at as a negative. That’s some of the stuff I went through when we launched nfl.com 10 years ago. Look at Eagles.com – it doesn’t get into salary negotiations. There’s nothing about holdouts. Real fans understand that – that’s why their web traffic is not near (the Inquirer’s) Philly.com. On game day it might be – fans will go to nfl.com so they can see the play-by-play.

They are doing journalism. I say that, having served on that side. But they’re only doing positive journalism – they’re not going to break a negative story. They are doing reporting and writing and all the things we’re trying to do with sound and video. It tends to be positive and act more like public relations. Could you tell the difference between them and us when we go out to do a positive story – probably not. Where you tell the difference is what we do in our columns. You’re not going to find too many negative opinions – or stories about criminals – on the team and league websites.

Q. Are your reporters blogging?

A. Not all of them – it loses its impact if you have too many. We have two blogs – Claire Smith on baseball and Marc Narducci on football.

Q. Do you consider the blogosphere your competition?

A. Yes I do. Is it big enough here where I feel it? I blogged awhile to see how it would go and I spent a lot of time on Phillies’ and Eagles fan blogs and hoped it would point people back to us. It was an experiment – an interesting experiment. It’s a neat world. They’re not competitive with one another – they just want to go out and write what they want – if they think something was written well on another blog they point to it. It’s like a large family out there. Are they competition to newspapers? For time? Yes. For information? No.

Blogs never will get the information we get because we’re in the lockerroom. That’s one thing newspapers have going into the future – no matter what talk radio does they still get their information from newspapers every day. Talk radio hosts aren’t in the lockerroom every day. It’s still the papers that break most of the news stories – that’s what we have to protect.

Q. Is talk radio your competition?

A. It’s more complementary and supplementary – I don’t think it’s truly competitive – not on information. In this market ratings for sports talk radio have gone down. It seems very Eagle-centric and one-dimensional – if you’re a fan of the other sports you won’t get your fix here on talk radio.

Q. Could the Phillies – like the Eagles – drive newspaper revenues?

A. Good question. It hasn’t happened. We would like it to happen. They did have a bit of a resurgence – but how much of that was due to Ryan Howard? The team was no better this year than last. Howard’s quest for 60 home runs was as much a national phenomenon as local. There was such an outcry against Bonds and McGwire – people wanted to see somebody clean do it. Then everybody in baseball pitched around him and it didn’t happen.

We’d love to see the Phillies take off. People ask me who I’m a fan of and I have to say nobody because I’m in the business. But I hope they do well because I know more people will buy the paper – success does matter to circulation.

(SMG thanks Jim Jenks for his cooperation)

Bennett steps down as Inquirer editor; Marimow to take over

By Joseph N. DiStefano and Miriam Hill

INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS

1151 words

9 November 2006

The Philadelphia Inquirer

English

(c) Copyright 2006, The Philadelphia Inquirer. All Rights Reserved.

The Inquirer’s new editor, Bill Marimow, returned to an enthusiastic welcome today in the newsroom where he had won two Pulitzer Prizes decades ago.

He will replace Amanda Bennett, who stepped down by “mutual” agreement with new publisher Brian Tierney.

With the paper facing a costly fall in national advertising and tough union contract talks with a Nov. 30 deadline, Marimow warned of “painful” staff cuts and narrower horizons at a paper that once prided itself on national and foreign coverage, as well as in-depth local reporting.

“We have to figure out how to thrive in an era of reduced resources,” Marimow told reporters and editors crowding the paper’s Broad Street newsroom and an overhanging balcony, as he stood beside Tierney and Bennett.

Tierney has said that as many as 150 of the 415 Inquirer newsroom jobs could be cut, though “it doesn’t have to be that bad” if he gets savings from new union contracts, changes to vendor contracts, and more flexible work rules for advertising salespeople.

“I need some breathing room,” Tierney said. Among other concessions, he wants to freeze pensions for newsroom, advertising and circulation workers. The Newspaper Guild of Greater Philadelphia, which represents the workers, opposes the freeze.

Marimow, who said he would start the week of Nov. 27, called for “excellent” and “indispensable” competitive journalism – online, audio and print. He promised a “collegial” newsroom. He said Tierney, an advertising professional, would help “figure out how to promote the great material our staff is producing.”

“I need some breathing room,” Tierney said. Among other concessions, he wants to freeze pensions for newsroom, advertising and circulation workers. The Newspaper Guild of Greater Philadelphia, which represents the workers, opposes the freeze.

Marimow called for “excellent” and “indispensable” competitive journalism – online, audio and print. He promised a “collegial” newsroom. He said Tierney, an advertising professional, would help “figure out how to promote the great material our staff is producing.”

That material will focus on the Philadelphia area, Marimow added. Although that will still include larger stories, he said, “we will no longer be sending battalions of staffers to cover news like Hurricane Katrina and the war in Baghdad.”

Marimow is replacing Amanda Bennett, who had been assigned the job under the paper’s former owner, Knight Ridder Inc., in 2003. Tierney’s group, Philadelphia Media Holdings LLC, bought The Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News and philly.com for $515 million, the majority of it borrowed, last spring.

Bennett said she will be a visiting fellow at Columbia University in New York. Tierney said the decision for Bennett to step down as editor was “mutual.”

In another shift, editorial page editor Chris Satullo will now report directly to publisher Tierney. He formerly reported to editor Bennett.

Satullo said he welcomed the shift, which he’d recommended to former Inquirer publisher Joe Natoli. He added that Tierney, “so far,” has made less effort to influence editorial page policy than his predecessors.

Tierney is a former Republican Party fund-raiser and organizer, but he has said he would take no part in party politics now that he was in the news business. Tierney also has a personal stake in one of the contentious issues that Satullo’s pages cover: Tierney is an investor in one of the companies that is trying to build a gambling casino in Philadelphia over the objections of neighborhood groups.

Tierney praised Marimow’s “passion for this region.” Marimow, 59, said he “couldn’t be happier” to be back in Philadelphia.

The son of a Havertown bicycle store owner, Marimow graduated from Trinity College and worked at the former Evening Bulletin before joined The Inquirer in 1972. He moved rapidly through a series of beats. He won two Pulitzers for his investigations of abuses by police, one in 1977 in partnership with Jonathan Neumann, now an editor at Bloomberg L.P., and a second in 1985.

Marimow was also lead reporter for the paper’s coverage of the 1986 bombing of the MOVE house in West Philadelphia. He later served as city editor, and as assistant to then-publisher Robert Hall. “I thought the world of him,” said Hall, who has served as a consultant to the paper’s new owners. “He’s a can-do guy, a totally rounded person.”

Marimow was also part of the exodus of veteran Inquirer editors and reporters after the departure of editor Eugene Roberts in 1990. His return is “the best thing that has happened to journalism in Philadelphia in more than a decade,” said James Naughton, a former Inquirer editor who later headed the nonprofit Poynter Institute, a journalism think tank in St. Petersburg, Fla.

In 1993, Marimow joined the Baltimore Sun as metro editor under John Carroll, another Inquirer alumnus. Marimow rose to editor-in-chief of the Sun, which won a string of Pulitzers on his watch. But he was fired after a new publisher took the helm at the Tribune Co.-owned paper in 2004.

He had opposed newsroom job cuts at the Sun. But The Inquirer is in a different situation, according to Marimow, because its profit margin is lower and the new owners, who have borrowed more than $300 million to acquire the paper, need to reduce costs.

After leaving the Sun, Marimow joined National Public Radio as vice president of news; he became the head of the growing radio service’s news division. But earlier this month he surprised staffers by taking a lesser job as the radio service’s ombudsman, fielding complaints from readers instead of leading reporters.

Marimow said he wrote Tierney a letter last summer after viewing the Philadelphia-centered movie Invincible, and discussions progressed from that first contact.

“I welcome Bill back to Philadelphia,” said Inquirer reporter Henry Holcomb, president of the Newspaper Guild of Greater Philadelphia, which represents advertising, newsroom and circulation workers. “He’s got the talent we need and the courage to fight for the resources the times require.”

Bennett joined the Inquirer in June 2003, four months before Hall left and two years before Knight Ridder Inc. decided to put The Inquirer and its 31 other daily newspapers up for sale. “We have been through one hell of a ride,” Bennett told reporters, praising their “passion and journalistic integrity.”

Bennett got high marks from former Inquirer publisher Joe Natoli, her boss for most of her Inquirer tenure. “Amanda led The Inquirer newsroom with integrity and grace during a difficult time in its history,” said Natoli, who is now an executive at the University of Miami. “She stayed positive in the face of adversity and always tried to do the right thing for the newspaper and the community that it served.”

Bennett was the paper’s first female editor. Bennett had previously served as editor of Knight Ridder Inc.’s Herald-Leader in Lexington, Ky., and as projects editor of the Oregonian newspaper, where she directed reporting that won a Pulitzer Prize. For more than 20 years, she was a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, where she covered the auto industry, the Pentagon, China, and other key beats, and served as Atlanta bureau chief.

Contact staff writer Joseph N. DiStefano at 215-854-5957 or jdistefano@phillynews.com
.

he Inquirer today introduces its new mobile service, delivering sports information directly to your cellular phone.

Inquirer Sports Extra will feature breaking news on your favorite Philadelphia teams, as well as Penn State, and score updates for Eagles games.

Subscribers will receive text-message alerts and access to a unique Web site for phones with Internet service.

The service is available on all major wireless carriers, including Verizon, Cingular, Sprint-Nextel, and T-Mobile. (Some carriers may charge extra for text-messaging service. Check with your provider for details.)

Inquirer Sports Extra will be free to new newspaper subscribers who sign up at http://go.philly.com/mobile
or by calling 800-222-2765. For existing newspaper subscribers, the service will cost 99 cents per month. Non-subscribers will pay $2.99 per month.

Inquirer offers sports on the go

137 words

8 September 2006

The Philadelphia Inquirer

CITY-D

D06

English

(c) Copyright 2006, The Philadelphia Inquirer. All Rights Reserved.

The Inquirer yesterday introduced its new mobile service, delivering sports information directly to your cellular phone.

Inquirer Sports Extra features breaking news on your favorite Philadelphia teams, as well as Penn State, and score updates for Eagles games.

Subscribers receive text-message alerts and access to a unique Web site for phones with Internet service.

The service is available on all major wireless carriers, including Verizon, Cingular, Sprint-Nextel, and T-Mobile. (Some carriers may charge extra for text-messaging service. Check with your provider for details.)

Inquirer Sports Extra is free to new newspaper subscribers who sign up at http://go.philly.com/mobile

or by calling 800-222-2765. For existing newspaper subscribers, the service costs 99 cents per month. Non-subscribers will pay $2.99 per month.

1.1 What is Inquirer Sports Mobile?

Inquirer Sports Mobile is an Inquirer news service that transmits text and photos to cellphone users. Some of this content is sent out as “SMS alerts” (customer receives a message) while other content resides on a mobile phone website that users access at their convenience.

Current content areas on the phone website are:

EAGLES

• Stories & Notes

• Injuries

• Breaking News

• Columns

• Scores

PHILLIES

• Breaking news

• Injuries

• Stories & Notes

• Columns

• Scores

SIXERS

• Stories & Notes

• Breaking news

• Injuries

• Columns

• Scores

FLYERS

• Breaking news

• Injuries

• Stories & Notes

• Scores

• Columns

PENN STATE FOOTBALL

• Breaking news

• Injuries

• Stories & Notes

• Scores

• Columns

Tom Jolly

An Interview with Tom Jolly

An Interview with Tom Jolly

“We’re constantly evaluating how we do things and why. For instance, not many years ago, half of our reporters were assigned to cover specific teams in the New York area. Now, only a few are assigned to local teams; others are writing about issues like doping, science and business. Even those who are covering local teams are writing more analytically about those teams than about the games they play.”

“We have reporters filing stories in mid-morning when possible. Judy Battista files her NFL Fast Forward analysis for posting on Monday morning when readers are in the office, talking about yesterday’s games. Pete Thamel and other college sports reporters file their college football stories for posting Friday morning when people are starting to talk about Saturday’s games.”

“It’s true that owning a share of the Yankees’ chief rival makes us an easy target for critics. Many of the news organization’s policies are aimed at preventing even the appearance of a conflict of interest and ownership in a share of the Red Sox obviously creates the appearance of conflict. Still, it defies logic to think that we really would have a bias in our coverage.”

Position: Sports editor, The New York Times

Born: 1955, Massena, N.Y.

Education: Ohio Wesleyan University, 1977, B.A. in journalism

Career: Ohio politics, 1977-1979; Delaware (Ohio) Gazette, 1979-1982; Annapolis (Md.) Capital, 1982-1985; Pittsburgh Press, 1985-1992; Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 1993; New York Times, 1993-present

Personal: Married (Linda) with five children (Sarah, 26; Rachel, 24; Russell, 21; Joelle, 19; Claire, 18.)

Favorite restaurant (home): Blue Point Grill, Princeton. “Great seafood perfectly prepared. And my daughter Rachel worked there last summer.”

Favorite restaurant (away): “The last place I had a great meal.”

Favorite hotel: “Anywhere that’s a vacation spot.”

Tom Jolly’s Facebook status updates:

Jan. 6, 2008:

“Tom is feeling sorry for his many Buckeye friends.”

Jan 3, 2008:

“Tom is wondering if there’s such a thing as too much football.”

Dec. 23, 2008:

“Tom is wondering what it’s like to have Yankee money.”

Nov. 29, 2008:

“Tom is happy he has never been remotely tempted to carry a gun, especially when going out for fun.”

Nov. 25, 2008:

“Tom is annoyed that ESPN isn’t giving the Times credit for a story our reporter broke.”

Nov. 17, 2008:

“Tom is separating Facebook and Twitter to save my sanity.”

Nov. 5, 2008:

“Tom is marveling at the line of people waiting to buy a historic edition of the New York Times.”

Oct. 26, 2008:

“Tom is wondering why new shoes cause blisters. It’s not like I’ve been running around barefoot for the past few weeks.”

Q. Everybody agrees that this is a brave new world for sports media. How is that reflected in the Times sports coverage? How much has it changed in the last five years?

A. Five years ago, I never would have dreamed that I’d be talking now about video and interactive graphics, strategizing about when to release stories on the Web, discussing cooperative agreements with other Web sites and third-party vendors … so much has changed that it’s difficult to remember what the “old world” was like.

Then again, I wouldn’t have dreamed that newspapers would be wrestling with such difficult economic issues either. It’s terribly sad to see so many talented people losing their jobs through no fault of their own.

I’m grateful for the relative stability of the Times and the forward-thinking approach our leaders have encouraged. Helping maintain that stability is a big part of my job, as is being aggressive in our pursuit of online and digital journalism.

Five years ago, reporters would argue against posting articles online before they appeared in print, fearing that the competition would take advantage and match their work. The best sign of progress: Now, reporters get upset if they think their articles aren’t posted quickly enough.

We’ve also altered the news cycle as much as possible, with reporters writing for the Web site first in order to give our online audience fresh material throughout the day. We don’t want our site to sit idle all day, or depend on wire copy that’s available to everyone. Online readers would go elsewhere if we didn’t give them a reason to come to us.

Of course, news and events can’t be rescheduled, but with so many big events happening so late at night, we’ve recognized the value of occasionally allowing our columnists to soak up the atmosphere and writing for the Web the next morning. This often produces better results than writing a pregame column that goes out to the majority of our readers and then rushing madly to recast the piece for the small percentage of the audience that gets the final copies of the paper.

One of our reporters points out that stories and columns that are posted during the day inevitably produce a bigger footprint because they’re fresh to Web readers and they still get the print audience the next day.

To make these changes work, we also had to restructure our newsroom, with more editors working on the dayside to handle the copy that is now being filed early. We’ve added Web producers, too, of course, and created what we’re calling writer-editors who can edit copy from other reporters and write for the Web themselves.

The unexpected dividend of all this is that it has made the print section better too. Instead of planning our story budget based strictly on the amount of space we expect in the paper, we take the opposite approach: The paper consists of the best of what’s on our Web site each day.

We’re doing more than simply transitioning traditional content to the Web, though. Last spring, we created a weekly golf feature called On Par that consisted of written content by Bill Pennington and a video that featured Bill in often humorous situations that resolved themselves with a tip from a pro.

For the Olympics, we mobilized some 200 people in all realms of the news organization to create new digital modules for schedules and results, interactive graphics, video and other features.

During the college football season, we produced a weekly video previewing the weekend’s games.

We regularly create audio slide shows to accompany features and other appropriate stories and some of our action sports videos have turned into youtube hits.

We’re in a multi-platform world and while it can sometimes make your head spin, it’s a lot of fun, too.

Q. Who and what is your competition? Do you have both a national and local strategy? What are you doing that gives you a competitive edge?

A. We look at everyone as our competition. We may not have the staff size to compete on every front, but by marshalling the resources we do have, we expect to be the go-to source of information on all of the big stories of the moment. The same goes for events that attract interest beyond the hardcore sports audience, like the Olympics, the Super Bowl, the N.C.A.A. basketball tournament, the World Series, U.S. Open tennis and the Tour de France.

When the Times sports section was expanded in the late 1980s, the goal was to compete with the New York tabs, but as our reach has grown, so has our mission. Practically speaking, we’re producing a news report for three audiences: a New York edition, a national edition and an international Web site. But in some ways, our audience is defined more by its interests than by its location. Many of our readers – online and print – are business leaders (or on that career track), educators and other curious types who are interested in the larger issues of the world. A significant percentage of our Web readers live outside the United States.

Everything that appears print goes on the Web site, as does a lot of additional material that is produced exclusively for the Web. Soon, our site will also include the content of the International Herald Tribune.

In the New York print edition, we focus on the most important local news without getting bogged down in minutiae – the “pulled hamstring stories” — while also keeping readers informed about the most significant and interesting issues around the world.

The national edition is often laid out differently, with a more magazine-like focus. We can’t possibly cover the local news in every area we’re distributed, but the local papers can’t cover the national issues either, and that’s our strength.

We’re constantly evaluating how we do things and why. For instance, not many years ago, half of our reporters were assigned to cover specific teams in the New York area. Now, only a few are assigned to local teams; others are writing about issues like doping, science and business. Even those who are covering local teams are writing more analytically about those teams than about the games they play.

We’re not trying to be everything to everyone. For example, we don’t buy into the idea that we need to publish a Giants or Jets story every day just because some readers would like us to. We’d rather have a reporter produce one smart, insightful piece than three based on little more than locker room chatter.

We understand that readers have choices, and we believe that those who choose to read The New York Times are looking to us for thoughtful, trustworthy journalism. We’re committed to meeting those expectations, in print and on the Web.

Q. What is your protocol for publishing web content vis-à-vis print? Breaking news vis-à-vis features?

A. Clear-cut: We are a Web-first publication. Everything goes on the Web before it goes into print. Breaking news always has the priority, but on quiet days we strategically post enterprise and feature stories on the Web to give our readers something fresh when they come back to our site.

As I said earlier, we have reporters filing stories in mid-morning when possible. Judy Battista files her NFL Fast Forward analysis for posting on Monday morning when readers are in the office, talking about yesterday’s games. Pete Thamel and other college sports reporters file their college football stories for posting Friday morning when people are starting to talk about Saturday’s games.

Throughout the baseball playoffs, we assigned one reporter each day to write an analysis or feature piece that would go up on the Web in the morning and in the paper the following day. That required careful planning and smart reporting so events didn’t outrun the stories, but it worked well and produced heavy traffic on the Web.

Q. How do you generate ideas for enterprise stories?

A. There’s no one answer, but it’s as simple, and as complicated, as observing anything that’s potentially relevant. A few years ago, my wife, an interior designer, mentioned in passing that the price of leather furniture had suddenly skyrocketed. I told the business editor what she had noticed and it turned into a story about how the mad-cow scare had increased the cost of leather.

Two years ago, Alan Schwarz learned that the brain of the former Eagles player Andre Waters had shown advanced signs of deterioration due to football injuries. He wrote a story about it and then one on a related issue, and then another and another. The point is, sticking with a story can pay dividends too.

Along those same lines, Pete Thamel has followed a line of reporting he discovered on academic short-cuts for high school athletes. Again, one story led to another and because Pete stuck with the reporting, he ended up with an award-winning series of stories.

You can’t force it, or it shows. But when you see something that’s out of the ordinary, asking why is the first step toward a good enterprise story.

Q. How do you keep your reporters energized and at the top of their games?

A. Thank you for acknowledging that they all are. First, most of our folks already are highly energized. Second, I think it’s invigorating for them that we encourage them to look for stories that are different and challenging. We don’t want them doing the same thing day after day, which they agree. Third, as our night editor, Carl Nelson, would say: Know your players. Some people are energized by praise, some by being constantly charging forward, some by being given creative space, others by constantly being tested. One size doesn’t fit all.

Q. Who were the influences on your career and how?

A. I’ll resist the temptation to answer in the form of an Oscar-like speech because there have been so many, but I do have to start with my parents. My mother encouraged me to write creatively and my father encouraged me to think critically. Throughout my years in school, I was fortunate to come into contact with a number of teachers, friends and mentors who inspired and challenged me. I’ve worked with so many smart people, from Red Reed, the wise old editor of the 9,000-circulation Delaware Gazette, to Bill Keller at the Times. I’ve been fortunate to meet many other thoughtful people who have been influences in one way or another. I’ve tried to gain something from every experience along the way, both personally and professionally. I love to read, especially great writing.

Influences come from everywhere if you’re open to them. One of my favorite parts of my job is the creative process. Kicking around ideas, thinking of new approaches to everything we do. That means being open to new ideas, from anyone – inside the newsroom and out. We always say there’s no such thing as a bad idea. Some ideas may be off base or not fully formed, but any of them can start a conversation. Many good ideas come from listening, and many more come through collaborating.

Learning is an essential part of journalism, after all, and it’ll be time to quit if I ever feel like I have lost interest in that.

Q. A traditional criticism of the Times is that it lacks humor. John Branch, in reporting on JJ Putz’ arrival as a reliever for the Mets, wrote: “The word “putz” is vulgar Yiddish slang for penis. It is more often used in English as a synonym for fool or idiot.” Is this an example of the Times taking a light subject and making it ponderous? Is the traditional criticism valid?

A. Ah, yes, the Times has long employed an editing team assigned to quash any signs of humor that may inadvertently surface. Seriously, this question reminds me of the comedy club heckler who hollers, “Say something funny.”

Geez, you didn’t see those golf videos, did you?

I thought the Putz story was pretty funny in its premise alone, and we thought it needed an explanation of the Yiddish definition to fully explain that the word is a vulgarity, but, hey, if it came off as ponderous to someone else, that’s the way it goes. (Don’t blame John Branch, though. His name and “ponderous” should never appear in the same sentence!)

Wasn’t it Roger Clemens who pointed out how hard it is to disprove a negative? O.K., maybe he’s not the best point of comparison, but we do have fun and I think most readers see signs of it on a regular basis.

It’s much more likely to surface in the form of something offbeat, like our story on Packer fans’ “cover-10 plan” for games in single-digit temperatures, Harvey Araton writing in the imagined voice of Phil Jackson, a “mad lib” on Brett Favre, and a piece built around a spy store owner’s explanation of what Bill Belichick should have done if he were serious about stealing signals from opposing coaches.

When Tiger Woods’s caddy created a stir with his comments about Phil Mickelson, we ran a list of other caddy controversies that included Danny Noonan and Ty Webb and a picture from “Caddyshack.” With a story on Seattle’s woeful year in sports, Wayne Kamidoi, our art director, put a coffee stain on the display page. Rich Sandomir imagined circumspect Jets coach Eric Mangini as a TV color man:

Chris Berman: Eric Mangini is standing by in San Diego with the Chargers’ injury report. A big welcome to ESPN, Coach. What about LaDainian Tomlinson’s ankle?

Eric Mangini: Boom, it’s between his toes and his shin.

Berman: Understood, but what about the sprain he sustained last week?

Mangini: It’s not my policy to discuss injuries in the media.

Berman: But, coach, you are part of the media. So the ankle — which one is it?

Mangini: The right or the left.

Berman: You don’t know or you won’t tell us?

Mangini: One of those, Chris.

Q. In a tight economy, what will be the most difficult coverage decisions?

A. We always talk about maximizing the value of what we do. Are we giving readers added value by sending our reporters to cover a story, or could we do something else that would be of greater worth? In a tighter economy, we’ll try to make sure that we’re investing in stories of the highest possible value to the greatest number of readers.

For instance, we’d rather use the wires for coverage of routine games and spend our money on enterprise and investigative work or other reports that are distinctive. Obviously, the tighter the economy gets, the more difficult those choices become, but our chief objective is to continue to focus on the high value journalism that readers expect of The New York Times. Readers can get game results anywhere; our aim is to meet the expectation that we will give them something more.

Q. If the NY Times sells its stake in the Boston Red Sox, can the Yankees finally expect fair coverage?

A. Oh, brother. I take back all the nice things I said.

Sigh … from my point of view, one of the best things that could come from the New York Times Company selling its stake in the Boston Red Sox is that I won’t have to answer questions like this any more. The absolute best thing would be if the revenue from the sale helps strengthen our journalism.

In the meantime:

In a perfect world, The New York Times would make millions of dollars without advertising or investments and would be exempt from paying taxes, utility bills and equipment expenses, freeing its journalists from any and all possible conflicts.

It’s not a perfect world.

The New York Times newspaper is owned by the New York Times Company, which pays taxes, buys equipment and owns a number of other newspapers and Web sites, including About.com
. It also owns about a 17 percent share of the Red Sox, an investment that includes the New England Sports Network.

It’s true that owning a share of the Yankees’ chief rival makes us an easy target for critics. Many of the news organization’s policies are aimed at preventing even the appearance of a conflict of interest and ownership in a share of the Red Sox obviously creates the appearance of conflict.

Still, it defies logic to think that we really would have a bias in our coverage. Our Yankees writer, Tyler Kepner, is not only one of the best baseball writers in the country, he’s one of the most scrupulous. Besides, does anyone really think a news organization based in New York could somehow profit by promoting an out-of-town team? Do they think we’re quietly trying to convert Yankees fans into Red Sox fans?

We have written a lot about the Red Sox in recent years, but that’s because many of the best stories in baseball have involved the Yankees and the Red Sox – two of the biggest rivals in sports, two teams with some of the biggest stars in baseball and two of the most successful teams over that time.

Of course, the appearance of conflict isn’t welcome. But the company made its decision to buy into the Red Sox and it’s up to us to stay aware of the perceptions. That’s why we note NYTCO’s share of the team whenever it is pertinent and why we were the first to report that NYTCO executives received World Series rings in 2004.

It has never had any bearing on how we have covered the Yankees and never will, even if the company holds onto its stake.

John Branch, from the New York Times, December 18, 2008:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/19/sports/baseball/19mets.html

The Mets
introduced another face and arm for their bullpen on Thursday by illuminating the giant new scoreboard at Citi Field.

“Mets welcome J. J.,” it read, deftly avoiding the use, or misuse, of the player’s surname.

J. J. Putz grew up in Michigan, and he said that the family pronounced its Hungarian name as “puts.” But the issue that remains for Putz, brought from the Seattle Mariners
to be a setup man and a part-time closer for the Mets in a three-team, 12-player trade, is not how he pronounces it. It is how others pronounce it, and use it in writing.

Talk about a setup man: someone named Putz in one of the most visible, all-or-nothing roles in New York sports. His new opponents may not include just National League sluggers, but the tabloid headline writers and New York fans with a history of unforgiving expectations, and little history of letting something like proper pronunciation get in the way of a good insult or cheap laugh.

Even Putz’s own general manager, Omar Minaya
, mistakenly mispronounced the name in discussing the trade last week in Las Vegas. When Minaya introduced Putz in the Citi Field clubhouse and draped him with a No. 40 jersey (with “Putz” on the back), he referred to Putz only as J. J.

“I’ve been dealing with that for years,” Putz said. “I’m not worried about it, man. It is what it is. There’s nothing you can do about it. I know how we say it. People can say whatever they want. It doesn’t bother me anymore.”

Putz, a 6-foot-5-inch redhead with a rectangular patch of a beard on his chin, made the All-Star team in 2007. He arrived in New York with 101 career saves and a right arm that uncorks powerful fastballs and nasty split-finger pitches.

On Thursday, Putz, 31, expressed excitement about being in New York and mild disappointment in relinquishing his role as a closer to Francisco Rodríguez, signed by the Mets last week.

“I prefer closer,” Putz said. “But I prefer winning over anything.”

The word “putz” is vulgar Yiddish slang for penis. It is more often used in English as a synonym for fool or idiot.

“It seems like when bad words go from Yiddish to English, they lose some of their power,” said Paul Glasser, an associate dean at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in Manhattan.

The columnists Steve Kelley of The Seattle Times and Art Thiel of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer said they never heard Putz’s name used as an insult against him, either at the ball park or by letter writers and talk-radio callers in Seattle. Putz played for the Mariners from 2003 to 2008.

Putz said that he had rarely heard his name used derisively, even in high school in Michigan.

“Dude, I was bigger than everybody in high school,” he said.

But his last name may be no joking manner, particularly in New York. The 2000 United States Census reported that nearly two-thirds of the estimated 178,945 people in this country who speak Yiddish at home live in New York. New Jersey had the third-highest number of Yiddish speakers, after Florida.

The state of Washington had an estimated 423.

Unlike the major papers in Seattle, many of New York’s largest daily newspapers are tabloids, with reputations for biting, attention-grabbing headlines on the front page and the back page, which is reserved for sports. Recent examples include “Stray-Rod,” on reports of infidelity on the part of Alex Rodriguez; “Mangenius,” a mocking reference to Jets Coach Eric Mangini
; and “Marbury One Steph From Gone,” on the Knicks
’ plans to get rid of Stephon Marbury
.

As for the surname of the Mets’ new reliever, its use as a vulgarity has some history in New York. Ten years ago, Senator Alfonse M. D’Amato
lost a re-election bid to Charles Schumer
a couple of weeks after D’Amato called his opponent a variation of the term. If nothing else, it sparked debate about the meaning of the word and its level of appropriateness in any context.

That debate has risen again in some quarters, and is sure to grow as the baseball season approaches. Copy editors and headline writers at The Daily News, for example, have already discussed it among themselves.

“Putz is a problem,” said the veteran copy editor Bill Sweeney, noting that he was not speaking on behalf of the paper, but merely as a primary headline writer. “We definitely don’t look at it as an opportunity.”

The name, in fact, may be used less in headlines than usual, just to avoid accusations of double-entendre. “It’s almost a nightmare,” Sweeney said. “He’s going to be referred to a lot as J. J., that’s for sure.”

Greg Gallo, The New York Post’s sports editor, declined to comment on the paper’s potential use of the name.

Putz said: “I’m not worried about it. I can handle it.”

(SMG thanks Tom Jolly for his cooperation)

Hiroshi Kanda

An Interview with Hiroshi Kanda

An Interview with Hiroshi Kanda

“When I started covering professional baseball I couldn’t imagine working in the U.S…Now I can cover the highest level of baseball in the world – that’s exciting.”

“I like living in New York, except for my rent. It’s terrible.”

“If you are not bilingual it is hard to cover the manager or opponent’s players.”

“Ichiro speaks English very well and Johjima too. When they talk to their teammates they don’t need translators. But when they talk to media they use it.”

Hiroshi Kanda: Interviewed on January 18, 2007

Position: baseball writer, Kyodo News

Born: 1966, Tokyo

Education: Osaka University, 1991, Art History

Career: Kyodo News 1992 –

Personal: married, two children

Favorite restaurant (Japan): Bungo, Osaka, “good sushi”

Favorite restaurant (U.S.): Pam Real Thai, NYC, 404 W. 49th St. “the best Thai in the city”

Favorite hotel: Sailport Resort, Tampa, “during spring training – beautiful view of the ocean”

From the Kyodo News website:

Kyodo is a nonprofit cooperative organization run on an annual budget, primarily made up of membership dues and revenues from nonmember subscribers.

Kyodo’s Japanese-language news service is distributed to almost all newspapers and radio-TV networks in Japan. The combined circulation of newspaper subscribers is about 50 million.

Kyodo has some 1,000 journalists and photographers. More than half of them are posted at the Tokyo head office, assigned to political, financial, business, city, sports, science and cultural news desks plus various government offices and business organizations. Others work at five regional offices and 48 local bureaus across the country.

For international newsgathering, some 70 full-time correspondents and 40 stringers are posted at 50 places outside Japan. News coverage focuses on the Asia-Pacific region, where some 50 staffers, including local employees, are posted at 19 places. The second largest concentration of correspondents is in North America, followed by Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and Africa.

Q. How big is your sports staff in the United States?

A. Two baseball writers and one editor in New York, one baseball writer in Los Angeles, one more in Seattle, and now one in Boston.

Q. Will you have a full-time reporter in Boston to cover Daisuke Matsuzaka?

A. Yes. He will live in Boston and will cover Daisuke Matsuzaka all season. Even if Matsuzaka pitches once in five days he will cover every game of the Boston Red Sox. On the days Matsuzaka does not pitch the stories will be shorter.

Q. How many Japanese players get this type of coverage?

A. Four players. Ichiro Suzuki and Kenji Johjima in Seattle, Hideki Matsui in New York. And now Matsuzaka.

Q. Why is Matsuzaka a big story in Japan?

A. We have no professional basketball or football. Baseball is the biggest professional league in Japan – it is our national pastime. Matsuzaka won the national championship of high school baseball – it is so big in Japan. Not so many people watch college baseball – most colleges with a good baseball program are in the Tokyo area. In other areas people follow high school baseball – each of the 47 prefectures has their own team. People are crazy about high school baseball and he won the national championship. He was a first round pick of the draft and won 16 games in his first year as a pro.

Q. Is Matsuzuka easy or difficult to cover?

A. Do you mean is he good for media?

Q. Yes, is he good for media?

A. Okay, but I have never covered him. I think he is good for media. Since he was 16 or 17 he has been covered by most Japanese sports media – he should get used to being covered.

Q. What about Ichiro?

A. I don’t say good, but that’s his style. Same thing in Japan – he didn’t change at all. Everyone knows that’s his style. He doesn’t say much every day. But when the season starts, or the season is over, or the first half is over, or he plays in the All-Star Game, he will talk. When he has a press conference he is very talkable.

Q. What about Matsui?

A. He talks every day. Because of his playing for the Tokyo Giants, which gets the biggest media coverage in Japan, like the Yankees – he has a long history and he can deal with it. He has to. He made his style in Tokyo.

Q. If Seattle plays the Yankees how much do you write?

A. One long story – two or three short stories.

Q. How would you describe your job?

A. When I started covering professional baseball I couldn’t imagine working in the U.S. Free agency started in 1993 in Japan – until then no player could come to the U.S. I couldn’t imagine a player like Matsui or Ichiro playing in this country. In the last five years everything has changed and now it seems like every star player is coming to the U.S.

Q. When did you come to the U.S.?

A. In 2003, with Matsui. I was covering the Tokyo Giants. I came on the same flight as Matsui. My wife and children came after me.

Q. Do you have a good job?

A. Yes.

Q. What do you like about it?

A. I’ve been a baseball writer – I covered Japanese professional baseball more than 10 years. Now I can cover the highest level of baseball in the world – that’s exciting.

Q. Your thoughts on living in New York?

A. I like living in New York, except for my rent. It’s terrible.

My family likes it. My two children (ages 12 and 8) are in public school in Manhattan.

Q. What is the hardest part of your job?

A. I cover more than 150 games a year. The first year I covered more than 170 games including playoffs. Sometimes a flight is cancelled or delayed – anything can happen – but I have to get to the ballpark.

Q. Is it a physical grind?

A. A little bit – especially the second half of the season.

I get to the ballpark at about 3 – the clubhouse will open at 3:30 so you have to be there. I’m there until after midnight.

Q. Is your beat competitive?

A. I think so.

Q. Who are your main competitors – who do you worry about the most?

A. I don’t want to tell you.

Q. How many Japanese reporters will be in Boston?

A. I’m not sure. On Opening Day almost every Japanese sports media will be there. More than 50.

Q. And later in the season?

A. Maybe 20 including TV.

Q. Which American media do you rely on for information?

A. Associated Press. New York Times. New York Post. Daily News. I watch ESPN and read ESPN on the web.

Q. Is Japanese coverage different than American?

A. The story is not different. The way we cover baseball is different. In Japan they don’t open the clubhouse for media. You have to go to the ballpark earlier and wait for players in the parking lot or in front of the clubhouse.

Q. Are your stories about the game or personalities?

A. Mainly on the game, but sometimes personal. That’s because I write for a wire service.

Q. Japanese newspapers are more gossipy and personal?

A. Yes.

Q. Is covering Major League Baseball a good assignment for a Japanese reporter?

A. Yes. I think so. If he likes to travel in the U.S.

Q. Are most Japanese reporters bilingual?

A. Some are not. If you are not bilingual it is hard to cover the manager or opponent’s players.

Q. Are the players’ translators helpful?

A. Ichiro speaks English very well and Johjima too. When they talk to their teammates they don’t need translators. But when they talk to media they use it.

Q. Why?

A. They don’t want to make mistakes.

Q. Do you miss Japan?

A. Not really. I know I’ll be back to Japan. This is my fifth year – it will be the last season. They told me. It’s not in my hands.

Q. Will you be sad to leave?

A. It’s okay.

(SMG thanks Hiroshi Kanda for his cooperation)

Sam Farmer

An Interview with Sam Farmer

An Interview with Sam Farmer

“Unnatural as it might feel, you have to establish a personal brand these days. With Facebook and Twitter, I have new tools to direct people to LATimes.com, and, more specifically, my stories. You can’t just ignore this technology, hoping it will go away. You have to embrace it.”

“As for what I did to get ahead, I stayed true to my style, didn’t panic – much – in the darker moments, and I stopped worrying about going to Kinko’s each week to send out my clips. When I put my energy into my day-to-day work, good things happened.”

Sam Farmer: Interviewed on April 2, 2009

Position: NFL columnist, LA Times

Born: 1966, Madison, Wis.

Education: Occidental, 1988, BA English

Career: LA Times San Fernando Valley edition, 1988-90; Bellevue (Wash.) Journal-American, 1990-91; Kent (Wash.) Valley Daily News, 1991-95; San Jose Mercury News, 1995-2000; Los Angeles Times, 2000-present.

Personal: married, two kids.

Favorite restaurant (home): La Cabanita, Glendale, CA “Some of the best and most authentic Mexican food in LA, and that’s saying something.”

Favorite restaurant (away): Mustards Grill, Napa, CA “Having lived in Napa for three weeks every summer (Raiders training camp), I really got to know the local eateries. No dish in Napa Valley tops the Mongolian pork chop at Mustards.”

Favorite hotel: Grand Hyatt Kauai resort. “The vistas are so stunning, they look fake.”

Sam Farmer’s Facebook status updates:

April 2, 2009, 2:01 a.m.: Coming off back-to-back pro days — UCLA then USC — and happy to have them in the books. Really wish I’d used sunblock, though. ‘Tis the season.

March 31, 2009, 10:13 a.m: I’m tweeting like a (somewhat annoying) bird from both UCLA and USC pro days, plus the NFL draft. Twitter: LATimesFarmer

March 26, 2009, 8:37 p.m: I’m now a willing (but somewhat confused) member of the Twitterati. What I’m saying is you can follow my updates on the NFL, draft, etc. at Twitter username: LATimesfarmer. (close commercial)

Q. Tell us about your new Twitter initiative – how will you use it and why do it?

A. Hey, if you don’t like change, you’re going to hate irrelevance. I’ve just started using Twitter – most recently sending real-time updates from USC’s pro day – and it helped me focus my thoughts for writing later in the day. I like that it helps me connect with readers on an informal basis. There are some great story ideas out there, and Twitter can help me find them.

Q. How does your Facebook site complement your mainstream and Twitter efforts?

A. Unnatural as it might feel, you have to establish a personal brand these days. With Facebook and Twitter, I have new tools to direct people to LATimes.com, and, more specifically, my stories. You can’t just ignore this technology, hoping it will go away. You have to embrace it.

Q. Give us an idea of how you approach your online blog in contrast to your print stories?

A. I try to be conversational. That makes for stories that are quicker to write – and read – and have a far less stilted feel. It’s all about connecting with the readers, telling them what they want to know.

Q. How do you envision the future of multi-platforming for reporters?

A. Well, I carry a Blackberry for tweeting, a flip camera for video clips, a digital recorder so I can upload sound… and sometimes even a notebook.

Q. How would you advise a media student to prepare for a career in sports journalism?

A. Stock up on food now.

Q. Who were your career influences? What did you do to get ahead?

A. I was so fortunate to have some great mentors who took an interest in helping me, everyone from Dan Raley of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer – RIP, the paper, not Dan – and Dave Tepps of the Mercury News, to Bill Dwyre, to Mike James, to Dave Morgan, to Mike Hiserman, to Bill Plaschke, to Scott Ostler, to Chris Dufresne, to Mike Penner, to Austin Murphy… too many to list, really.

As for what I did to get ahead, I stayed true to my style, didn’t panic – much – in the darker moments, and I stopped worrying about going to Kinko’s each week to send out my clips. When I put my energy into my day-to-day work, good things happened.

Q. Who and what do you watch and read to keep up with the NFL? What are some of your favorite bookmarks?

A. I think Peter King does a terrific job, as does Mike Silver. Dave Goldberg at Associated Press is excellent. So is Don Banks at SI.com. Mike Reiss at the Boston Globe is superb in his Patriots coverage. I’ll read every story Jackie McMullan writes, particularly her in-depth features.

The ESPN bloggers are all friends of mine and are really sharp, especially Matt Mosley. Very clever.

My guilty pleasures: Profootballtalk.com and Deadspin.

Q. Why isn’t there an NFL team in LA? How weird is that?

A. It’s strange, but getting less strange with each passing year. Why isn’t there one? No suitable stadium and no public money to help build one. Consensus building is dead in this city. Only way you get everyone behind you in LA is when you’re on the 110 freeway and you get a jump on rush-hour traffic.

Q. Three reasons why the LA Times will survive?

A. The people, the people, the people.

If anyone can figure out a way to make a newspaper float, it’s the sharpest minds in the business. And there are some incredibly creative and resourceful people in that building – I’m banking on them. Oh, and praying too.

Sam Farmer’s blog, latimesblogs.latimes.com, March 6. 2009, 10:55 a.m:

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/sports_blog/2009/03/more-fisticuffs.html

This was entertaining. I stopped by L.A. Southwest College this week to spend some time on the set of “Pros vs. Joes,” the Spike TV show airing in April that pits retired NFL and NBA players against so-called everyday Joes in various football and basketball skills challenges. Actually, the Joes are pretty athletic this season, many of them former college athletes.

I watched former NFL players Rich Gannon, Priest Holmes and Adam “Pacman” Jones play in a three-on-three football game — with helmets and shoulder pads — against three no-name competitors. Although some of it was hokey (when’s the last time you saw Gannon rush the passer, or drop back into coverage?), there were a couple of big hits.

One of the better collisions was one at the goal line between Jones and a “Joe” named Dan Adams
, a 5-foot-10 sales rep from Boston who played linebacker at Holy Cross. He set an NCAA single-game record with a staggering 21 solo tackles against Colgate.

Anyway, Adams stuck Jones at the goal line, jarring loose the football. It was pretty funny, because Jones had been talking trash to that point, referring to Adams as “Waterboy
.” A few minutes after the hit, the two exchanged punches and had to be separated.

“He hit me 10 yards out of bounds, kind of a cheap shot,” Adams said. “I couldn’t sit there and not retaliate. You’ve got to have some pride and dignity.”

As for the oft-suspended Jones, released by the Dallas Cowboys after the season, he didn’t seem too concerned about how he came off on camera.

“I guess that’s the person he wants to be,” Adams said. “But I guess in his defense, people kind of get caught up in the heat of the moment.”

(SMG thanks Sam Farmer for his co-operation)

Stefan Fatsis

An Interview with Stefan Fatsis

An Interview with Stefan Fatsis

“Just eight players who were on the Broncos when I was there in 2006 were still with the team when I wrote the new afterword – and just seven were when the 2009 training camp opened…I like to describe this book as the story of a dysfunctional workplace, in which paranoia is the preferred mode of operation and open communication is as familiar as Urdu.”

“With the web and social media, the nature of the race is changing. Everyone is a wire-service journalist now – including the athletes themselves, who can tweet their own news…I’m not saying anything brilliant here, but I think we’re in a fascinating transition period. New media are forcing mainstream media to reconsider their every process. Kill the morning-after game story!”

Stefan Fatsis: Interviewed on August 10, 2009

Position: Author/freelancer

Born: 1963, New York

Education: University of Pennsylvania, 1985, BA

Career: Associated Press, 1985-1994; Wall Street Journal, 1995-2006; Current – Regular guest on NPR’s “All Things Considered”; SI.com columnist; Slate.com sports podcast panelist

Personal: Married to NPR host Melissa Block; daughter Chloe, 7

Favorite restaurant (home): Komi, Washington DC, “Greek-derived; owner is a Broncos fan”

Favorite restaurant (away): Arpege, Paris “got engaged there”

Favorite hotel: Don’t have one!

Author of: “A Few Seconds of Panic: A Sportswriter Plays in the NFL”; “Word Freak: Heartbreak, Triumph, Genius, and Obsession in the World of Competitive Scrabble Players”; “Wild and Outside: How a Renegade Minor League Revived the Spirit of Baseball in America’s Heartland”

Stefan Fatsis, excerpted from Sports Illustrated, July 14, 2008:

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1141764/1/index.htm

IN A couple of weeks, NFL
training camps will open. T.O. and his new sidekick Pacman—sorry, make that Adam—will star in the new season of HBO’s Hard Knocks. The 24/7 media machine will air endless loops of players in mesh cutoffs jogging, throwing and catching. Millions of pages and pixels will analyze the season ahead.

And none of it will convey the emotional reality of life inside the National Football League
.

Two summers ago, after two decades on the business end of a notepad, I joined the Denver Broncos
as a player. My goal was to write a book about the NFL
. My inspiration was George Plimpton
‘s Paper Lion, which offered the first inside glimpse of the growing sport of pro football (SI, Sept. 7 and 14, 1964). Plimpton quarterbacked for the Detroit Lions
and wore number 0. I placekicked and wore number 9. Neither of us was very good.

Paper Lion was groundbreaking sports journalism, but it was a product of its time. Plimpton devoted the bulk of his book to football’s then obscure strategic machinations, mythmaking tales from the trenches and training-camp hijinks—seven pages alone on rookies singing their college fight songs. A Brahmin intellectual in an aboriginal tribe, Plimpton made professional football sound like fun.

There were, to be sure, sophomoric diversions during my days in Denver
, like the time a punter’s keys were taped under a toilet or when coaches promised to abbreviate meetings if a certain kicker made a field goal. A 300-pound offensive lineman, P.J. Alexander, even made me sing my alma mater’s song. (I spend one page describing that.) Those antics stanched the boredom of 15-hour days. But they didn’t obscure a surprising truth about the NFL
: A lot of players hate their jobs.

Once they stopped laughing at the gray-haired guy in the size-7 cleats, my teammates saw me as a megaphone: I could correct the vast public misperceptions about what they do. The players wanted me to understand that apart from Sundays, which are simultaneously terrifying and exhilarating, their working lives are a seemingly endless string of unpleasantness: injuries, reminders from coaches that their jobs are on the line, distrust of their bosses, disgust over being scheduled like preschoolers, unfathomable psychological pressure. “You’re just seeing the worst part,” wide receiver Charlie Adams said to me about training camp. “Although the season kind of sucks, too.”

Bronco after Bronco compared college to the NFL
. In the former, players said, coaches tried to maximize their potential. In the latter, coaches sucked them dry. Starting linebacker Ian Gold
had a lucrative six-year deal. But he wore a shell of embittered indifference that he blamed on an institutional lack of integrity and loyalty. “You lay it on the line for these people, for this organization, and all it is is a moneymaking machine,” Gold said. “They’re looking for your replacement the day you step foot in this door.

The NFL
rolls that reality into its Lombardiesque image of toughness. From the absence of guaranteed contracts to the revolving locker room door, players are kept on an emotional knife’s edge in an attempt to breed desire and desperation. The players want compassion and communication. They get pressure and paranoia instead…

Q. ‘A Few Seconds of Panic’ is out in paperback. Did you write an update? How did the book challenge you as a writer?

A. I did write an update, that I think is revealing in several ways. One, just eight players who were on the Broncos when I was there in 2006 were still with the team when I wrote the new afterword – and just seven were when the 2009 training camp opened. That fact very starkly demonstrates the impermanence of pro football that is a theme of the book.

Two, the team’s offseason turmoil — owner Pat Bowlen firing coach Mike Shanahan, new coach Josh McDaniels trading quarterback Jay Cutler – says a lot about how the NFL operates as a business. I like to describe this book as the story of a dysfunctional workplace, in which paranoia is the preferred mode of operation and open communication is as familiar as Urdu. Which brings me to, three, my appraisal in the afterword of the GM at the time I was in Denver, Ted Sundquist.

After reading the book, Sundquist told me he was surprised by the level of animosity the players felt toward management. I told him that I was surprised that he was surprised, because the players I was with were so overwhelmingly disillusioned by the management of their business. But Sundquist, whom I admire enormously, also said the book changed how he would run a team if he got another chance – that is, more openly with greater respect and consideration for the players. If that happens, and that’s this book’s contribution to the NFL, I’ll be satisfied.

Q. What are the pleasures – and pains –of writing sports for the Wall Street Journal?

A. You mean what were they? I can’t swear that my pleasures and pains are the same as those experienced by reporters at the paper today; it’s changed rather a lot since I left to kick footballs.

When I worked there, the pleasures could be enormous, mainly because the mandate was to cover sports differently from how the rest of the media covered it. I had the freedom to take the time necessary to investigate academic shenanigans by ex-college basketball coach Jim Harrick or the dangers of aluminum bats (I wrote one of the first comprehensive pieces on that, in 1996) or the legal claims of the BCS. I was allowed to follow a baseball researcher on a hunt for a man he suspected of being the first black player in the majors (we found the evidence among century-old records in a small town in Georgia). I got to write about Retrosheet’s efforts to assemble the box scores of every MLB game and why baseball pitchers don’t wear single-digit uniforms and why NFL players are wearing fewer pads than ever.

I had the privilege of learning from John Helyar, who wrote brilliant sports-business narratives, and of succeeding, for a time, the great Fred Klein, one of the last of the erudite, literary sports columnists. I got to write distinctive daily columns from two Olympics and cover a World Cup – without having to worry about a single time, score or record. The Journal’s goal was to do things smartly and exactingly and comprehensively – but also differently. Because of the volume and cacophony of sports media, that could be especially challenging, but it also made the rewards much greater.

The pains? An occasional tone-deafness to sports. An editor or two. The usual reporter gripes.

Q. Have you ever done competitive sports journalism involving breaking news? Your thoughts on the daily journalistic horse race and those who run it?

A. I’m proud to say I broke plenty of sports news for the Journal – sports-business news, anyway. I was never a team beat writer – and never really wanted to be one. But I did work for the AP for eight years, so I understand that the horse race is part of journalism.

With the web and social media, the nature of the race is changing. Everyone is a wire-service journalist now – including the athletes themselves, who can tweet their own news, which is what soccer player Jozy Altidore did the other day when he broke via Twitter his own story that he was joining Hull City of England’s Premiere League. I’m not saying anything brilliant here, but I think we’re in a fascinating transition period. New media are forcing mainstream media to reconsider their every process. Kill the morning-after game story!

Mainstream media want to make sure consumers are looking at something that includes the dwindling numbers of ads. Reporters want to be the first to report something. Peter King apologized to his bosses the other day for reporting via Twitter, not on the site of his employer, SI.com. And athletes and other newsmakers want and have the ability to better control their own messages and images. For now, everyone is feeling his way and no one has good answers.

Q. Aside from collecting royalties for “Word Freak,” what was your greatest Scrabble moment?

A. When I played an obscure and beautiful word that I had studied and fallen in love with: OQUASSA. It’s a small lake trout.

Q. Your critique of the Facebook Scrabble application?

A. I play it all the time against friends, but it has more than a few flaws, chief among them the lack of a “challenge” function – you can’t challenge an opponent’s play – and the lack of a “tile tracker” to tell you which tiles remain unplayed and the inability to play a timed game.

The whole Hasbro-Scrabulous showdown – when Hasbro, Scrabble’s owner, shut down the popular unauthorized site and replaced it with its own program– was a fiasco, in my mind. But I’ll save my deconstruction for another forum.

Q. What sports media – mainstream and non-mainstream – do you consume and why?

A. Everyone’s list is a lot longer than it was a few years ago, and I think that’s a good thing. I read everything from the ink versions of the Times and Post (Washington) and Sports Illustrated to smarty pants sites like Baseball Prospectus and Football Outsiders to fan sites like Big Soccer and Orange Mane – for Broncos fans – to the impossibly prolific Joe Posnanski’s impossibly well-written blog to the excellent Sports Law Blog to web mainstays like Kissing Suzy Kolber and Deadspin to the hilarious Soxaholix to the indispensable Team Handball News, because I love me some team handball.

If I’m going to be informed about what I’m supposed to be well-informed about I need to absorb as much information as possible, and there’s never been more information about sports and culture as there is now.

Q. Your journalistic and writing influences?

A. Newspaper column-writing division: George Vescey. WSJ division: Fred Klein and John Helyar. Sports nonfiction conference, inspiration division: George Plimpton. Sports nonfiction conference, irreverence division: Jim Bouton.

Q. What’s next?

A. I hope another book, possibly nonsports. Working on it.

Stefan Fatsis, from Slate, Oct. 26, 2006:

http://www.slate.com/id/2152255

On Oct. 12, in the basement of a Unitarian church on the town green in Lexington, Mass., a carpenter named Michael Cresta scored 830 points in a game of Scrabble. His opponent, Wayne Yorra, who works at a supermarket deli counter, totaled 490 points. The two men set three records
for sanctioned Scrabble in North America: the most points in a game by one player (830), the most total points in a game (1,320), and the most points on a single turn (365, for Cresta’s play of QUIXOTRY).

In the community of competitive Scrabble, of which I am a tile-carrying member, the game has been heralded as the anagrammatic equivalent of Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point game in 1962 or Don Larsen’s perfect game in the 1956 World Series: a remarkable, wildly aberrational event with potential staying power. Cresta’s 830 shattered a 13-year-old record, 770 points, which had been threatened only infrequently.

Since virtually all sports involve variable conditions, comparing one performance to another is technically imperfect. Consider the absence of black players in Babe Ruth’s day, or the presence of steroids in the Barry Bonds era. On its face, the new Scrabble records seem to avoid such problems. No one’s juicing in Scrabble. Points in a game are just points in a game, and Michael Cresta scored 830 of them. On Scrabble’s members-only list-serve, Crossword Games-Pro
, most players have hailed this harmonic convergence of vowels and consonants as a triumphal moment. But the record-worthiness of the shot heard ’round the Scrabble world is more complicated than it might look.

Let’s begin with the fact that Cresta and Yorra aren’t expert-level players. They know the basics—like the 101 two-letter
and most of the 1,015 three-letter
words—but they’re both rated
in the bottom third of tournament players. In Lexington, where the record was set during the club’s regular Thursday-night session, Yorra is known for trying implausible words and hoping they’re in the Official Tournament and Club Word List
. Cresta has memorized thousands of obscure words (like those ending in WOOD or starting with OVEN) by reading, writing down, and tape-recording pages from the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary
. But he doesn’t study the highly probable words that are essential for climbing the competitive ranks. “These are not guys who have low ratings because they haven’t played in many tournaments,” Mike Wolfberg, the Lexington club
‘s statistician, told me. “They have low ratings because they aren’t very good.”

So, how did they break the all-time Scrabble scoring record
, set during a tournament by two experts, one of whom has been known ever since as Mr. 770? The simple answer is that Cresta-Yorra was a fluke. Given that Scrabble is played in more than 200 clubs and there are more than 200 tournaments a year in North America, the thinking goes, it was inevitable that Mr. 770’s record would fall, especially with the growth of serious study and an increase in words
in the Scrabble dictionary.

But there’s more to it than that. To understand how Cresta and Yorra broke the record, let’s take a closer look at the game. (For the full play-by-play, click here
.) Yorra opened with JOUSTED, a “bingo”—Scrabble lingo for using all seven tiles, which earns you an extra 50 points—worth 96 points. Cresta then traded in all seven of his tiles in the hope of getting more-playable letters, not an unusual move. Yorra bingoed again, very nicely, with LADYLIKE for 73 points and a 169-0 lead. The first L in LADYLIKE landed between two triple-word-score squares, giving Cresta a shot at Scrabble’s holy grail—a “triple-triple,” covering two triple-word scores with one word. That’s worth nine times the value of the word, plus the 50-point bonus for using all seven letters.

Triple-triples are rare in Scrabble—I’ve played no more than a dozen in a thousand or more games—because they require a confluence of mathematically improbable events. Cresta’s play, FLATFISH
, for 239 points, was especially unusual because it contains infrequently occurring letters (two F’s and an H) and isn’t a common word. Many good players would have missed it. Cresta didn’t because he had studied words beginning with F.

Yorra challenged FLATFISH, a reasonable move given the word and its score, but it was in the official word list, so he lost his turn. Cresta exchanged tiles on three of his next four turns, while Yorra bingoed again, this time with SCAMsTER
. (The lowercase letter represents one of the game’s two blank tiles.) Yorra told me he had no idea whether the word was legitimate. (It is.) SCAMsTER was simply the first possible bingo he saw. That put another letter, the R, in a triple-triple lane. Cresta, who held I, O, Q, U, and X, recognized he was three-quarters of the way toward a really huge triple-triple: QUIXOTRY. (He had studied words starting with Q.) He exchanged two letters from his rack in hopes of drawing the needed T and Y. From Cresta’s vantage, 56 tiles were unseen, including three T’s and one Y. The probability of pulling one of each was 1 in 513.*

Cresta beat the odds. And when Yorra didn’t block the open R—because he played his fourth bingo, UNDERDOG
, for 72 points—Cresta laid down his 365-point QUIXOTRY (a quixotic action or thought).

After making just three plays, Cresta had an amazing 614 points. The rest of the game was pedestrian. Neither player bingoed again, though Cresta played the recently added word ZA (short for pizza) for 66 points. When he laid down VROW
, a Dutch woman, Cresta passed 770. (For a cell-phone-camera image of the final board, click here
.)

Looking at the game as a whole, it’s clear that a lack of expertise created the conditions for the record. The play that enabled QUIXOTRY, for one, was a clear mistake. When Yorra played SCAMsTER, which scored 65 points, there were eight other bingos available worth 72 points or more that wouldn’t have dangled a letter in a triple-triple alley. Among them were several common words, including the 94-point dEMOCRAT
. Most players would have taken a few extra moments to search for one of those moves.

I asked Jason Katz-Brown, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology junior ranked 10th in North America, to analyze the game. Unlike most players mid-level and higher, Cresta and Yorra didn’t keep track of the letters they drew on each turn, so it’s impossible to fully examine their possible moves. But we do know what letters they played on each turn. When Katz-Brown input those into a Scrabble-playing computer program
he co-wrote called Quackle, he found that Cresta and Yorra had better moves on 14 of their 22 nonbingo turns. One example: Cresta scored just 30 points using the second blank when he could have held it and tried for another bingo.

Technically, Cresta’s strategy was unsound. Fishing for a once-in-a-lifetime play might be understandable in a casual game, where winning is less urgent. But in competitive play—even in a club setting, where there’s less on the line than in a rated tournament—exchanging letters three times, as Cresta did, to enhance some combination of Q, U, I, and X is unorthodox at best, suicidal at worst. (The strategically correct move was to dump the cumbersome Q
and move on.) In Scrabble, the player who waits for the miracle word usually loses. The implication: Cresta wasn’t terribly worried about whether he won or lost.

“If they weren’t really trying to win,” an intermediate-level player named Mike Eldeiry wrote on the Crossword Games-Pro message board, “then can we really consider it our record? Fun, yeah. Neat, sure. Promotable, why not? But record, ummmmmmmm, I don’t know.” Eldeiry told me the game reminded him of a 600-foot batting-practice home run. If experts always shot for the moon, he said, “I think they’d have cracked 850 by now. But they’d have lost a lot of games in the process.”

Most CGP posters defended Cresta and Yorra. Lexington-club regulars said they just played differently than Joe Expert might have. The democratic Scrabbling message: Even someone who doesn’t study word lists for hours on end can achieve greatness. “Non-experts often make suboptimum plays,” wrote Rod MacNeil, a top-100 player who witnessed the game. “This time that resulted in some pretty eye-popping plays. But they found them.” Another expert, John Van Pelt, said, “When faced with the possibility of playing a Q-X triple-triple, they see it as a good opportunity to advance their winning chances. So they go for it.”

Cresta, who is 43 years old, didn’t start playing Scrabble competitively until a couple of years ago. He told me he loves learning and playing unusual words; at carpentry jobs he sometimes transcribes dictionary pages onto walls or sawhorses. In the record game, Cresta said he went fishing as soon as he drew Q, U, I, and X. “I wanted to get QUIXOTE down bad, or QUIXOTIC.” When SCAMsTER hit the board, he immediately spotted the possibility of QUIXOTRY. But he also realized that those other
words
were possible
. “I like to gamble,” Cresta said. “I’m trying to win the game, but I’m trying to get that word down, too.” Strategy wasn’t a big concern. “I’m not playing a top player.”

The difficulty posed by this game, and by games in general, is judging the role of circumstances in the commission of records. In this case, the sensible moves would have been just another set of moves in just another game. The wrong moves produced history. But is that enough? If 830—or any record—happens as a result of boneheaded play, tactical ignorance, or the pursuit of a good time, should it count? Or should records be reserved for those who have earned the right to set them, and who set them in expert fashion?

Here’s what I think: Michael Cresta holds the record for club play, while Mr. 770 keeps his tournament mark. And here’s what Michael Cresta thinks: “It’s really not that big of a deal because I’m really not that great of a player. If you get two experts together, that game’s not going to happen.”

(SMG thanks Stefan Fatsis for his cooperation)

Jason Fry

An Interview with Jason Fry

An Interview with Jason Fry

“To me it’s often instructive that whenever there’s a big controversy in a particular town you get the clearest view of it from a sportswriter from somewhere else. One of the San Francisco Chronicle columnists…wrote one of the best pieces about Alex Rodriguez’ troubles with the Yankees last summer.”

“During the NLCS, I read a great Cardinals blog called Viva El Birdos, even though the NLC didn’t go the way I wanted it to go. I felt I had more appreciation for the Cardinals and how their fans felt by reading a passionate Cardinals fan that was a great writer.”

“It’s fashionable among some bloggers to bash traditional sportswriters, but I don’t know of a responsible blogger who will do that. There is no doubt that most if not all bloggers rely on reporters who go into lockerrooms and work the phones and talk to general managers, and without that all bloggers would be much poorer. Bloggers forget that at their peril…. I do think that what Simmons and the great bloggers who followed his lead have done is taken away the idea that you can’t have great sportswriting unless you are in a lockerroom. It’s not true.”

Jason Fry: Interviewed on January 4, 2007

Position: co-columnist, Daily Fix; co-columnist Real Time, Wall Street Journal Online; co-blogger, Faith and Fear in Flushing

Born: 1969, Charlottesville, Virginia

Education: Yale, 1991, American studies

Career: IAQ Publication 1994, WSJ Online 95 –

Personal: married, one child

Favorite restaurant (home): The Good Fork, Brooklyn “it speaks for itself”

Favorite restaurant (road): Sonic, “ a chain”

Favorite hotel: “don’t have one”

Carl Bialik: co-columnist, Daily Fix, WSJ Online; free-content editor, Numbers Guy columnist, WSJ Online; co-founder, Gelf Magazine; host, Varsity Letters reading series

Born: 1979, New York City

Education: Yale, 2001, math/physics

Personal: single, no children

Career: WSJ Online 2002 – ; Gelf Magazine, 2005 –

Favorite restaurant (home): Amorina, Brooklyn “most creative pizza toppings, no annoying wait like Di Fara, no pretensions, and the talented chef, Ruth Kaplan is a friend of mine”

Favorite restaurant (away): Bentara, New Haven “delicious, inexpensive Malaysian with a great wine list”

Favorite hotel: “friends’ couches”

Editor’s Note: The Wall Street Journal Online’s Daily Fix column, written by Jason Fry and Carl Bialik, is a digest of quality sports journalism culled from print and online media. The column, launched in August 2001, has been written by Fry and Bialik since August 2002. Bialik did not participate in this interview.

Q. Are you a connoisseur of good sportswriting?

A. I certainly hope to be. I’ve arrived at much greater appreciation of good sportswriting since writing for the Fix for these five years.

Q. Did you read sportswriting before doing The Fix?

A. Before doing this I certainly enjoyed sports, but mostly I stuck to baseball, which is the sport I love above all others, and the Mets, the team I love above all others. So my horizons were not as broad about the great sportswriting that is out there.

Q. How do you know when you see a good sports column?

A. Good question. It just kind of feels right. Am I quickly reminded of what’s being commented on, without having to wade through the whole recollection, which is a tricky balance. Beyond that – is there a point of view I didn’t expect, or if I did, is the writing so well done or so insightful it makes me think about it or appreciate that perspective? The other thing that jumps out – is the writer passionate about the subject? Every columnist faces the dilemma of having to produce a column when nothing is moving him or her. I’m sympathetic to that as a columnist myself – you can tell when a columnist has caught fire.

I also write a column called Real Time about how technology is changing our daily lives. Writing that has been good for The Fix – it’s given me an appreciation for what columnists face having to file as many times as they do. My co-writer Carl Bialik, who writes his own weekly column called The Numbers guy, would say the same thing. It’s easy to criticize columnists but you’re not as quick to do it when you are doing it yourself.

Q. Does Daily Fix criticize writers?

A. Very rarely. Honestly, that’s because part of what we hope to do is motivate the reader to click through and read the columns. Life is short – the workday is busy – we don’t see the point of sending people off to bad sportswriting. Once in a great while we take exception to something, but then it’s the argument, not the writing. That’s just not what we do.

Q. Can you tell immediately if a column is worthy of mention?

A. Usually. Having written The Fix for years there are writers I’ve come to rely on. There are some sportswriters out there who, even if it’s not a newsworthy day, they’ll do a lot with very little – and that helps us.

Q. Who?

A. Joe Posnanski (KC Star) , Bruce Jenkins (SF Chronicle), Lisa Olsen (NY Daily News), Bill Simmons (espn.com), Ray Ratto (SF Chronicle), Tom Boswell (Washington Post). I could go on and on, there are some wonderful writers out there. On days when not much is going on we tend to go to our all-star columnists hoping they will save us.

Q. How do you put together The Fix?

A. It’s interesting, because the Daily Fix was envisioned as a showcase for great sportswriting when it began in the summer of 2001. The primary mission was to find great writing, introduce it and get out of the way of the writers. It soon became apparent that’s not what our readers were expecting. What they wanted was a water-cooler primer of the biggest stories of the day – with great writing about them. That’s a different thing. What we find now is that when you come in you know there are three or four stories that are so big that people are writing about them and people want to read about them. Today it’s the Sugar Bowl and the Dolphins coach going to Alabama – it would be strange if those topics were not in The Fix, and indeed they were.

Beyond that we have favorite writers we always look to see. We rely on e-mail tips from readers – that’s invaluable. Google News can be your friend – it has helped me a lot in finding columns in smaller papers off my usual route.

We try to get it out by noon at the latest. We come in and write until we have 1300 words. That’s an arbitrary limit but if you do more you risk exhausting people. If there’s really big news we blast out an early Fix to get people talking. We did that after the Fiesta Bowl because it was such a great game.

Q. Do you have to watch sports to do The Fix?

A. It certainly helps to have a mental map in your head before you go in to do it. We’re looking for good sportswriting. When Simon Barnes (Times of London) writes about soccer I can appreciate soccer through his eyes even though I can’t remember the last time I watched a soccer game. Our emphasis is on writing. My hope is that I can find good writing about a sport I’ve never seen.

Q. Do you have to know a lot about sports to size up good sportswriting?

A. Not necessarily, though it certainly helps. As a huge baseball fan I can appreciate an in-depth article or column that takes me into the subtleties but I don’t think it’s essential. Again, it’s the emphasis on writing above all else.

Q. By reading nationally and internationally do you get a different perspective than fans that read only local writing?

A. I think so. There are a couple of things I’ve learned doing The Fix. To me it’s often instructive that whenever there’s a big controversy in a particular town you get the clearest view of it from a sportswriter from somewhere else. One of the San Francisco Chronicle columnists – and I think the Chronicle has one of the strongest lineups of columnists – wrote one of the best pieces about Alex Rodriguez’ troubles with the Yankees last summer. It was either Bruce Jenkins or Scott Ostler. Being out of the day-to-day Sturm and Drang helped the writer. Not that the stuff in the Daily News and Post wasn’t good, but having a clear view helped the writer from San Francisco. I would like to think that that column jumped out at me because I was so used to scouting writers from other cities.

Another thing I feel I’ve gotten a sense of is how cities root and how sports is seen in different towns – I don’t think I would have appreciated that until The Fix broadened my horizons. It’s interesting to watch the tenor of Philadelphia versus Chicago versus Los Angeles versus New York.

Q. Does reading broadly make you a better sports fan?

A. Ideally I enjoy having gotten more of a national perspective, but at the same time part of loving sports is loving one team to death. That applies to writing too. I’m a huge Mets fan. I will read every local story on the Mets, which in New York is a lot of newspapers. And then I’ll read the best blog coverage.

At the same time it’s a great experience having more of a national perspective – it helps me appreciate the big sports stories coming out of other cities. I’ve gotten used to following them.

Q. Do you recommend wider reading for fans?

A. Absolutely. Every team is made up of good people who love their mother and deserve to win every game and every fan can tell you that. To give you an example, during the NLCS, I read a great Cardinals blog called Viva El Birdos, even though the NLC didn’t go the way I wanted it to go. I felt I had more appreciation for the Cardinals and how their fans felt by reading a passionate Cardinals fan that was a great writer. To me it makes those kind of Cinderella stories about teams that get rolling more entertaining if you can see it from their side’s perspective.

Q. Did The Fix link to Viva El Birdos?

A. Yes. We will link to blogs. Our feeling is that great sportswriting is great sportswriting wherever we find it.

Q. How does The Fix monitor the vast universe of blogs?

A. We don’t do it as well as we should because of how big that universe is. Having read Viva El Birdos during the fall I now know it’s out there – if something big happens to the Cardinals I will go back to it.

You could do a whole Daily Fix entirely of sports blogs and come up with a terrific roster of sportswriting every day. There are some fantastic writers out there blogging every day.

Q. There’s a philosophical debate between traditional sportswriters and bloggers over whose method is better. Any thoughts?

A. I’m a blogger myself. Faith and Fear in Flushing, with Greg Prince. To your point, it’s fashionable among some bloggers to bash traditional sportswriters, but I don’t know of a responsible blogger who will do that. There is no doubt that most if not all bloggers rely on reporters who go into lockerrooms and work the phones and talk to general managers, and without that all bloggers would be much poorer. Bloggers forget that at their peril.

I do think that what Simmons and the great bloggers who followed his lead have done is taken away the idea that you can’t have great sportswriting unless you are in a lockerroom. It’s not true. What Simmons did was weave together being a fan with being a reasonably impartial observer of sport. And being up front about sport not existing in a vacuum but being a part of your life – how your love of sports or a team warps your life and how you build your life around that.

Even though all bloggers like me owe him a debt, he didn’t invent that. Go back and read Roger Angell’s (New Yorker) pieces from the 1960s on baseball. He was an out-and-out fan of the Mets and Red Sox and a huge fan of the game – he talks about watching games or an entire season and how he felt about that. I’m sure Roger Angell didn’t cheer while in the pressbox but he’s certainly cheering in print. It’s not a huge leap from Angell to bloggers like me and everybody else trying to write objectively about the teams they love without apologizing for loving them.

Q. If everybody is writing, who is reading?

A. I suppose so. But there are a lot of people I know who read, whether The Fix or our blog, who are passionate fans of sports and very good writers, but have no urge to pick up a pen or hit the keyboard. I certainly hope so. Writers need readers to become better writers.

Q. Seems like Daily Fix doesn’t do as much with the major sports websites as with print?

A. I think we have a fair proportion, certainly of espn.com links. There’s no explicit plan regarding that – I would venture to say it’s a matter of proportion. So many papers have one or two or more terrific columnists, while there still are comparatively few sports websites with established columnists. It will be interesting to see how those percentages change in the next five years.

Q. Do you get any direction from sportspages.com?

A. I do look at it sometimes. I do a lot through Google News, which aggregates papers worldwide. The problem is that it’s hard to tell a straight game story from a column.

Q. Same shortcoming if Google News doesn’t aggregate websites, no?

A. It’s a fair point. Personally I look at espn.com every day to see what their columnists have to say. Most days something good is there. Yahoo Sports has hit my radar with Dan Wetzel and Jeff Passan. Another site that recently hit my radar is Slate.com. Today’s Fix had something by Josh Levin on why college football is so much more innovative than the NFL.

More and more of those places are getting added to our rounds – same thing with blogs. Every year we do best columns of the year – it should be called favorite columns – and one thing we picked up for ’06 was The Dugout. It sounds crazy but it’s an imaginary chat room between baseball players, with pictures and made-up nicknames and chat room talk. Dugout did a farewell to Buck O’Neil that was one of the most moving things I saw all year. For me it’s a way of finding more great new writers.

Q. How much opportunity is there for new writers?

A. There’s always opportunity for good writers who want to work really hard and learn – no matter what the medium. It’s certainly true that you have more avenues for creating a name for yourself and an audience. Obviously it depends on what you want to do. Some writers still want to go into the lockerroom. Some writers want to write about their life as a fan and now they have a way to do that with a blog. To me good writers who are really passionate about their craft ought to concern themselves with pursuing that craft rather than with career counseling.

It comes back to why The Fix showcases websites, blogs, and papers. Why can we write about sports we haven’t seen? It goes back to good writing being good writing, and that writers write best about what they love the most. That’s old advice but it’s still true.

One thing that can be frustrating writing The Fix is that people write in to compliment us about something a columnist has said. We’re just quoting somebody’s effort and work – they deserve the credit for that. Whenever somebody says they like the Daily Fix it’s flattering. We provide a service, and we hope our service is getting people to appreciate the great writers out there.

Q. Are you lobbied by writers and editors?

A. Writers and editors do write in pointing out the stuff they’ve done. That’s great – we’re totally happy with that. I can’t think of a situation where I haven’t been happy to have that or where anybody has been obnoxious about it. Promoting yourself is part of writing. Writing is hard and it takes a certain humility. I’m thrilled writers do that. If you’re a writer and nobody is reading you what’s the point? It’s even more important now with so much more to read and people feeling like they have so much less time.

Q. Best sports section in the country?

A. My favorite is the San Francisco Chronicle – Bruce Jenkins, Gwen Knapp, Scott Ostler and Ray Ratto are all great writers and favorites of mine. Other papers whose deep benches impress me are the Washington Post, Philly.com – combining the Daily News and Inquirer – and the Detroit Free Press.

Q. Best online sports section?

A. espn.com. People like to bash it, but there are a lot of very, very talented writers there.

(SMG thanks Jason Fry for his cooperation)

1. Bill Simmons, ESPN.com: He’s come a long way in our five years, from the Boston Sports Guy to the master of Sports Guy’s World, hirer of interns and the columnist most identified with the nation’s best-read sports site. At his worst, Mr. Simmons can come off as bored or burnt out — feelings he confirmed in an interview with SI.com earlier this year — and sometimes his columns are too much old TV and not enough sports. (An online widget that allows readers to mad-lib mock-Simmons columns is eerily accurate.) But even then, he’s reliably hilarious and almost impossible to stop reading.

And he pioneered not one but two powerful ideas: that writing about sports at the highest level doesn’t mean having to surrender being the kind of fan who lives and dies by the box score; and that sports can be discussed as just one ingredient of a lively, cross-pollinated pop culture that includes everything from music to old TV shows to ads. A million bloggers are in Mr. Simmons’s debt on both scores.

Finally, when a subject near and dear to Mr. Simmons’s heart comes around, something like the New England Patriots’ Super Bowl titles (after they won in 2002, he wrote, “Now I can die in peace“) or the 2004 Boston Red Sox championship, productivity may grind to a halt as his readers hit refresh on ESPN.com, waiting for his column to publish.

First Fix appearance: A diary of the Arizona Diamondbacks’ victory in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series. “Some of you who have never encountered Mr. Simmons will find you share his rather bent view of the world,” the Fix wrote then. “If so, you’re in for a treat if you follow the link to the archive to his other stories. But beware: He can be an addiction.”

2. Thomas Boswell, Washington Post: After 22 years at the Post, Mr. Boswell remains our favorite baseball writer at any newspaper. Writing on deadline, he turned in a valedictory column about the 2004 Red Sox with allusions that reach to the heavens. Last year, for the first time in his column-writing career, Mr. Boswell got a hometown team to chronicle, and his joy upon the arrival of the Washington Nationals has been infectious.

First Fix appearance: Just two weeks into the column’s run, and in the middle of an exciting baseball season, Mr. Boswell wrote about … golf.

3. Jeff Jacobs, Hartford Courant: Too many columnists “report” by watching ESPN, reading the newspaper and calling on their memories of sports history. Not Mr. Jacobs, who goes to games, talks to overlooked sports figures and crafts original stories with careful thought and an engaging style. In 2003, Mr. Jacobs argued when a high-school football coach’s well-intentioned act cost him his job. The next year, he was there to celebrate when an official’s poor decision provoked a noble act at a high-school swim meet in 2004. Last year, Mr. Jacobs was sidelined by quadruple-bypass surgery, but he has returned with impressive energy.

First Fix appearance: In November 2001, writing on UConn men’s basketball coach Jim Calhoun, his brother Bill, and their father who died too young.

4. Bruce Jenkins, San Francisco Chronicle: Grand Slam tennis tournaments create a pack mentality among sportswriters, who focus on the same predictable storylines. But Mr. Jenkins manages to break away from the pack with his unique take on the sport’s most-notable figures. Two years ago, Mr. Jenkins profiled Roger Federer, “the quiet genius of Wimbledon,” by focusing on the Swiss star’s love for his cow. And last year, the match of the U.S. Open, between Andre Agassi and James Blake, was captured best by Mr. Jenkins’s deadline prose.

First Fix appearance: Appropriately, a match report about the 2001 U.S. Open quarterfinal meeting of Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi in which neither man broke the other’s serve and four tiebreakers were contested.

5. Gwen Knapp, San Francisco Chronicle: Along with fellow Fix honorees Jenkins, Ratto and Scott Ostler, Ms. Knapp rounds out the nation’s deepest bench of sportswriting talent. She excels at engaging her topics deeply, and addressing uncomfortable truths without discomfort. She has criticized herself and her fellow Bay Area sports scribes for going easy on the unfolding steroids scandal. In December 2004, she noted that Barry Bonds was getting a lighter touch than Jason Giambi was receiving in New York, perhaps because Bonds was more productive at the time. (Those roles have reversed since then.) Earlier that year, Ms. Knapp attended the memorial service for NFL player-turned-war victim Pat Tillman, and discovered a life worth remembering for much more complexity than merely being a “pure and simple hero.”

First Fix appearance: In August 2001 — back before BALCO, No. 73 and No. 715 — Barry Bonds merely was trying to stay ahead of teammate Rich Aurilia in the MVP race.

6. James Lawton, The Independent: When the world’s attention turns to soccer, the Fixers turn to the U.K. for the best English-language coverage. Mr. Lawton is our favorite read because he brings great passion to every column. In 2003, as the race to sign David Beckham was on, Mr. Lawton wrote, “we need to say his fame — if we want to be serious for a minute — has been built on a lie. It is a great big whopping lie.” No one wrote more movingly about Greece’s stunning victory at the 2004 Euro Cup. And last year, Mr. Lawton was amusingly over-the-top in describing the day on which American Malcolm Glazer purchased purchase Manchester United as the “the blackest one in the history of English football.”

First Fix appearance: Ahead of Brazil’s quarterfinal World Cup match against England in 2002, Mr. Lawton wrote that Ronaldo was eyeing redemption. Ronaldo scored all three of Brazil’s goals in their semifinal and final victories.

7. Dave McKenna, Washington City Paper: Mr. McKenna writes for a weekly paper, which lowers his frequency but grants him more space to write and to think things out. He uses those advantages so well that just about every one of his columns is Fixworthy, even though many of them are intensely local in a city that hasn’t had many sports successes in the last five years. In 2003, Mr. McKenna told the story of local hoops prodigy Kendall Marshall, who weighed 82 pounds, was 11 years old, and was already being hyped as the next LeBron James (back when Mr. James was a high-school player, not one of the NBA’s best players). Mr. Marshall, incidentally, is now six feet and hit six consecutive three-points at a recent youth tournament. And last year, Mr. McKenna profiled a local businessman who inserted himself, Zelig-like, into a Washington Nationals press conference to ask a pointed question about steroids.

First Fix appearance: In November 2001, Mr. McKenna explored why so few place kickers are black.

8. Joe Posnanski, Kansas City Star: Mr. Posnanski combines several virtues: clean writing; a knack for getting subjects to open up to him; and refreshing optimism. In 2002, he described weekly chess matches he played against Chiefs running back Priest Holmes, and what they demonstrated about his approach to football. And in 2004, defying all logic, he predicted in good humor that the Royals would make it to the World Series.

First Fix appearance: When the Royals fired manager Tony Muser in the first month of the 2002 baseball season, Mr. Posnanski explained that Mr. Muser simply had lost too many games. The Royals would go on to lose 100 games that year, 104 in 2004, 106 last year — and set a pace of 107 losses so far this year, perhaps redefining how many losses is too many.

9. Ray Ratto, San Francisco Chronicle/ESPN.com: A reliable cynic has been a welcome fixture on any sports page during the last five years of failed drug tests and boorish player behavior. The Bay Area has had more than its fair share of both types of badness, and Mr. Ratto has delighted in all the material. And man, can he write! In 2004, when Terrell Owens was on his way from the 49ers to the Eagles, Mr. Ratto wrote of the Philadelphia-T.O. tie-up, “This marriage comes straight from Satan’s left-hand suit pocket, and it will end very, very badly.” And earlier this year, Mr. Ratto explained why the allegations that Barry Bonds used steroids could never be wrapped up tidily.

First Fix appearance: Mr. Ratto questioned whether Mark McGwire really intended to retire when he announced as much in 2001. (Four years later, Ratto questioned whether McGwire’s fumbled testimony before a Congressional panel on steroids would imperil his Hall of Fame chances.)

10. Adrian Wojnarowski, The Record/ESPN.com: The New York area may have more columnists, per team, than any other metro area, and too many voices become too shrill to stand out. Mr. Wojnarowski manages to cover the major teams in original, thoughtful ways from his perch across the Hudson River. In 2002, when both resident teams of nearby Giants Stadium had Super Bowl hopes, Mr. Wojnarowski chronicled “the best of times for the beleaguered New York football faithful.” And the following year, when Todd MacCulloch was forced to retire from the NBA because of a neuromuscular degenerative disorder, Mr. Wojnarowski chased down stories from Nets teammates and friends about the beloved center.

First Fix appearance: After Rich Beem improbably won the 2002 PGA Championship, Mr. Wojnarowski offered some commentary from Papa Beem. The column had more staying power than did Mr. Beem, who has won just one more tournament — in 2003.

Tomorrow: Backstage at the Fix.