Covering baseball in a major market

Let me introduce myself first. My name is Jeremy Cothran and I’m a former student in several of Steve’s classes at George Mason University.

Like my former colleague B.J. Koubaroulis, I was also the sports editor of the Broadside. I graduated in 2005 and currently work at The Star-Ledger, which is based in Newark, N.J., and is one of the largest daily newspapers in the country. I’m the beat writer for the New York Mets, a team most of you know just pulled off a major trade in acquiring Johan Santana from the Minnesota Twins.

Covering sports in New York City is a different animal than anywhere else in the country. But it’s especially crazy with baseball. On my beat alone, I compete with six other major metro papers and a reporter from MLB.com. Compare that with, say, the Washington Nationals. There you only have the Washington Post and the Washington Times as papers that travel full-time with the club.

What will get you in trouble in a market like New York is to be content with the status quo. I’m always searching for great story ideas, ways to improve our paper’s Mets blog, and ways that I can improve my source-building. If you follow a pack-journalism mentality, writing what everybody else is writing, you’ll end up with bland stories.

Going back to the Santana trade, it was a story that consumed our market. And that’s even with a good chunk of the media at the Super Bowl. Our paper alone has 14 people (eight reporters, six photographers) in Phoenix right now.

Working on a major baseball story like that, you’re not going to get any information at all from team officials. In fact, if you’re the type of person that waits for news releases to write stories, you are in the wrong business. So you work the Blackberry, calling and e-mailing all the sources you’ve cultivated over time. (Another tip for future beat reporters: Develop a confident persona over the phone!)

I’m glad Steve gave me this forum to share some stories about covering baseball. If anybody ever needs advice or has a question, feel free to email me: jeremyc28@gmail.com.



14 Responses to “Covering baseball in a major market”

  1.   BJ Koubaroulis Says:

    Students,

    Please take the time to read Jeremy’s work…Some key notes from his BLOG post. Jeremy has a proven ability to find interesting stories off the beaten path and bring them to life through great featurized work…Also, his Mets blog is an element that I believe more media outlets should be mimicking…

  2.   menu dietmenu diet sehat Says:

    I tend not to leave a comment, but after looking at a few of the
    comments here Covering baseball in a major market | Sports Journalism.

    I actually do have 2 questions for you if it’s allright. Is it just me or does it
    seem like a few of the remarks come across as if they
    are left by brain dead visitors? 😛 And, if you are writing
    at additional online social sites, I would like to keep up with
    you. Could you post a list of all of your social
    pages like your twitter feed, Facebook page
    or linkedin profile?

  3.   http://www.agbridge.kr/xe/?document_Srl=528855 Says:

    My brother suggested I might like this web site. He was totally
    right. This post truly made my day. You can not imagine simply how much time I had spent for this info!
    Thanks!

    Feel free to surf to my website – http://www.agbridge.kr/xe/?document_Srl=528855

  4.   radca prawny lubin Says:

    I have been surfing on-line more than three
    hours nowadays, yet I by no means discovered any interesting article like yours.
    It’s pretty price sufficient for me. In my view, if all site owners and bloggers made just right content material as you
    did, the web might be a lot more helpful than ever before.

  5.   digital extortion Says:

    Everything posted was actually very reasonable. However, what about this?

    what if you were to create a awesome headline? I am not saying your content isn’t solid., but suppose you added a post title that grabbed folk’s attention? I mean Covering baseball in a major market | Sports
    Journalism is kinda plain. You ought to peek at Yahoo’s
    home page and see how they create post titles to get viewers interested.
    You might add a related video or a picture or two to grab people interested about everything’ve written. In my opinion, it could
    bring your blog a little bit more interesting.

    Look into my web page … digital extortion

  6.   Beulah Says:

    Hi, There’s no doubt that your website could possibly be having
    browser compatibility problems. Whenever I take a look at your website in Safari,
    it looks fine however when opening in I.E., it has some overlapping issues.
    I just wanted to provide you with a quick heads up! Aside from
    that, wonderful blog!

    my homepage game play; Beulah,

  7.   service ac Says:

    We’re a group of volunteers and starting a new scheme in our community.
    Your website offered us with helpful information to work on. You’ve performed a formidable activity and
    our whole group can be thankful to you.

    Feel free to visit my web site; service ac

  8.   Elma Says:

    Tell: A physical or verbal action, posture, move or
    look, which can let a observant player know how strong
    or weak your hand is. Everyone loves tips; theyre hard-earned information that can only be gain through winning and losing.
    Fifth, don’t fold right at the end, unless you truly have nothing worth playing.

    My web blog; giochi gratuiti (Elma)

  9.   Ashford University Says:

    Various other federal grants also started with the same thought are the FSEOG, TEACH Grant,etc.

    The federal grants can be applied through the
    online application center FAFSA. Campus colleges are starting to adopt this practice of uploading documents
    that get sent to the professor.

  10.   procera avh Says:

    If you are learning how to start a booster club, you should visit local teams and clubs
    with successful booster clubs, and see how they do it.
    When I was a youngster, school perform was a daunting procedure I hated, mainly as a result of frustration of not being
    ready to concentrate. You will locate available versions that might function on battery power, gasoline or
    a mixture between those two.

    my blog post: procera avh

  11.   http://www.norarobbinsblog.com Says:

    It is the best time to make some plasns for the future and it’s time
    to be happy. I’ve read this post and if I could I desire to suggest you some
    intereting things or tips. Perhaps you could write next articles
    referring to this article. I want to read mmore things about it!

    my site: http://www.norarobbinsblog.com

  12.   http://www.career-transition.com Says:

    Useful!

    Feeel free to visit mmy blog post :: Karmaloop Rep Codes (http://www.career-transition.com)

  13.   wayback.archive.org Says:

    The particular tools and techniques used in a business succession plan will vary based on the goals and objectives of the four groups affected by the plan: the senior generation business owner, the junior generation family members involved in the business, key non-family (wayback.archive.org) employees,
    and family members not involved in the business. If you are looking for a
    new opportunity in the nursing field, consider a career as a travel nurse Travel nursing allows you
    to gain professional experience fast. You need
    to first off own an Amazon Kindle DX or Amazon Kindle 2 e-reader,in order to start sharing Kindle books.

  14.   Matthew C. Kriner Says:

    Hands down, Apple’s app store wins by a mile. It’s a huge selection of all sorts of apps vs a rather sad selection of a handful for Zune. Microsoft has plans, especially in the realm of games, but I’m not sure I’d want to bet on the future if this aspect is important to you. The iPod is a much better choice in that case.

Leave a Reply