U.S. Open: Four nights in primetime for Fox’s coverage

Fox Sports is making the most of its first U.S. Open being on the West Coast in Seattle

All four nights of the tournament will air on Fox, not Fox Sports 1. That means watching live U.S. Open golf until 11 p.m. on the East Coast. Yes, we love West Coast Opens.

With that kind of primetime coverage, Fox needs a significant comeback from Tiger Woods; another Open challenge from Phil Mickelson; and Rory McIlroy going for his fourth straight major after his Masters victory in April.

Is that too much to ask for its reported $100 million annual rights fee?

Here’s the rundown from Fox:

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Planned linear and digital media coverage for the 115th U.S. Open Championship is unprecedented.  FOX Sports is scheduled to offer 38.5 live hours from Thursday through Sunday on FOX and FOX Sports 1, a three-and-a-half hour increase from a year ago.  Moreover, FOX Sports is televising 22.5 hours on FOX, up from 19 hours on broadcast television in 2014.  Of the 22.5 FOX hours, 11.5 hours of live action are slated for prime time, up from five prime-time hours scheduled for broadcast television in 2012, the last time the U.S. Open was played in the Pacific Time Zone.  In addition to almost 40 hours of coverage on FOX and FOX Sports 1, FOX Deportes domestically televises three hours of U.S. Open coverage on both Saturday and Sunday in Spanish, a first in the championship’s storied history, and FOX Sports Digital offers three distinct alternate production feeds available daily on USOpen.com for desktop viewers and via FOX Sports GO and U.S. Open digital platforms, adding an additional 120 hours of coverage.

Date                Program                                             Time                                       Network

June 18           First Round                                         12:00-8:00                               FS1

8:00-11:00                               FOX

June 19           Second Round                                    12:00-8:00                               FS1

8:00-11:00                               FOX

June 20           Third Round                                        2:00-10:00                               FOX

June 21           Final Round                                         2:00-10:30                               FOX

June 22           Playoff            (if necessary)             12:00-4:00                               FOX

 

James Brown wins Lacy-Smith Award from Povich Center

Kudos to JB.

The official announcement:

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James Brown, three-time Emmy award winner, host of  “The NFL Today” on CBS, “Thursday Night Football” on CBS, and special correspondent for CBS News, is the winner of the second-annual Sam Lacy-Wendell Smith Award.

Given to a sports journalist who has made significant contributions to racial and gender equality in sports, the award is presented by the Shirley Povich Center for Sports Journalism at the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism.

“James Brown’s accomplishments, starting when he was a very young man at DeMatha Catholic High School, have been exemplary in every sense of the word,” said Povich Center Director George Solomon. “If you are going to honor and tell a story about someone who made it to the top and kept his head and balance all the way, while giving back to his community, you are not going to find a better person than James Brown. He honors the two men whom the award is named for, as well as himself, his family and everyone he’s ever come in contact with.”

The award was created to honor Lacy and Smith – the late African-American sportswriters who battled against prejudice and injustice their entire careers. Both men were instrumental for years in pushing for the integration of Major League Baseball and covered Jackie Robinson breaking the MLB color barrier with the Dodgers in 1947.

“I’m proud and humbled to receive an award that honors the memory of two distinguished journalists such as Sam Lacy and Wendell Smith. Both men worked long and hard for justice and equality in sports — their efforts resulting in their changing the very culture of this country, ” Brown said.

James Brown’s coach at DeMatha, the retired Basketball Hall of Fame member Morgan Wootten, said Brown remains one of his favorite players. “Of all the kids I’ve coached, James is the shining example of the student-athlete. I think he’s the most popular player ever to have been at DeMatha. Any community would be very fortunate to have had a James Brown in their midst.”

Brown was selected to receive the award by a committee that included Povich Center Director George Solomon, Povich Center coordinator Beth Mechum, Editorial Director for NBA.com Greg Lee, Alicia Patterson Foundation Director Margaret Engel, Merrill College professor Diana Huffman and former Sporting News Editor Garry Howard, now ‎Director of Corporate Initiatives at American City Business Journals.

Brown is the second winner of the award, following Claire Smith, a news editor at ESPN.

He will receive the award at a luncheon, Thursday, April 2, at the Samuel Riggs Alumni Center on the University of Maryland campus.

For information on tickets, please contact Beth Mechum at bmechum@umd.edu.

About James Brown

James Brown, was born in Washington, D.C. He was a basketball star at DeMatha Catholic High School and Harvard where he earned his degree in American Government and was captain of the team his senior year before being drafted in 1973 by the Atlanta Hawks of the National Basketball Association and Denver Nuggets of the American Basketball Association.

He also has been associated with many charitable activities in the D.C. area over the years, including co-chairing with Michael Wilbon of ESPN the DC-Cap Golf Classic & Roast that assists the D.C. College Access Program helping to send D.C. students to college.

Brown and his wife, Dorothy, live in Maryland.  His daughter, Katrina and her husband John have three daughters and one son.

About the Shirley Povich Center for Sports Journalism

Named for the late Washington Post sports writer and columnist Shirley Povich, the Shirley Povich Center for Sports Journalism was established in November of 2011 under the directorship of long-time Washington Post sports editor George Solomon.

The Povich Center serves Philip Merrill College of Journalism students and professional journalists, as well as the university and greater community through its panels, workshops and support of the college’s academic offerings as well as research and analysis. Shirley Povich was an eyewitness to the most significant sporting events of the 20th century and his fearless reporting took on questions of race, religion and gender. The Povich Center hopes to lead a new generation of sports journalists to view and chronicle events in sports.

The Center serves as a launching pad for University of Maryland students to learn, actively participate in and develop the journalistic skills they need to meet the challenges of new media that face the next generation of sports journalists.

The Center was made possible by continued support Povich’s children – Maury, Lynn and David – as well as support from other involved parties.

 

Former GWAA president recalls day Charlie Sifford turned down an invitation to Augusta

It is my pleasure to allow my good friend and golf book co-author, Leonard Shapiro, to use this space to share a memorable conversation with Charlie Sifford.

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The death of pioneering African-American golfer Charlie Sifford earlier this week at the age of 92 rekindled the memory of a rather unpleasant telephone conversation we once had a dozen years ago a few months before the annual Masters Tournament in Augusta, Ga.

At the time, I was covering golf for The Washington Post and serving as president of the Golf Writers Association of America. Our board of directors had wanted to honor Sifford at the organization’s annual awards banquet traditionally held the night before the tournament started at a venue about two miles from Augusta National. We’d pay his way, put him up in a hotel and even provide tickets to the tournament if he wanted to attend.

When I called Sifford at his home in Ohio to invite him to the dinner, he politely declined, sort of. To paraphrase, he said that while he greatly appreciated the gesture, “no way in hell” would he ever come to Augusta, let alone even think of setting foot on that golf course.

And who could blame him?

A former kid caddy who began playing as a professional in the 1940s, and smoking his signature cigar all along the way, Sifford never was allowed to play in the first major championship of the season, even though he clearly belonged. In his 20s and 30s, the prime years of any golfer’s career, the PGA Tour of that time had a ‘Caucasian-only” clause that forced talented black players to form their own circuit until that odious policy was finally dropped in 1961.

Instead, Sifford and other fine African-American players like Ted Rhodes, and later long-time Washingtonian Lee Elder, competed for a relative pittance at public courses like Langston in Northeast, D.C. Even when Sifford did play in PGA Tour events in the early 1960s, he endured unspeakable indignities—racial epithets from the galleries, feces at the bottom of flagsticks on the greens, even having to change his shoes in the parking lot because in some private clubs, blacks were not allowed in the locker room.

“It took a special person to take the things that he took,” Elder told the New York Times in 1992. “The tournaments that barred him, the black cats in his bed, the hotels where he couldn’t stay, the country club grills where he couldn’t eat. Charlie was tough and hard.”

Sifford was 39 when the PGA changed its segregationist rule, an age when most players of that era were on the downside of their careers. Still, he played at an extremely high level. In 1967, at age 45, he won the Greater Hartford Open, a big-time event and a victory that surely would allow him to play The Masters the following spring.

It never happened.

In 1969, he won another prestigious PGA Tour event, the Los Angeles Open, but once again, no Masters invitation. Both times, Augusta National officials cited a points system they had instituted to qualify, though many back then always thought it was a sham excuse for keeping Sifford and other black golfers out of the event.

Sadly, hardly any of his white playing peers at the time spoke up on his behalf, though a number of sports columnists around the country vented their outrage. Jim Murray of the Los Angeles Times led off one column by writing “OK, rest easy Jefferson Davis, put down the gun John Wilkes Booth….The Masters Golf Tournament is as white as the Klu Klux Klan….Everyone in it can ride in the front of the bus.”

Not until Elder won the 1974 Monsanto Open did the first African-American finally play in The Masters, in 1975. And twenty-two years later, a baby-faced 21-year-old prodigy named Tiger Woods became the tournament’s first black champion. In his remarks afterward, Woods made it a point to specifically thank players like Sifford, Elder and Rhodes for paving his way to the title.

Last year, Woods told the Associated Press that “it’s not an exaggeration to say that without Charlie and other pioneers who fought to play, I may not be playing golf. My pop likely would not have picked up the sport, and maybe I wouldn’t have either.”

That Sunday in April, 1997 when Woods won the tournament and his first of 14 major championships, shattering scoring records on his way to a remarkable 12-shot victory, I stood next to Lee Elder in the massive crowd surrounding the first tee as Woods was about to begin his historic final round. He had driven up from his home in South Florida the night before to bear witness, and as Woods was introduced, I looked over at Elder and saw tears streaming down his face.

Charlie Sifford wasn’t there that day, nor on any day of his remarkable life. What a shame.

 

 

Dreamers: Some Cubs fans thought they were qualified for new radio broadcasts

My latest Chicago Tribune column discusses the deluge of applicants WBBM received for a position on the Cubs radio broadcasts.

You also can access the column via my Twitter feed @Sherman_Report.

From the column:

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A dream job proved that some Cubs fans are huge dreamers.

WBBM-AM 780, the new radio outlet for the Cubs, has been actively looking to hire a third person to join Pat Hughes and Ron Coomer on the game broadcasts. A decision is expected shortly on who will host the pre- and postgame shows as well as provide score updates during games.

Sounds like a pretty good job, especially since it means attending every Cubs game, home and away.

Ron Gleason, WBBM’s director of news and programming, wasn’t surprised to receive more than 400 resumes for the position, which Judd Sirott filled last year at WGN. More than a few, he said, were from people who had only one qualification: Cubs fan.

“I got a number of resumes from people who had absolutely no broadcast experience,” Gleason said. “They basically said they were lifetime Cubs fans who got an autograph from their favorite player when they were 7. Because of that, they are perfect for the job. I don’t want to demean or make fun of them. These are wonderful people. But there is a skill and craft that goes into working in broadcasting.”

 

Deadspin 2, Sports Illustrated 0: New Best American Sports Writing shows shift in media landscape

Pleased to share my first sports journalism column for Poynter.org. I look at how the 2014 edition of “Best American Sports Writing” says much about the media landscape these days.

From the column:

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Look no further than the table of contents in the annual “The Best American Sports Writing” books to see the dramatic shift in the sports media landscape.

In 1991, there were 24 stories selected in the first book of the series; David Halberstam served as the guest editor. The lineup included 11 from newspapers, including four from the late, great The National. As you would expect, Sports Illustrated had a presence with three entries.

Now fast forward to the 2014 edition of “Best Sports Writing,” which was released in the fall with “Born to Run” author Christopher McDougall as the guest editor. Of the 25 stories in the book, only two are from newspapers (both from the New York Times). Instead, Internet sites now are more prevalent with eight stories coming from the Dot-com sector.

And here’s the ultimate kicker: There are two stories from Deadspin in the book; none from Sports Illustrated.

 

Lineup change: Davis replaces Fowler as new host of GameDay

After 25 years, there’s going to be a new quarterback on ESPN’s “College Gameday.”

ESPN announced late Thursday that Rece Davis will take over as the new host next year. Chris Fowler, who had been the show’s host since 1990, will focus strictly on his duties as the network’s lead play-by-play voice for college football.

Fowler handled both roles in 2014, working “Gameday” on Saturday morning and then calling a game later in the day. While analyst Kirk Herbstreit does the same double shift, calling a game is considerably more taxing.

Also, Davis was up for a new contract, and the network likely needed to give him a plum role to keep him at ESPN.

John Wildhack, ESPN executive vice president, programming and production, said in a statement: “This agreement reflects our belief that Rece Davis is one of the very best in the industry. He’s established himself as a versatile and polished pro. Chris Fowler was instrumental in building College GameDay into an award-winning and iconic program that transcends sports with its excellence, relevance and influence on the public discourse. With Rece on board, we know College GameDay will remain the show of record for college football fans.”

Fowler discussed the change: “I am truly proud and gratified to have hosted College GameDay for the past 25 years, from the humble early days in the studio to its present place on the sports TV landscape. Traveling the country with Lee, Kirk, Desmond, and the whole GameDay family as we shared Saturday mornings with passionate football fans has been professionally and personally rewarding… and unforgettable fun.

“In choosing to shift my focus to play-by-play for Saturday Night Football, the College Football Playoff, and the biggest tennis events year-round, it was important to me that GameDay be left in excellent hands. It certainly will be with someone as talented and dedicated as Rece Davis. I know viewers will welcome him and I am excited to watch GameDay’s continuing evolution.”

Illinois football coach needs education in how journalism works

During the last few months, I have been proud to work with my old school in developing a sports media program for the College of Media. Great bunch of dedicated people and I’m looking forward where it is going to take us.

Now I have a suggestion for a new class: Introduction to sports journalism for football coaches.

Specifically, one football coach: Tim Beckman.

The Illinois football coach, whose Big Ten record is 4-20, wants the media to join in the effort to save his job.

From Shannon Ryan’s column in the Tribune:

But when Beckman asked in no uncertain terms that the media abandon objectivity and jump aboard the Illini bandwagon, he showed more than a basic lack of knowledge about and respect for the job of the press. He overshadowed his own success story of the day and ultimately steered the narrative away from what he actually was trying to achieve: a slam dunk positive day in the news.

“What are (recruits) reading?” he asked reporters directly. “What are you saying? … The challenge is still, how important is the University of Illinois to you? It’s very important to us. We can be successful if we’re all in it together.”

Part of a coach’s strategy is controlling the message about his team. Understood.

But there are less blatant ways to go about it than an out-and-out directive to media to throw away objectivity. (More and more have in press boxes, but that’s another story.)

“Let’s build this thing into a champion,” he said, addressing reporters. “The more positive stuff you can talk about the better off we all are.”

Ridiculous and alarmingly naive. Writes Ryan:

Does Beckman truly think the purpose of the media is to fill the same role as the university’s public relations staff? In return, is part of Beckman’s mission to help the Tribune sell newspapers?

No, but it is his job alone — and not mine at all — to sell his program.

Steve Greenberg in the Sun-Times:

Where Beckman is concerned, he has gotten himself into odd, awkward spots — repeatedly — with his words. He’s a little tone-deaf, OK? He says stuff that makes people ask, “Did he really just say that?” It’s almost always harmless stuff. Again: nice, earnest guy. I mean that, truly.

But he is so far off in asking the media to essentially cheerlead, it’s beyond comical. It’s also wayyyy wrong. He’s out of line and, it seems, doesn’t even know it.

Yep.

NFL backs off: No fine for Marshawn Lynch’s media charade; expect copycats

It would have been tricky for the NFL to impose a fine on Marshawn Lynch. Technically, he did make himself available to the media during the Super Bowl.

Still, the NFL could have imposed a fine on Lynch because he is expected to do more than say “I’m just here so I won’t get fine.” He definitely violated the spirit of the media rule.

If the fine got overturned, so be it. At least, the NFL made a statement.

The NFL, though, decided to do nothing. From Josh Alper of Pro Football Talk:

NFL spokesman Michael Signora sent an email to PFT explaining that Lynch would not be fined for any reason.

“Marshawn Lynch complied with his obligation to attend all required media sessions at the Super Bowl. In addition, there is no basis for a fine for the hat he wore at the media sessions, which was made by and given to him by an NFL licensee, New Era, and was in team colors,” Signora wrote.

Here’s the problem. Lynch received considerable attention by not talking to the media. As a result, you’re going to see more Marshawn Lynchs in the NFL and other sports.

In fact, it already is happening. Nick Schwartz of USA Today has this excerpt of a Boston radio intervew with Red Sox outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr.

“I’m going to go all Marshawn Lynch this year…. I just focus on me. I have to do what I’ve got to do. I don’t even talk about it to anybody. Action speaks louder than words, and that’s pretty much this whole year is going to be. I won’t have much to say. I’m just going to go out there and take care of business.”

However, as Schwartz notes, Bradley hit .198 last year. Fans might not care what he has to say.

 

 

Brandon Marshall wants to do another season of ‘Inside The NFL’

Brandon Marshall sounds like he wants to do another season of “Inside The NFL” on Showtime.

On this week’s season finale, the Bears receiver discussed returning to the show in 2015.

“[During Super Bowl Week] I actually interviewed (Baltimore coach John Harbaugh),” Marshall said. “I said, ‘If I played for you, would you let me do Inside the NFL?’ He said, ‘Oh, absolutely.’ He knew I was taking a lot of heat for doing the show.

“But, when you are the first in the space to do something like this, you are going to get a lot of push-back and we [The Bears] had the worst year possible … Next year will be a better year for us. I’m looking forward to the challenge and I’m looking forward to the opportunity.”

Of course, the bigger question is whether Marshall will be back with the Bears.

 

New assignment: Writing sports journalism column for Poynter

As a freelance journalist, I always say I am a man of many hats. I pleased to be wearing another one.

Starting Thursday, I will launch a new sports journalism column on Poynter.org. Here is the official announcement.

My weekly (mostly) columns will examine the pressing news, issues, trends and challenges in sports journalism. I also plan to look at the process by telling the stories of the business’ top editors, reporters and outlets.

After all, I don’t just cover the changing landscape of sports media. I’m living it.

I also will be reunited with Poynter president Tim Franklin. Back in the ‘90s, I was one of Tim’s associate editors when he was sports editor of the Tribune. He is one of the smartest people I know in the business, and he has gone on to have a marvelous career. The opportunity to work with Tim again is big reason why I am thrilled to be part of his team at Poynter.

Please check out my columns at Poytner. I also will link to them here at Sherman Report.