A couple of interesting stories involving sportswriters:
At Kansas, there is a bizarre story involving a reporter covering the football team for the student paper. It seems coach Charlie Weis isn’t a big fan. Also, he probably is more than a bit cranky about his 1-4 Jayhawks.
Romenesko.com reports:
University Daily Kansan sports reporter Blake Schuster says he was warned Tuesday by University of Kansas football communications director Katy Lonergan about asking questions at the weekly football press conference.
The reason: Coach Charlie Weis and his team are still miffed about last week’s newspaper cover art and story.
Later, Romenesko reports:
I wasn’t able to reach Lonergan by phone this afternoon, but she did talk to Sports Radio 810 host Kevin Kietzman off the air and told him: “Coach Weis has been very patient with [the student reporter]. Other KU coaches I know would have obliterated him and humiliated him for asking dumb questions.”
Kietzman says he talked to Lonergan for 17 minutes. “She made one great decision” he adds. “She made a great decision in not coming on the air. She made a poor decision in saying I’ll talk to you on the record, because she couldn’t stop talking. And the farther she got into this thing, the weirder the conversation got as to why” the student reporter was warned about asking questions at the press conference.
Note to Kansas: You’ll never look good when you try to bully the student newspaper.
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Tom Hoffarth from the Los Angeles Daily News reports on why Rich Hammond left his job covering the Los Angeles Kings for the team’s website. He has since joined the Orange County Register.
From the story:
Hammond’s Sept. 17 post was a Q and A with the Kings’ Kevin Westgarth, the most visible of the team’s players as he worked with the NHL Players Association during Collective Bargaining Agreement talks. Westgarth was candid in his opinions about both sides of the negotiations.
“The league wanted the story taken down,” said Hammond, who stressed the Kings organization did not take issue with it. “Technically, they were saying that as a team employee, I had to abide by their rules of not discussing the lockout.”
The story remains posted (linked here) as discussions between the team and league continued. Still, Hammond wondered about maintaining the integrity of the blog if future restrictions or threats were ever put to him again.
In the meantime, he had renewed discussions from the Register about the USC beat and decided to take it, explaining only on his last post for the Kings’ blog (linked here) that “the timing and situation” was right for him to “move on . . . the decision is mine and the Kings in no way pushed or encouraged me to leave.” He said that during the lockout, he was not in danger of being laid off.
“It’s my choice, for a number of reasons,” he said. “I will leave on good terms.”
Hammond told the USC class that the team would have preferred he stayed but he “was not totally convinced the Kings could make (this situation) have a good ending.”
Probably not. Obviously, different rules apply for a team-owned website. Given his sentiments, Hammond is better off at the Register.