Puck Daddy at Yahoo Sports has an excellent article on how newspaper hockey coverage is quickly becoming an endangered species. The LA times now have one beat writer to cover both the Kings and the Ducks. The Palm Beach Post has discontinued staff coverage of the Florida Panthers. Go read the piece, it’s important and it’s a shot across the bow to Avalanche fans.
We are very fortunate in Denver to have real commitment from our two papers of note, The Denver Post and The Rocky Mountain News. The Denver Post feature Adrian Dater and Terry Frei as their main hockey columnists but also feature occasional pieces by Woody Paige, Mark Kiszla, Jim Armstrong, and Mike Chambers. The Rocky Mountain News feature Rick Sadowski and Aaron Lopez as their main hockey columnists but hockey is also covered occasionally by Dave Krieger, Bernie Lincicome, Sam Adams and even Drew Litton will sketch the an Avalanche comic now and again. Let there be no doubt that it’s not just Denverites that read this material. With online material, Avalanche fans from across the world follow these newspapers.
It’s been argued by some people and hell, even some bloggers that newspaper beat writers are dinosaurs of the past. Some bloggers have even been so bold as to suggest that they themselves can replace the “old media”. There could be nothing further from the truth. Bloggers cannot replace the mainstream media. Blogs can only supplement and enhance newspaper coverage. Some newspaper columnists have been quick to point at blogs as the bad guy when it comes to newspaper economics. The fact is that all newspapers have suffered and they are now adapting with online content and even blogs! I believe the big problem for beat writers aren’t blogs but rather the big sporting websites that leech off their hard work. The same big media that are supposed to have accountability and higher ethical standards then blogs. Below is an excerpt from an email conversation I had last year with a member of the local Denver media.
One thing I think most respectable blogs do that mainstream media fails to do is properly source our material. Every time we post a breaking story, we not only give our source but we also post a hyperlink back to that source and in most cases cite the author of the piece. Today, I’m reading ESPN.com and they have a breaking report on Forsberg and Foote being back in the lineup. ESPN.com cites the Denver Post as the source in text only http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?id=3297433. I see a breaking alert on www.tsn.ca that “Peter Forsberg, Joe Sakic and David Jones are expected to form the top line Monday against the Wild.” Only if I click on the alerts and scroll down will I see that it was attributed to the Denver Post. Everyone here knows it was probably Dater or another beat writer that busted his ass to go and get that story after practice.
Here’s what I’m getting at; As a blogger I can forward traffic back to the Denver Post. The Post gets more views (granted, not many from small potatoes like an Avalanche blog) and in turn they can make more money from their advertisements etc… It’s good for all parties involved. I believe that’s ethics in new media. What’s happening is that major sites like ESPN act as a hub for sports data in every market and they horde that traffic to the best of their ability. Reputable blogs (and frankly, most blogs in general) constantly link to other sites.In the large picture I just think that blogs really compliment major media, and enhance it. They will never replace it. And despite all the supposed ethics and accountability of major sites like ESPN.com, I think in some ways blogs adhere to a more modern ethic needed on the Internet.







“The Denver Post feature Adrian Dater and Terry Frei as their main hockey columnists but also feature occasional pieces by Woody Paige, Mark Kiszla…”
let’s try not to hold that against the Post.
also, I don’t know what’s gotten into you, dude, but please don’t change a thing!
Denver is also one of the few markets that sends writers from not only one, but both papers to cover the Stanley Cup Finals on a regular basis. A lot of NHL markets don’t anyone any more.
Good point Jack. As I mentioned in my letters to both the RMN and DP, Denver had the fourth highest TV ratings in the US with a 3.7 / 7 number for the Winter Classic game between Pittsburgh and Buffalo. There’s a large resource of Avalanche fans in and out of Denver that they should (and do) cater to. Hopefully their advertisers see this as well as ultimately they run that show.
DD, thanks and I will.
I’m not sure how much worse the LA Times can get; Detroit winning the Cup got 2 inches of space while the Dodgers losing an early-season game took over half the front of the sports page the same day. Even for a warm-weather market, that’s pathetic.
Not that Detroit winning a cup not getting any play is a bad thing, mind you? Way to go LA Times!
Nice post Dario.
I read that Puck Daddy article earlier today and was wondering if anybody in the Avs Blogosphere was going to comment on it seeing how good we have it.
I know that the Broncos are the big deal in Denver. Where do the Avs stand among the other “big 3″ sports teams?
I firmly believe they are number 2 behind the Broncos in the hearts and minds of the fans …. easily ….. but the print media treats them like they are tied with the Nugs for last. The amount of baseball coverage in the print media is nauseating. And boring, just like the game itself. Take a look at the traffic that AD’s blog gets on the Post compared to the other major team blogs. The rest of them are pretty much dead.
I think it is difficult to tell if the Avs are 2nd. When the Rockies went on there run last year, they almost silenced the Broncos! (And by almost I mean, the closest any other team has come to doing that.)
However, the Rockies are returning to earth and worrying people that they will not be able to keep many of their players for next year, and the Nugs pissed of fans due to high payroll but nothing to show for it.
The Avs fanbase meanwhile, though divided over Budaj, seem very loyal. I think the bottom 3 under the Broncos fluctuate with who has the best chance of winning.
Thank you letters sent. I think Dario is just jealous of DD’s once-sided Dater-luv and is hoping he can move up the food chain to managing editors…
Not gonna lie, Dater has become a very good writer since he published his book.