Sports Journalism Sucks
Media Rants by Tony Palmeri
From the May 2015 edition of the SCENE
Mainstream sports journalism? I wish I could wax
eloquently about it with a verbal dexterity and grace equivalent to the awesomeness
of a Lebron James layup. Unfortunately the quality of sports journalism (to the
extent that such a thing even exists) requires only one blunt descriptor:
SUCKS. Unless of course your idea of quality sports journalism is mindless
cheerleading, bland press conferences, inability to tell the difference between
real and manufactured scandals, and so-called “experts” screaming at each other
on cable television. If that’s what we mean by quality sports journalism, then
without question we have the best in the world.
Poor sports journalism is not strictly a modern
phenomenon. The late Howard Cosell complained about it in the 1970s. Cosell’s
most remembered for being one-third of the original ABC Monday Night Football
broadcast team and for his theatrical banter with heavyweight boxing champion
Muhammad Ali. Less remembered is the fact that Cosell saw sports as more than
just entertainment or distraction. His interviews with Ali during the champ’s
Vietnam War draft refusal period and subsequent suspension from boxing raised
the bar for what should be legitimate sports news; in his 1973 autobiography
Cosell recounts how the ABC network received complaints along the lines of “Get
that nigger-lovin’ Jew bastard off the air.”
Cosell in 1973 lamented “the general absence of
journalism in sports coverage, both in broadcast and in print.” Not much has
changed, as can be seen in the treatment of three recent sports stories that
cry out for competent journalism: (1) Chris Borland’s retirement from football,
(2) The Chicago Cubs’ treatment of prospect Kris Bryant, (3) The NCAA final
four basketball tournament in Indianapolis.
Chris
Borland’s Retirement: Refusal to Tackle the Elephant in the Room. When
24-year-old Chris Borland announced his retirement from the San Francisco 49ers
this year (he was one of four players under age 30 to retire in 2015) after
citing the possibility of future head trauma and diminished quality of life, he
presented the mass media with a golden opportunity to give urgency to the issue
of the National Football League’s many decades long attempt to cover up the
dangers associated with the sport. Remember how the major media for decades
minimized or ignored the dangers associated with cigarettes? The rush to get
Borland and others out of the headlines as quickly as possible is eerily
similar.
Kris
Bryant: The Media’s Uncritical Acceptance of the Business of Sports.
Baseball’s spring training is supposed to be the time when players compete for
spots on the major league roster. So when Chicago Cubs third base prospect Kris
Bryant hit 9 home runs in spring, he appeared to be a lock to make the big
league squad. Bryant may be on the team by the time you read this, yet the Cubs
sent him down to the minor leagues for at least the first 12 days of the season
so as to guarantee that he could not become an unrestricted free agent until
2021 at the earliest. In other words, the integrity of the game came in second
to the owners’ bottom line. This is of course not unique to the Cubs; in fact
it is typical across franchises in all professional sports. What’s distressing
is the media’s almost uncritical acceptance of the business side of sports,
resulting not only in lower quality play (i.e. delaying the big league arrival
of prospects like Bryant), but also making it easier for owners to raise ticket
prices at will while having the audacity to ask taxpayers for money to
refurbish stadiums or build new ones. Absent a critical media, sports team
owners can get away with just about anything.
The
NCAA Final Four: Sports Media Called For Blocking Foul.
In an epic case of bad timing, the Indiana legislature passed a homophobic
version of the “Religious Freedom Restoration Act” during the height of March
Madness in Indianapolis. The legislation in its original form would allow
private businesses to refuse to serve gay, lesbian, and transgender persons on
religious grounds. Massive protests erupted in Indianapolis, and even all four
Final Four coaches signed on to a statement rejecting discrimination in any
form. Yet moving the games out of Indianapolis was never seriously considered.
Why? Because sports reporting mostly blocked any serious discussion of that
issue, leaving it for the “serious” news to handle.
There are some great sports journalists out there. Mark
Fainaru-Wada’s
and Steve Fainaru’s work on football’s concussion crisis
and other issues is extremely well researched, provocative, and powerful. Dave
Zirin’s “Edge of Sports” column brings a sense of social justice and moral
clarity to sports. Regrettably, the Fainaru’s and Zirin are the glaring
exceptions to the general rule of suckiness.
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