Aug. 04, 2016
Beat of the Week
(Honorable Mention)
Baylor's strict conduct code may have silenced rape victims
Jim Vertuno, reporter, Austin, Texas, for seizing on details in a report about sexual assault at Baylor University ...
Jim Vertuno, reporter, Austin, Texas, for seizing on details in a report about sexual assault at Baylor University ...
for source work that put AP ahead with details of the previously undisclosed framework of the NBA’s upcoming collective bargaining agreement with players. http://es.pn/2dXhGtM
for putting AP ahead with word that the NBA and its players union had reached a tentative deal for a new labor agreement. http://abcn.ws/2hWwfkz
for arranging to be with the New York Liberty as they tried out the first NBA Live video game with women’s players. http://bit.ly/2wHoUbY http://es.pn/2w7NMdD
for reporting accounts from three opera singers and a classical musician that renowned conductor Charles Dutoit sexually assaulted them, immediately causing widespread tumult and outrage in the classical music world. http://bit.ly/2COFJcQ
for noticing from a police report that the name of the man arrested for possessing marijuana-laced candy matched that of a New York Jets player. http://bit.ly/2DpRabx
for interviews with six more women who charge that maestro Charles Dutoit sexually abused them, including one who alleged rape. http://bit.ly/2Dbc9KM
for an in-depth, only-on-AP look at how marquee African-American NFL players feel deeply affected by racial profiling in America. http://bit.ly/2BiwcsE
worked sources to score a 24-hour beat on all competition, reporting that a $6 million fund was being set up to help more than 800 lower-ranked players who are going broke during the pandemic. Fendrich’s story went unmatched until the official announcement, getting wide play, including ESPN.com and Tennis.com, and was the subject of a panel discussion on Tennis Channel.https://bit.ly/35UvPBQhttps://bit.ly/2YZwoJl
used deep sourcing to be the first to report that former NFL player Phillip Adams was responsible for shooting six people to death in Rock Hill, South Carolin. She also broke the news that Adams was a former patient of one of the victims, prominent Dr. Robert Lesslie. Adams later killed himself.Local media outlets needed more than an hour to match Kinnard's scoop naming Adams, and major national outlets were hours behind AP — in many cases having to wait until authorities confirmed the shooter’s name during an afternoon news conference.Michelle Liu, Kinnard’s colleague in Columbia, secured interviews with neighbors and covered the news conference, while AP sports writers contributed background and interviews regarding Adams. https://bit.ly/3abe44E
A photographer needs more than a good eye to do the job.
On Friday night, August 4, Los Angeles-based photographer Mark J. Terrill landed the AP a scoop with sharp hearing.
In the eighth inning of the Angels’ game against the Oakland Athletics, Los Angeles’ CJ Cron made a diving stop of Matt Joyce’s hard-hit line drive, which elicited loud cheers from the crowd in Anaheim. As Joyce ran back to the dugout Terrill heard the Oakland player in a heated exchange with a fan, cursing at the fan using a gay slur.
Terrill's reporting was used by AP's stringer covering the game for Sports, and expanded by Baseball Writer Ron Blum who recognized the importance of the incident. The AP story went unmatched overnight. Even after the A's addressed the incident, most media outlets continued to cite the AP story throughout.
For their enterprising efforts, Terrill and Blum split this week’s $300 Best of the States award.
National sports writer Eddie Pells was first approached in February by the mom of a player who said she had some concerns about abuses going on in the volleyball program at Oregon State.
Over the next five months, Pells conducted dozens of interviews both in and out of the program, and checked with experts to learn if volleyball coach Mark Barnard was over the line. Several athletes spoke to Pells, including a former OSU player who described how the coach’s abusive practices contributed to a suicide attempt.
Pells’ exclusive led to immediate calls for the coach’s firing and questions about the university officials who didn’t take action after hearing complaints.
For months of persistent and sensitive reporting despite uncertain prospects, resulting in an impressive story with impact, Pells wins this week’s Best of the States award.
for being two hours out front on the details of a government watchdog report detailing problems with the conduct of Rear Adm. Ronny Jackson, President Trump’s nominee to head the Veterans Administration. https://bit.ly/2HAEuN1
for reporting exclusively an overlooked angle to the NFL protests: acceptance of government funds may leave NFL owners vulnerable to legal challenge if they bar players from protesting. http://bit.ly/2yfLHAg
for connecting sports writers across the AP with their colleagues at Canadian Press to survey players on all 31 National Hockey League teams on a defined set of topics, fueling exclusive stories during the playoffs. Among the takeaways: Almost half of the players surveyed support a change to the current playoff format.https://bit.ly/2UAregR
for making AP first with exclusive comments and explanations from some of the world’s top female players as they announced their landmark decision to boycott current North American hockey leagues until they get a single, viable professional league.https://bit.ly/2H6jsrM
used access and anticipation to set up and deliver an exclusive multiformat package from inside the NBA bubble. When Miami Heat forward Meyers Leonard stood during the national anthem while his teammates knelt before their season’s reopening game, Reynolds had his full story on the wire within five minutes of the end of the anthem, and his interview package, including video, was hours ahead of other outlets, who credited AP.https://bit.ly/2DuUNxThttps://bit.ly/2Psz7oA
noticed at the 2005 World Series that the Houston Astros fielded a team without any U.S.-born Black players, prompting the AP baseball writer to wonder when he would cover a World Series without such a player on either team. The answer: 2022.Leaning on his previous reporting, reaching out to sources and working closely with Race and Ethnicity reporter Aaron Morrison for precise language about Black identity in baseball clubhouses, Walker and AP were alone in reporting that this year’s Astros-Phillies Fall Classic would be the first since 1950 without any U.S.-born Black players.In a World Series full of big names and rich storylines, Walker’s piece was undoubtedly the buzz of baseball in the days before Game 1. It was the top Google result for searches of “World Series,” “MLB” and “baseball” for several days, and it was cited widely even outside the sports world, by NPR, CNN and others.Read more
for reporting exclusively that the Houston Texans NFL team had warned its players in a private memo to avoid leaving their hotel in Mexico City ahead of Monday night's game against Oakland. http://pro32.ap.org/article/texans-urged-stay-room...
for reporting that University of Minnesota football players had ended their boycott in advance of a bowl game, in part because the group had read a report detailing the allegations made against 10 teammates suspended for sexual assault. http://apne.ws/2hWi3bp