Hype?
OTT Sports Reporting
Two days in a row this
week the front page of the EDP has been taken up entirely with the
saga that is the Norwich City football club.
Never mind the stories
themselves. What has me wondering is how the rest of the world copes
without such riveting stuff to chew over.
And, it's not just the
EDP. One night this week the lead story on the 6 o'clock News was
the impending departure, or otherwise, of Kevin Keegan from Newcastle
United.
What I wondered was
this: are there no other stories which should be front page items?
Is this really such a slow news week? Or, are the media just so lazy
and ill-informed as to make real reporting too difficult and too
time-consuming?
This week we have seen
another hurricane hit the New Orleans area; the continuing
Russian/Georgian flashpoint in the Balkans, the opening of the
Republican National Convention in Minneapolis; the continuing credit
crunch and any number of stories about the difficulties Gordon Brown
and Alastair Darling are facing over the economy. All these have
appeared in the news.
What I am asking is how
can the comings and goings of football managers and the financial
strength of Norwich City be front page news?
I had a quick check at
the local media in Kansas City. The start of the NFL season is upon
us. The sports page is full of news of the Chiefs. The front page
is empty of idle, gormless speculation about who's in – who's out
or who's up and who's down.
Why should this be so?
If you listen to the average man in the street they will gleefully
assert that the Americans over-hype their sport. All the razzmatazz
is across the pond. I've news. The UK media have overcome our
trans-Atlantic cousins in the OTT stakes, by a long margin.
It's time that we
gained some perspective in what's important and what's not. Sports
fans should get to read about their team. It's on the back page.
Tomorrow's headline is
already written. Delia has put another 2 million into the club to
cover a (perceived) shortfall caused by the departure of the Turner
money. That will make three days in a week when the EDP front page
consists only of NCFC stories.
No, I have no inside
info. But, remember, you heard it here first.