Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Game Story Notes


Game Story Notes

 

Elements:

•Storyline – the narrative thread that runs through most of the game story, something that addresses the significance of the event, of a strategy, of a play, or of a player. The storyline keeps fans reading, even if they’ve already watched the game.

•Context – explains the news values and offers key details, such as the score and the participants. Sometimes, this information, referred to as the nut graph, is included in the lede paragraphs for stories that do not take a narrative approach.

•Quotes – comments from players and coaches reveal insights into key plays, approaches and performances. Writers need to speak with participants on both teams.

•Key plays – descriptions and references to key plays illustrate how a team or player performed during key moments.

•Key statistics – the most significant numbers, particularly those that help propel the main storyline or that clarify a main point.

 

STORYLINE

 Nearly 24 million people tuned in to Game 6 of the NBA Finals, many cheering for Dirk Nowitzki, who elevated his game in the second half and led Dallas to its first championship. A large percentage of the TV audience also jeered LeBron James, probably the NBA’s most hated player after departing his native Cleveland for Miami following his hyped “Decision” announcement last summer. James fizzled down the stretch, shooting infrequently and poorly, setting up a perfect foil for Nowitzki, the assiduous forward. Essentially, that was the storyline for most journalists, a comparison between James and Nowitzki.

 

One of the authors used the two different players to start his lead while the other author focused more of staring off the story with the outcome of how it ended, and the last author went for more of the reaction of a character in the story. We notice that there is many different ways to start a story.

 

CONTEXT

    Should address which teams played, where they played, when they played, who won, what the final score was, and, perhaps, a brief reference to how the game culminated.

 

Author techniques:

·         Insert most of the info in the second graph and add details about what Dallas earing NBA title by winning the first three games of the series.

·         Insert several reasons why Dallas won.

 

QUOTES

                Never interview local coaches and local teams because you will get two different stories. However you should always interview the opposing team to talk about how they saw the ball movement, to then see and understand how the game was played, without having too many opinionated thoughts.

 

KEY PLAYS

 Basketball is a game of scoring runs. The team that strings together the most runs usually wins. So you’ll need to keep detailed notes as you watch a basketball game, highlighting where a team outscores its opponent in runs like 8-0, 12-2, 14-4. You’ll also want to underline key plays and to determine how a team scored several unanswered points. Was it thanks to 3-point shooting? Strong rebounding? Transition points? Focus more on the runs that usually ended being buzzard beaters and different plays that defined the games and helped the team stay strong, as well as overall player scores and include timing.

 

KEY STATISTICS

 You do not need to recite every scoring leader in a game story. Less can certainly be more. Readers’ eyes will glaze if you offer too many statistics, especially if these numbers are packed together. Look for stats that might not emerge in a box score, such as a player’s shooting percentage in a quarter or half.

 

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