| Sports
reporting
A conversation with Mike Lopresti

Mike Lopresti |
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Award-winning sports reporter Mike Lopresti has been a national
sports correspondent for Gannett News Service since 1982.
He has covered almost every major U.S. sport and reported
from 11 Olympic Games. He began his career at the Palladium-Item
in Richmond, Ind., as a high school junior.
Chipsquinn.org: What's the secret to being able
to crank out a quality game story so quickly after a game
ends?
Mike Lopresti: How do I do game stories so quickly?
One word: Panic. Actually, it goes a little deeper than that.
Preparation is vital. I have to work several different versions,
trying to guess what will be most important if there is an
Ending A, Ending B, or Ending C. Kind of like the movie "Clue."
I even like to have some quotes stored from before the game,
to fit into different versions of the story, so even the story
that moves right after the game will have some quotes
in it. In a close game, I will be constantly updating and
rewriting and changing from about halfway through to the very
end. Obviously, I have learned to appreciate blowouts.
Q: You've covered many major sporting events in
your career -- Super Bowls, Final Fours, World Series, Olympics.
How do you come up with original angles at events where access
to players is so tightly controlled?

Mike Lopresti at work at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia. © Gannett
News Service |
A: Originality comes from never forgetting one thing. Sports
events, at their core, are about people. Every person has
some unique story about him, and many times those stories
can be told by talking to other people. I always am interested
in the star athlete's wife, husband, father, mother,
child, friend, etc. For instance, one Super Bowl, I did a
column
on quarterback Steve Young. But instead of fighting the
masses to talk to him, I did something with his sister, who
also was a very good athlete. She told the story that when
Steve was a kid he wouldn't got to sleepovers with friends.
So I had a column about this big tough quarterback afraid
of sleepovers.
One other thing I try to do is to find unusual angles away
from the game itself. At another Super Bowl, in Los Angeles,
I decided to visit three high schools in gangland, to write
about what it was like to be a football player in a place
such as that, when the glitzy Super Bowl was just up the street.
Q: Have you ever had a confrontation with a sports personality
who wasn't happy with something you wrote? How did you handle
it?
A: A unique part of my job is that I usually am an
outsider from a faraway place, so I don't have as many confrontations
because people often don't know who I am. I had many more
back when I used to write for the local Richmond, Ind., newspaper.
Whenever I have had them, I always have tried to use calm
logic, to explain what I wrote and why, and to listen. And
I always have tried to put myself in that person's place,
too. I spent four years on the school board in the town where
I live. That was an invaluable experience, to be on the other
side of reporting, and be a subject, not a writer.
Q: Editors say you write for more than just sports junkies.
How do you do this, especially given your intimate knowledge
of sports?
A: One of the compliments I enjoy hearing most is
if someone tells me they don't read sports very often, but
they do read my column. I always try to remember that sports
are people, and people are stories. I try not to get too deep
in terminology or statistics. Not that there is not a place
for them on a sports page, but a column can be drowned by
them. In my particular job, I also always try to remember
that in such events as the World Series, Super Bowl, Masters,
etc., people will be following that event who don't follow
baseball, football or golf at any other time. Again, I think
they come for the personalities, the drama, the emotions and
the people.
Q: How do you get a reluctant interview subject to open
up? Can you recall a situation where you had little hope for
a good story but came away with something spectacular?
A: A few ideas on this. First, when I am dealing with
athletes or coaches in talking about games and their jobs
in them, I always make it clear that I understand they have
a much closer insight into it than I do, they know more than
I do, and the reason I am there is to get their perspective.
I think the media comes across too often as a know-it-all
and that turns interviewees off in sports. How can a chunky
guy like me sit there and try to tell a pitcher what it is
like to face a hitter in the ninth inning? I want him to know
that I am asking these questions because I understand he does
know, and I don't.
Also, when dealing with off-field issues, I try to find some
common ground. Take away the games, and we are all people.
For instance, I wanted to do a column from the Fiesta Bowl
on an Ohio
State player who lost both parents this season. An assistant
coach was grumbling that people would ask about the subject,
and I am not sure the kid would have said much. But I mentioned
to him how I felt when I lost my mother, and if he had some
of the same feelings, and I went from a stranger asking questions
to sell newspapers to another man who had lost his mother.
His quotes were wonderful.
Q: Most sports writers begin their careers covering local
and high school sports at smaller newspapers, just as you
did at the Palladium-Item in Richmond, Ind. What advice
do you have for them and for aspiring sports writers who would
like to cover sports on a national level as you do?
A: I would tell small-paper reporters what I miss
from those days. I miss the intimacy. I miss the close connection
between the newspaper and the community. I miss the feeling
in the newsroom that basically we were all there together.
I miss sometimes doing things outside my area that were fresh
and new (once, I had to take a photo of a bus accident, beginning
and ending my short-lived photographic career). Those are
all values that help make a reporter, and in some ways, never
will be matched at bigger papers. And I would tell them that
even though the newspaper business demands urgent deadlines,
sometimes it requires patience as well.
About the column
Watch, listen, learn. One of the best ways to improve your
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