Prep sports scoring
points
By Marcelo Duran
Associate Editor
If you build it, they will
come.
That is the hope several
companies are expressing as they attempt to extend community journalism into the
wide world of sports.
Last month,
CommunitySportsDesk, an offshoot of the Kenosha (Wis.) News, launched a hosted
service that allows local youth and recreation sports leagues to post schedules,
write game summaries, input stats and box scores and upload game and team
pictures to a newspaper-branded Web site.
The hosted version is the most
recent iteration of CommunitySportsDesk, which the News (Monday-Friday, 24,552;
Saturday, 24,215; Sunday, 27,149) rolled out last summer as an experiment to see
how it could handle user-generated content flowing from the area’s youth and
recreation sports teams, according to Ken Dowdell, News publisher and vice
president of United Communications Corp.
“Our in-house techs built that
innovative model, based on discussions with league organizers and team
officials,” he said.
Reaction was positive, so the
News hired additional software developers to pepper CommunitySportsDesk with
additional features, including the ability for UCC to host the app, Dowdell
said.
“It can be the
‘something-different’ tool that equips a traditional media company to get where
they need to go with youth and recreational sports,” he said about the software,
adding that he felt confident the concept would work well in other “Kenoshas”
around the country.
Automatic lede writing
In addition to rewriting code
that enabled UCC to host the app, developers added features that allow the
software to produce basic headlines and lead paragraphs automatically, based on
the data input by team representatives.
“Rather than simply offering a
channel for blogging, CommunitySportsDesk helps structure the collection,
processing and flow of what can be massive amounts of data,” said Dowdell.
“We’ve engineered options that
can serve Pee Wee players who just need their achievements recognized to high
school and adult leagues that like to collect complete stats,” he said.
Dowdell said the company is
prepared to support its users as they roll out the software.
“As a result of our real-life
experiences, we’re prepared to help other publishers with a community-focused,
full advertising-supported business model, not merely software,” said Dowdell.
Matthew Serpe, a
CommunitySportsDesk business development specialist, said the service dovetails
with the industry’s adoption of hyper-local coverage.
“In a newspaper, (youth and
rec sports) is an area getting the least amount of coverage. We are offering
this application for youth and rec to cover themselves.”
National effort
Dell Sports Inc., meantime,
plans to roll out a national high-school sports service this fall, according to
Terry Dell, president of the Charlotte, N.C., firm.
The service, Prep Sports
Nation, allows participants to post and share pictures, upload video and blogs
and share content among students, parents, athletes and local community members.
“How cool would it be to have
pictures of you, uploaded on the Web site, by everyone in the audience?” Dell
said. “It’s a game of a thousand angles and it’s easy for anyone who goes and
watches the game to take pictures.”
Dell said participating
newspapers can download all the materials they need from the PSN site. Fans are
reminded that a newspaper could use their photos or stories before they can post
to PSN, Dell said.
Prep Sports Nation began beta
testing the app last August and Dell said he’s modified PSN to accommodate user
requests.
Reverse publishing
“One suggestion was full
reverse publishing on all user photos and profile material, which we had, but
(the paper) wanted to take the entire profile and feature a particular a
student,” he said.
Papers can feature multiple
student profiles and can also run fan profiles from multiple schools, he said.
PSN is engineered to manage
rosters, schedules, and individual and team stats. Users will also be able to
search for particular teams or individuals on other PSN sites and Dell said he’s
working on a delivery method to allow photos and other materials to be shared
among newspapers.
The system includes a stamp or
watermark that identifies where the photo originated and a transmission system
that can route the photo to a newspaper that requests to publish it.
CommunitySportsDesk and PSN
come as newspapers try to find ways to increase coverage of local sports even as
their resources are trimmed. The Amarillo (Texas) Globe-News, for example, won a
Digital Edge award for its prep sports site, Pigskin Review, which launched last
year (see Newspapers & Technology, March 2008).
Editor’s
note: Hear our exclusive interview with CommunitySportsDesk on News&Tech Radio.
