Adviser Update Summer 2012 | Page 7

Adviser Update SUMMER 2012 Page 7A ‘Devolution of sportswriting is complicated’ By RICHARD J. LEVINE S PRESIDENT'S PERSPECTIVE Richard J. Levine is president of the board of directors of the Dow Jones News Fund Inc. In five decades with Dow Jones & Co., he has served as vice president for news and staff development, executive editor of Dow Jones Newswires, vice president of information services, editorial director of electronic publishing and Washington correspondent and columnist for The Wall Street Journal. He holds a B.S. from Cornell University and an M.S. from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Email: [email protected]. P07.V53.I01 Frank Deford black Today, of course, with the Internet, sportswriting is being squeezed again, just as television pressured us ... Notwithstanding, I think there are more good sportswriters and more good sportswriting than ever before. cyan magazine put it, has “literary ambitions as one of its credos and the essay as its primary means of expression.” Then there is Yahoo! Sports, which has assembled some of the nation’s finest talent, and Deadspin, a Gawker site that proclaims it offers “sports news without access, favor, or discretion.” More focused sites such as Brian’s Cook’s mgoblog.com, which covers University of Michigan sports, have become mustreads for fanatic fans. Some newspapers have improved or expanded their sports coverage. The New York Times has won plaudits for its indepth reporting on the dangers of life-altering head injuries in football and hockey, while the relatively new sports pages of The Wall Street Journal offer fresh insights and some of the best writing in the paper. “What’s happening is the Internet is decentralizing long-form sports journalism,” says a knowledgeable sports executive who started as a sportswriter. ”There’s a lot of good stuff. It’s a great time to be a content consumer.” Though Frank Deford decries the decline of “stories” about “the characters, the tales, the humor, the pain” in his new memoir, the senior contributing editor at Sports Illustrated, concludes: “Today, of course, with the Internet, sportswriting is being squeezed again, just as television pressured us ... Notwithstanding, I think there are more good sportswriters and more good sportswriting than ever before.” In this sports spat, I choose to give Deford the last word — because I agree with him. magenta ing. “Since the mid-1990s, two forces have diminished classic sports journalism,” Gary Andrew Poole wrote. “First, television coverage in general has expanded, making hype and the sensational aspects of sports dominant ...The Web, meanwhile, did to sportswriting what it has done to journalism more broadly: