Thursday, March 22, 2012

State of the Beat Address


The UNC women’s basketball beat has been exciting to cover this semester because of the success the team had. 

I was fortunate enough to write a day-in-the-life story with head coach Jaime White a few weeks prior to the Big Sky tournament and write a feature on one of the team’s leaders, senior Kaisha Brown.

Both were enjoyable in their own way. 

I had never done a day-in-the-life story before, so it was a nice deviation from the path for me. The feature of Brown was also something I really enjoyed because a lot of people have a lot of good to say about her, making it a really easy story to write, and she has a great story to tell, so it all worked out well.

What made both articles even better was that I got to add information about the team’s success this season, reaching 20 wins for the third time ever and making it to the Women’s National Invitation Tournament after losing in the Big Sky Conference Championship game.

I would have liked to improve on my day-in-the-life technique, because, despite there being a lot to tell, in my mind, it came out a little dry. It was fun to experience, but I was unsure of how fun it would be to read.

The hard part about both of these stories was having so many great details or quotes and not being able to use them all. As a journalist, you can never have too many quotes, but it’s unfortunate when you have too many good ones and you have to pick and choose which ones work the best. 

Those are both minor complaints, though, as I’ve still very much enjoyed covering this beat.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

The Bears, the Eagles, the field and the math

And then there were two. Well, sort of.

With Portland State’s victory over Montana Thursday, the Grizzlies took a large step back in the quest for the No. 2 seed in the women’s basketball Big SkyConference Championship next week in Pocatello, Idaho.

So, instead of Montana possibly being tied with UNC and Eastern Washington, the Bears and Eagles are now tied with one game remaining.

The University of Northern Colorado, however, now has only one team to worry about: Eastern Washington.

Luckily, the Bears have the easiest path to the second seed and a bye into the semifinals of the conference tournament.

All the Bears have to do is win Saturday at home against Portland State. Even if Eastern Washington wins its final game against Idaho State, UNC still owns the tiebreaker over the Eagles (and Montana, for that matter) should they end up with the same conference record thanks to a season sweep of the teams’ two games.

Eastern Washington would end up with the second seed if UNC loses and the Eagles defeat Idaho State. Based on recent games alone, though, UNC seemingly still has the advantage.

The Bears have won six of their last seven games, including four straight. Eastern Washington has lost three straight, the most recent coming against Idaho State by 13 points at home. Now the Eagles must face the same Bengals team in Pocatello, where ISU is 10-2 this season.

It’s likely the only way Montana gets the second seed is if Eastern Washington, UNC and Montana State all lose and the Grizzlies win at Northern Arizona, who’s struggled this season.

There are a lot of “ifs” involved there, and it’s probable UM will defeat the Lumberjacks anyway, but UNC can save everybody a lot of math problems and scoreboard-watching with a win Saturday at Butler-Hancock Sports Pavilion.