With Louisville and West Virginia getting ready for a high-profile football game Thursday night, I'm wondering if anyone else has ever encountered a situation like this.
Louisville coach Bobby Petrino has decided not to let his players speak with media outlets in opponents' cities. (Or, as the Louisville football contact called them, "opposing media.") That meant denying the Kansas City Star an interview with a back-up quarterback with ties to the area when he was thrust into a starting role against Kansas State last month, and it has riled up the West Virginia media as they try to write advance stuff for a pretty big game.
This all came about after Louisville linebacker Nate Harris caused a stir by saying Miami "is not the same Miami" before they played Louisville last month. Speaking the truth has its price, we all know.
We published a story on it in Louisville, but stuck it inside. I wrote five paragraphs chiding the coach for the policy in a recent column. But it's my experience that readers and fans don't care much about this stuff.
Out-of-town outlets can get access to press conference quotes that players give (three players, five or six minutes each), but can't ask questions.
I'm wondering, just out of curiosity, if it were a team in your market doing this, how would you handle it?
http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061026/SPORTS02/610260441/1028/SPORTS02
Louisville coach Bobby Petrino has decided not to let his players speak with media outlets in opponents' cities. (Or, as the Louisville football contact called them, "opposing media.") That meant denying the Kansas City Star an interview with a back-up quarterback with ties to the area when he was thrust into a starting role against Kansas State last month, and it has riled up the West Virginia media as they try to write advance stuff for a pretty big game.
This all came about after Louisville linebacker Nate Harris caused a stir by saying Miami "is not the same Miami" before they played Louisville last month. Speaking the truth has its price, we all know.
We published a story on it in Louisville, but stuck it inside. I wrote five paragraphs chiding the coach for the policy in a recent column. But it's my experience that readers and fans don't care much about this stuff.
Out-of-town outlets can get access to press conference quotes that players give (three players, five or six minutes each), but can't ask questions.
I'm wondering, just out of curiosity, if it were a team in your market doing this, how would you handle it?
http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061026/SPORTS02/610260441/1028/SPORTS02