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Babb (mulkey), Verducci (ohtani) and the Peril of Longform

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Yeah, I know: An actual journalism thread. I expect one reply, a question mark, a Mizzou96 drive-by....and to be shunted by tomorrow way back on the darkest side of the thread ash heap.

But....

It isn't often, these days, that a deep-dive piece makes conversation, even percolates on hot stove a while -- for reasons that have nothing to do with the piece itself. Kent Babb's fine work on Kim Mulkey in the Washington Post should have done that on its own terms; Babb seems to have turned up new info (estranged dad, woeful, interviewed) and gave us a tough-but-fair portrait of a big-time coach just when everyone was wondering what makes her tick. Yet Mulkey's preemptive, lawsuit-threatening carpetbomb -- based on a coddled coach's paranoid idea of what a "hit-piece" is -- teed up expectations stupidly high, with everyone thinking Babb had "the goods" on some sort of scandal. When the piece landed, it was exactly what it should be -- what Babb intended and his bosses expected -- but even journalists who should know better were sniffing, "nothing-burger," and moving on. All the "gets" Babb got were lost in a collective shrug. I can't recall a deep-dive suffering so bizarre a rollout.

Less sensational is what happened to SI's Tom Verducci. Now, I'm sure Verducci isn't sweating this (he's one of the most self-possessed journos ever), but his recent Ohtani blowout is typically good, though worshipful, and hinges on an -- I think -- unprecedented one-on-one interview with a relaxed SO in a New York hotel room. There's lots of detail about Ohtani's family and dog lust. It's not "What Do You Think of Ted Williams Now?" -- the wife is nowhere mentioned, which is odd, and Ohtani says little of interest. But it's a sterling "get" these days, especially for a "print" journo, because expectations for SO have been beaten so low. He doesn't ever say anything to anyone. I can guarantee Verducci''s SI bosses were ecstatic: They got to slap SO on the cover of their preview issue, puff up and think, "Just like the old days: Ain't dead yet!"

That probably was sometime in December-January. Whatever the lead time of SI stories these days, I can guarantee it wasn't the week before the April issue hit the stands. With Verducci and SO in the hotel room lede are SO's "two most trusted friends" -- Ohtani's dog and translator Ippei Mizuhara. Story gets locked, ship hits iceberg: Ippei is fired for maybe stealing millions of SO's money and the gambling tar is now dripping all over baseball's greatest star. Dog's fate unclear. Verducci's get has gotten ridiculous -- through no fault of his own.

Every feature writer -- and there are about what, six left now? -- has suffered Babb and Verducci's fate at some point: The story changes, someone else published first, the subject gets knocked out for the season two days before publication. Whatever: You're forked. But I can't recall it happening with arguably two of the moment's most compelling subjects and two of this cratering industry's -- and this shrinking sub-craft's -- finest talents.

And I'm writing this, I now realize, because it seems like a topic custom-made for a "Journalism topics only" board. Could be wrong.
 
It was interesting because Babb's piece came in like a lion and out like a lamb, and the reverse for Verducci's.

Plaudits for the Post for giving Babb the resource runway and time needed for that piece. Bezos/the paper have taken deserved hits lately, but they're still at the top of the biz. I can't remember the last time I read through a read that long. I skipped a couple paragraphs in one of the sections not because of Babb's writing and reporting, but I was impatient for what was next.

Who would've thought the second (publicly) most inoffensive player in the sport would be involved in that much of a shirtstorm?
 
Eh, doesn't really register as much on the Fallout Scale as Astro Ball, where the author was embedded with the team for the entire season and missed the biggest sports story of the young century.
 
I was once doing a deep dive on one of the first local soldiers killed in the Iraq invasion - he was in the Jessica Lynch firefight - anyway, we're shooting the main art at his gravesite with the family and they mention to me there will be a presser at the local national guard armory tomorrow, they're releasing the full investigation about what went down. So I get back to the office and my editors scrub the planned A1 Sunday thing that was to include stuff like how the tombstone was made etc. A lot of his background and it became an A1 daily. I guess I got lucky in a way because the feature became a news thing and I had way more stuff on the family than anyone else, but it happens.

Another time I had an lead Sports cover feature that was mistakenly used as deep inside "filler" by a guy on a remote copy desk. It was about a jockey permanently brain damaged in a fall. Yes, that sucked trying to explain it to the family.
 

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