michael_badley said:
Anyone who thinks these jobs are so good should ask themselves one question: Is there even one writer who has been hired into one of these specialty positions (covering a team, for one of the local sites or as a college or NFL blogger) moved on to a better, higher-profile job as a result? The NFC North blogger or Big 10 correspondent doesn't get to write anything of any substance, and they're not moving on to better gigs. At least that I know of.
These jobs, if you ask me, are career black holes unless you just want to work for ESPN. Which I guess is cool, Pompano.
I have a few friends who are ESPN bloggers for college and the NFL. Consensus is that while you have to be on the ball about what's going on across your conference, these guys do not have to do 95 percent of the grunt work that newspaper beat writers have to do.
Can you imagine being a college or pro beat writer without having to chase down agents or GMs or trying to find out which players the team worked out that week. Most of us have spent countless hours trying to find out this kind of stuff and with rare exception, if you work for one of the ESPN sites, whether it's ESPN.com or write for one of the zillion of satellite radio sites or one of these new places, you can basically focus on what really matters on the beat. You're working your ass off, but you're not spending a day finding out who is going to be on the practice squad or which players were brought in to work out to audition to be the 53rd guy on the roster.