skippy05 said:
I just returned to the world of prep sports coverage for a smallish newspaper after a couple years covering the pros for a decent-sized market sports-talk radio station and covering NASCAR (still doing the NASCAR stuff, though). Anyway, swim season is starting and I've never covered the sport before. Obviously, basketball is fairly easy to cover and there are usually some compelling stories, even if it's just game coverage. Wrestling is a little tougher, but there are still some stories there. Swimming looks like it could be a challenge...any thoughts? Advice? Etc?
I don't know what it's like there, but around here, the really good athletes swim for their high school teams almost on a secondary level. Their primary teams are their independent club teams. On one boys team that won the state championship a couple of years ago, the coach only asked her club-level swimmers to come to the HS practice once a week because, as she admitted, the swimmers are getting better coaching and have more pool time with their clubs.
The dominant girls team in the area is coached by the same guy who runs the big swim club, so pretty much the club practice is the school practice for a couple of high schools.
Around here, they have separate diving meets and really only compete as full swim/dive teams in the postseason. And, as Slappy said, you do get a break during the 1,600.
Also, you have the insane hours that club swimmers keep. They're up at O-dark-thirty in the morning, work out for a couple of hours before school, then go back to practice after school. Some of them have told me they would like to play another sport, but there's no way they would have time during their competitive season.
Also, we keep a running list of the top 10 times in each event throughout the prep season. If somebody who's usually swimming event A and event B turns up a great time in another event, it sticks out.