Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Mike Brown

Rene Ferran's weekly Get To Know The Americans focuses on Mike Brown this time:
"A bunch of our scoring guys were gone during camp, and I tried to help out in that department," said Brown, who has 12 career goals in 153 games. "But my role has not changed a whole lot. I'm still the big guy on the team, and I have to play that way."
What else is there to know about Brown?
First hockey team: The Trails West Tykes team at age 6 in his native Calgary, Alberta. "I'm still friends with a couple of guys who were on that team."
Favorite hockey moment: Brown listed two -- his first WHL goal as a 17-year-old with Swift Current against the Prince George Cougars, and winning the Western Conference title last year with the Americans. "Just the whole experience, especially the feeling after winning each round, coming into the dressing room and getting to share it with these guys."
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If you want a good fan-run blog about the Seattle Thunderbirds, check out Let's Go Birds.  Tyler's been running a great site over there for many years and does a really good job.  

And I really loved this:
As many of you know, last season was especially tough in the life of this blogger. No... It wasn't tough in a "lose your job" kind of way. It was tough going through a season trying to stay objective in the face of a team that was pretty darn lousy. There are only so many times you can say "Pickard is awesome, the defense is making too many mistakes and nobody scores besides Rai".

This, coupled with some other "factors", made me consider hanging it up. At the end of the day, I certainly don't need this blog. It's like having a second job that doesn't pay the bills and it really isn't that much fun having Thunderbird "fans" harass you for providing free content to read simply because they don't agree with your point of view.

Summer came and summer went and my energy has been renewed to a certain extent. I was excited to be writing again and I was excited to start working on roster construction articles and mathematically breaking down whether this team could make enough progress to find themselves back in the playoffs again (article soon to follow).

For the past 3 seasons I have "covered" the team like a journalist without a media pass, like a beat reporter with no ability to attend practice and limited ability to travel with the team. As a result, I feel like my role as a "reporter" has suffered. I simply do not have time to attend every prospect scrimmage, training camp scrimmage and every single game. I have a life and that life includes a lot of things outside of Thunderbirds hockey. Does that mean I can't still provide fans with some quality content? I don't think so and I'm betting on the fact that a lot of fans still want to hear what I have to say (maybe I'm wrong!!)

3 years ago, the team issued very few press releases, offered very little information and most certainly didn't have a Facebook profile and a Twitter account to better disseminate basic information to the fans. The team now does all of that. Want to know who was invited to prospect camp? Go check the website. Want to know how former Tbirds are doing? Check their Facebook page. Want to have live updates on scoring from the game when you can't be there? Check their Twitter page.

All of these developments are things I wished the team had done 3 years ago… hence the genesis of Let's Go Birds. So the question is what should I do now that the reasons for starting the website have been fulfilled? Do I quit? Or do I adapt and evolve?

It means that from this day forward I am changing the way I write Let's Go Birds. It's going to be less about "covering" the team and more about the analysis of the team. Obviously some topics and events will fall into a grey area between reporting and analysis and the line will become blurred. This will mean more content on big picture things and less about the details. If you want to know who is injured and how long they will be out, look for that some other place. I'm not going to go hunting down that information like a reporter would. If Marcel Noebels is hurt right now (which he is) I'm just not going to harass parents, players or front office staff members trying to find out what exactly is wrong. That is information you're just going to have to find in other places.

The team wants to treat me like any other fan with a blog. No special attention or privileges and no differentiation between myself and anyone else. I don't like it and I don't agree with it… but I don't have to and I'm certainly not going to sit here and cry into my keyboard about it either. Quite frankly, just like I don't really need this blog… I don't need input from players, coaches, front office or anyone else in order to provide the fans with quality content. I learned to skate when I was 4 years old and I've played this game for a total of 17 years between junior and adult recreational hockey. I think my knowledge of the game is strong but I'm also not arrogant enough to believe that I have everything figured out and I constantly strive to learn more about the game, this team and the WHL.  (Let's Go Birds)
Sorry Tyler, I cut and pasted almost that whole post, it was really good. 

So if you want T-Birds stuff, head there.  Especially if you don't like some other Seattle fan blog (not naming names).  My God, I don't understand people.  If they don't like reading something, why do they keep going back?? 

1 comments:

normalooking September 23, 2010 11:57 AM  

What a great post by the Tyler guy. Very well said. It's too bad the team doesn't support him.

And don't forget The Greater Internet Fuckwad Theory:
Normal Person + Anonymity + Audience = Total Fuckwad

In other words, some people really enjoy shitting all over your work because they can. Don't let the fuckwads get you down.

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