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2016-2017 Around The NBA

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Marc Stein was let go by ESPN as well.

So, ESPN pretty much axed their basketball coverage and hockey coverage.

Haynes, Windhorst Dave and Ramona only one's covering NBA that I know of.
 
I'm guessing part of this is making room for The Vertical and its staff, but a lot of big names being laid off is surprising.
 
Marc Stein was let go by ESPN as well.

So, ESPN pretty much axed their basketball coverage and hockey coverage.

Haynes, Windhorst Dave and Ramona only one's covering NBA that I know of.

Forgot, Lowe is still there as well.
 
What happened to those rumors a couple months ago that Woj was going to ESPN?
 
What happened to those rumors a couple months ago that Woj was going to ESPN?

There was a rumor of every Vertical writer along with Woj going to ESPN. They could be making the room for that.
 
That NFL contract that ESPN overpaid for is going to end them.
 
Would be nice if Wall didn't get free throws every time someone is near him and he throws up a brick.
 
Chad Ford is out too.

It’s really turning into a Bloody Sunday situation over there.

will be interesting to see if someone can monetize written sports content that's not clickbait. lotta talented dudes gone. guess all sports fans want to hear is 2 men arguing about polarizing topics
 
Marc Stein was let go by ESPN as well.

So, ESPN pretty much axed their basketball coverage and hockey coverage.

Haynes, Windhorst Dave and Ramona only one's covering NBA that I know of.
ESPN cut Stein, Henry Abbott (the founder of NBA blogging with TrueHoop), Chad Ford, Ethan Strauss, Calvin Watkins, David Thorpe, and Justin Verrier. They completely gutted their NBA staff.

http://awfulannouncing.com/espn/nba-layoffs-mean-vertical-headed-espn.html

On Friday, we learned of two shocking additions to the list of ESPN layoffs.

The first was Henry Abbott, the founder of True Hoop and essentially the godfather of NBA blogging. Many of the best basketball writers in the country got their start thanks to Abbott and the blog network he spawned. If you need evidence of how vital Abbott was to NBA writing, see a sample of the testimonials that poured in Friday.

The second notable layoff was Marc Stein, one of the two most prolific NBA reporters in the country (we’ll get to the other in a moment) and a huge presence across ESPN platforms. Amid a torrent of loud-mouthed opinion-makers, there was Stein quietly breaking news. He was as trust-worthy a voice as the network had.

In effect, ESPN gutted its NBA operation in two moves. It slashed its blog operation by firing Abbott and undermined its commitment to breaking news by canning Stein. The network has also laid off Ethan Strauss, Calvin Watkins, David Thorpe and Justin Verrier. All of which begs the question: Is ESPN giving up on covering one of the most popular (and fast-growing) sports in the country?

Perhaps not.
Immediately after the Stein news dropped, Twitter blew up with speculation that these firings mean The Vertical—Yahoo’s NBA site led by Adrian Wojnarowski—could soon be under ESPN control.

We’ve got no inside information here, but an ESPN purchase of The Vertical makes a ton of sense. Yahoo is struggling even more than ESPN is and might not be in a position to maintain such a deep stable of NBA writers. Deadspin reported back in February that Woj was headed to ESPN, and while that never materialized, there was obviously some smoke.

Plus, ESPN taking over The Vertical would make Friday’s layoffs seem much more sensible. Marc Stein is expendable if you plan to add Woj (America’s other top NBA breaking news reporter), Bobby Marks and Shams Charania. And maybe the loss of Abbott doesn’t hurt quite so much if Chris Mannix and others are on the way over. The Vertical also has a successful podcast network, that could easily replace the popular True Hoop podcast.

The biggest reason to believe ESPN is going after The Vertical: The alternative is a profoundly diminished approach to covering a sport that continues to grow in popularity and prominence. And if ESPN can’t find money even for NBA coverage, that’s a scary thought.
 
What if, and go with me here, the market for professional sports journalism is waning?

Fact is, a whole helluva lotta people are willing to write and recap for free these days, because that's just what they like to do in their spare time.
 
What if, and go with me here, the market for professional sports journalism is waning?

Fact is, a whole helluva lotta people are willing to write and recap for free these days, because that's just what they like to do in their spare time.
This^

Also - and I know this from experience - if you use SEO and ads properly, it is fairly easy to have a revenue neutral blog... And I only write an article every other week. If you really try and take a blog to a professional level, it is very feasible to make a small amount of income.

It seems to me that the ultimate conclusion is another website like Grantland whereby long-form journalists and analysts can write about basketball, etc. The difference is that this website will not be affiliated with ESPN.
 

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Episode 3:14: " Time for Playoff Vengeance on Mickey."
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