As some members know I compile details of match reports and player ratings for my website on West Ham.
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/2007WHsquad.htm
This involves reading virtually every newspaper report (mostly online as I am too mean to buy them all). I have observed a pattern in these reports that I thought members might be interested in.
The initial online reports (BBC, Sky, etc.) concentrate on what they considered the important dramatic incidents of the match. For example, the reports on the game against Blackburn Rovers focused on Bellamy’s goal, Blackburn’s disallowed goal, Green’s penalty save, the flattering nature of the score-line, etc. The reporters are interested in creating heroes or villains. As the scorer of the first-goal, Davenport, is selected as a hero. The fact, that he was responsible for the first Blackburn goal, is rarely mentioned.
The Sunday newspaper reports are different. They tend to concentrate on the soap-opera aspects of football. For example, has Curbishley saved his job by this victory and the reception that Paul Ince received from the crowd. There is also much speculation about players being sold or bought before the transfer deadline. This is especially true of the tabloid press. Much of this appears to be made-up and only a very small percentage will turn out to be true. For example, I recommend people read the back issues of the BBC gossip page to see how few of those transfers actually took place before the deadline.
Newspaper reports on the Monday are different again. Journalists assume that you have read what happened during the game in the Sunday papers. Therefore, they concentrate on the human-interest aspect of the game. For example, several newspapers today carry interviews with Calum Davenport about the fractured vertebrae he suffered last year that very nearly paralysed him.
I think this approach to football reporting is deeply flawed. As a fan, what I want is a detailed analysis of the progress that my team is making. This is a difficult task and maybe that is why it is almost always ignored. What journalists prefer to do is to concentrate on what is obvious, the players whose individual skill or incompetence has led to goals. Journalists rarely comment on the way manager’s tactical performance. Nor do they examine structural problems in the team. For example, no one wrote about the problem that we have at full-back. In my opinion, we only have one competent full-back at the club (George McCartney) and this will cause us problems if it is not remedied in the transfer-market today.
In fact, the best analysis of football matches comes from forums and phone-ins. I agree that both contain a great deal of ignorant rubbish but it is where you will also find examples of deep analysis that rarely appears in the press.
