Teddy Greenstein today rationalizes the apparently incorrect "scoop" that ESPN reporter Tim Kurkjian had about the Alphonso Soriano trade. He explains how Kurkjian ran with the report based on what one source told him. Greenstein's key line in his article is this one: "One of the challenges is figuring out which sources to trust." With all due respect to the young journalist Teddy, I think he's wrong. I think the most important challenge is to not report anything that hasn't been verified by two or more independent sources.
Therein lies the rub. When I matriculated in journalism school 30 years ago, and during my cub reporter days in the 70s, one of the cardinal rules of reporting was that you needed THREE sources to verify and validate the accuracy of any investigative story or "scoop". Editors demanded it. That gradually changed to two sources after the Woodward-Bernstein era. Then, with the rise of around-the-clock cable news in the 80s, the race to be first became more important than accuracy. Many media gradually removed their independent sourcing requirement. The most important requirement was to be first. Today, independent sourcing of stories is considered by many in the biz as an arcane axiom of another era. Many reporters race rumors onto the air or into print, rather than validating their accuracy with independent sources. As a result, we get a lot more inaccurate reporting than we used to get. Kurkjian is just another in a growing line of journalists doing incomplete work. That's progress? Keep it.
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ESPN reporter regrets Soriano 'scoop'
Published July 28, 2006
Extremely close?
Ozzie Guillen is extremely close to his sons. U.S. Cellular Field is extremely close to the footprint of the old Comiskey Park. Chicago is extremely close to its next heat wave.
But unfortunately for ESPN's Tim Kurkjian—and, perhaps, White Sox fans—"extremely close" no longer applies to the team's prospects for snagging Alfonso Soriano in a trade.
Kurkjian uttered those words Monday. Now he wishes he hadn't.
"I felt comfortable that the White Sox were serious players [for Soriano], even if just for a day," Kurkjian said Thursday. "But if I had to do it again, I would have worded it as serious interest, not extremely close."
Kurkjian's a terrific reporter, and he has been covering baseball for 25 years. But even he hates the countdown to the July 31 trading deadline.
"I don't sleep well this time of year," he said. "It's very, very uneasy."
One of the challenges is figuring out which sources to trust.
"There's so much misinformation out there," he said. "You get something from a general manager and then call another GM with that piece of information, and he says: 'Where did you get that? It's not even close.'"
When a source told him the Sox were on the verge of landing Soriano from Washington, Kurkjian filed a television report that ESPN.com picked up.
"I think what [the report] did was establish that the Sox were indeed seriously interested, which I don't think had been out there," Kurkjian said. "But clearly my source took it too far, and I did too."
Kurkjian, who no longer believes the deal will be completed, fears his source might have been using him in an effort to boost Soriano's value.
For example, say the Tigers and Sox are interested in Soriano. If the Tigers believe the Sox are close to landing him, they might improve their offer. That would benefit both the Nationals and the Sox.
"It's a really, really bad feeling to think that someone you're dealing with is telling you something just to force another team to do something," Kurkjian said. "But it happens every day."
Kurkjian quickly rebounded after the Soriano story. He broke the news that the Sox had acquired Kansas City reliever Mike MacDougal.
"At least I had that right," he said.
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