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B/R Articles Featured on Foxsports.com and Sportsline.com for Oct. 20-24th

Written by Aron Glatzer

6 comments

Oct 24 2008

Hey all,

I’m checking in to bring attention to our writers who have appeared on Foxsports.com and CBS Sports this week.

 Monday on CBS Sports: Nino Colla (MLB), David Aaron Lindsay (NBA), Dustin Chapman (three NBA articles), Justin Chatelle (NBA), Buddy Smith (fantasy football), The Roundtable (fantasy football), John Tamel (fantasy basketball).

Monday on Foxsports.com: Nino Colla and Michael Lemaire (MLB), Thomas Halzack (NBA).

Tuesday on CBS Sports: Daniel Damico (college basketball), Rafal Ladysz (fantasy hockey), Nino Colla (MLB).

Tuesday on Foxsports.com: Todd Jackson (Rumors-MLB), Lisa Horne (Funhouse-college football), Kelly Crandall (Funhouse-NASCAR), Ray Bogusz (Funhouse-NFL), Max Tcheyan (Funhouse-fantasy football), Rory Davis (Funhouse-MLB).

Wednesday on CBS Sports: Erick Blasco (NBA), Rory Davis (MLB), Jameson Fleming (college basketball), Pete Treperinas (NBA).

Wednesday on Foxsports.com: Nino Colla and Claire Reclosado (MLB).

Thursday on CBS Sports: Jameson Fleming (college basketball), Claire Reclosado (MLB), Michael Walsh (college football).

Thursday on Foxsports.com: Claire Reclosado and Nino Colla (MLB).

Friday on CBS Sports: Rory Brown (NFL), Claire Reclosado (MLB), Erick Blasco (NBA), BabyTate (college football), Pete Treperinas (NBA).

Friday on Foxsports.com: Claire Reclosado, Nino Colla, Aron Glatzer (MLB), Angel Navedo (Funhouse-NFL), Kristofer Green (Funhouse-college football), Isaac Luber (Funhouse-college football), Kara Martin (Funhouse-NASCAR), GeorgiaDawg (Funhouse-college football), Justin Goar (Funhouse-college football).

Until next week,

Aron

File Under: BR Around the Web

Presenting “Creature Vs. Creature”

Written by Zander Freund

13 comments

Oct 18 2008

Here at the Bleacher Report office, we pride ourselves on thinking up clever ways to enhance the finest Community of passionate sports fans on the web.

Yet increasingly more often, we’re finding that many of the best ideas come from the Community itself.  Which of course makes perfect sense, considering that B/R’s top contributors probably use the site ten times more than us working stiffs in suits (okay, okay…more like T-shirts and jeans…)

The latest development in this regard personally excites the living daylights out of me.  I’ve always loved the idea of collaborative writing—whether it be Round Tables or Q & A’s, there’s nothing quite like multiple expert analysts putting their skills together and continuing to push the envelope for what is possible in world of sports citizen journalism.

I’m pleased to announce that we have a brand new method for writer collaboration on Bleacher Report:

Presenting Creature Vs. Creature, a Justin Goar creation.

The Concept: two Bleacher Creatures go head-to-head with opposing viewpoints of an upcoming game.  They write their breakdowns in separate articles, then link the two articles together.

The Format: 

1) Find a fellow Creature who’s a fan of the team you are squaring off against this weekend.

2) Both of you construct mirroring articles that offer a fan’s take on the upcoming battle.  Suggested formatting is as follows:

  •  Title the Piece Creature Vs. Creature ____________________ (create your own subtext, and make sure it’s clear to the reader which team you are representing).
  •  Use the following bolded headings to guide your analysis: Game Preview, {Team 1} will win if…,{Team 2} will win if…, X Factor, Prediction.
  •  Give your fellow Creature a link and a plug to their opposing piece at the bottom of your article.

Examples: LSU/South Carolina, LSU/Florida

As always, don’t hesitate to let me (or Justin) know where you have questions.  Can’t wait to see this take off!

File Under: Community, Bleacher Creatures

B/R Articles Featured on Foxsports.com and Sportsline.com for Oct. 13-17

Written by Aron Glatzer

4 comments

Oct 17 2008

Hey all,

Since our tremendous user base is now receiving daily syndication on CBS Sports (http://sportsline.com) and Foxsports.com, I wanted to make everybody aware of which writers are appearing on these prestigious sports sites.

Without further ado…

Monday on CBS Sports: Buddy Smith (fantasy football), BabyTate (college football).

Monday on Foxsports.com: MLB playoff writers Claire Reclosado (Phillies), Jonny Solovy (Dodgers), Ben Weixlmann (Rays), Michael Lemaire (Red Sox); Jameson Fleming (college basketball), Dustin Chapman (NBA).

Tuesday on CBS Sports: Ray Bogusz (NFL), Claire Reclosado (MLB), Michael Lemaire (MLB), Brandon Ribak (fantasy basketball), John Lorge (fantasy football).

Tuesday on Foxsports.com: Claire Reclosado (MLB), Michael Lemaire (MLB).

Wednesday on CBS Sports: Kevin Paul (college football), Michael Lemaire (MLB), Buddy Smith (fantasy football), Shaun Ahmad (NFL).

Wednesday on Foxsports.com: BabyTate (Funhouse), Brandon Ribak (Funhouse), Andy Miller (Funhouse).

Thursday on CBS Sports: Claire Reclosado (MLB), Dustin Chapman (NBA), Andrew Goode (college football), Chris Wilson (fantasy hockey).

Thursday on Foxsports.com: Claire Reclosado (MLB).

Friday on CBS Sports: Sean Crowe (NFL), BabyTate (college football), Adam Miller (NBA).

Friday on Foxsports.com: Nino Colla (MLB), Thomas Halzack (NBA), Jameson Fleming (college basketball).

There you have it. My advice to all of you Bleacher Creatures hoping to follow in these footsteps is to continue working hard in developing your craft, and these types of opportunities may come your way.

File Under: Community, BR Around the Web

The Verdict on Potential Foul Play in the B/RCS

Written by Zander Freund

15 comments

Oct 14 2008

Hey everyone,

Over the past few days, there have been serious concerns raised by various members of the Community regarding the rules, management of, and general fairness of the B/RCS College Football Contest.  These concerns finally reached their peak today, when site celebrity Lisa Horne published an article on the subject which soon found itself on the front page.

Before we get into the sticky details, I wanted to thank both Lisa and Gray Ghost for speaking up when something didn’t sit right with them.  These are two of our College Football Community’s most passionate contributors, and they care deeply about the integrity of the Bleacher Report network in general.

Secondly, I would also like to thank Justin Goar, who even after being accused of cheating kept his cool.  Justin was the victim of our failure as a Community staff to communicate the rules of the contest clearly to the user base.  I cannot express to him how sorry I am that he, rather than I, became the target for some people’s anger.

To clarify, Justin is without question one of the classiest gents on the site, and is in fact about to be a father.  He clearly could have done without this headache, but throughout it all he has not once tried to pin blame on others nor lost his temper.

Okay, now the moment you’ve all been waiting for: the verdict.

After careful deliberation, thought, and discussion with my partners, we are standing by the rules of the B/RCS as they were originally stated.  A copy of those rules can be found here.

When you create a contest with monetary prizes involved, you have to live with the rules you set ahead of time.  Doing anything other than that is completely unfair to the participants, not to mention illegal.

As you will notice, there is nothing in the rules that prohibits writers from using the contest as a way to recruit their friends and family to Bleacher Report.  This issue was discussed during the planning of the contest, and it was decided that this could be a great way of attracting new readership to the site.

Would I change the rules to make the voting more exclusive, if I could go back in time?  Perhaps.  Lisa, Gray Ghost, Kristofer Green, Georgia Dawg, and many others make very compelling arguments for why this recruiting voters brings an element of popularity into the contest that could interfere with the most talented writer being sent to Miami.

Then again, locking the contest out to new members seems to go against the inclusive nature of Bleacher Report as an “Open Source Sports Network.”  And isn’t that inclusiveness one of the things that makes B/R so special?

Either way, the simple fact of the matter is that I cannot travel back in time, and thus I have to live by the decision that was originally made before the contest began.

I apologize profusely if the rules were in any way miscommunicated by Trey and I in the follow-up Q&A.  I will take full responsibility for this and I am truly sorry guys—it is abundantly clear that I messed up big time.

What I was trying to get at in my initial response to the question about cheating was that we put security measures in place to ensure that votes cast in the contest were credible:

  • A user has to have been a member of B/R for a certain amount of time for their vote to count, ensuring that people can’t sign up, vote, and never return.
  • A user has to have spent a certain amount of time on an article page for their vote to count, ensuring that they actually read the piece they’re voting for.
  • Votes coming from the same IP address shall not be counted more than once, ensuring that someone can’t create impostor accounts as a way of racking up MyPicks totals.
  • Our engineering team has the full ability to audit all of the B/RCS voting data and look for abnormalities should anything seem fishy or cheating is suspected…which is exactly what was done in this case.

After doing a thorough audit of the data, we have detected no foul play thus far.  As such, no action will be taken to penalize any of the contests’ current participants.

Thanks again for all of the Creature feedback during this process.  I am truly sorry for any confusion I and the rest of our staff may have caused, and I truly hope that we can put this behind us and move forward together as a Community.

File Under: Contests, Community

b/rCS Under Review

Written by Dave Finocchio

no comments

Oct 14 2008

Thanks to Lisa and everyone else who raised concerns about the b/rCS. We’re working through the issues, and we’ll announce next steps shortly.

File Under: Uncategorized

Two New Features for Writers

Written by Bryan Goldberg

12 comments

Oct 14 2008

Today, Bleacher Report has released two powerful new writing tools. Last week we pushed out Writer Polls, which have instantly improved the manner in which readers and writers interact. This evening, we are releasing two new ones…

The first feature we are pushing is one that users have been requesting for months…

Auto-Save

Effective tonight, every article will get auto-saved every ten minutes. If a writer gets logged out, loses computer power, or spills beer on their keyboard, then they will automatically recover their article the next time they open the “Write” form.

Writers can also auto-save whenever they like by clicking ’save draft’ on the Write interface.

The site will remember every writer’s most recent work-in-progress until they have successfully submitted the piece.

The second feature is a simple and subtle one, but still quite important:

Pagination.

Though it may seem like a minimal addition, page breaks are very important, and there are several reasons why we have added them:

*Research consistently shows that users are more likely to avoid reading articles that appear very long and therefore time-consuming. It’s that simple. Since Bleacher Report has so many great writers who put a lot of time into their articles, we felt that we needed page breaks as an option in order to limit how many readers bypass longer content.

*It’s the industry standard, and Bleacher Report is committed to giving our articles no less than the full treatment.

*It will help us learn a lot about what kind of articles users read, which in turn, will help us pass valuable information to our writers.

File Under: Uncategorized

B/R MLB Playoff Writer Showdown on Foxsports.com

Written by Aron Glatzer

4 comments

Oct 2 2008

Hey all,

I just wanted to encourage all Major League Baseball fans to check out an exciting series Bleacher Report has running on Foxsports.com.

Keep up with the Angels (Scott Fowler), Brewers (Peter Bukowski), Cubs (Bob Warja), Dodgers (J.C. Ayvazi), Phillies (Claire Reclosado), Rays (Ben Weixlmann), Red Sox (Michael Lemaire) and White Sox (J.J. Stankevitz) throughout the playoffs with daily reactions and analysis.

Show some love for the tremendous efforts this group will make during the triumphs and pitfalls that is baseball in October.

Best,

Aron

File Under: Partnerships, Community, BR Around the Web

A Proven Method for Improving Your Bleacher Report Readership

Written by Zander Freund

31 comments

Oct 1 2008

One of the most common questions I get from members of our Community is how to increase their exposure on the site.

I tend to direct people to an extensive blog post I’ve written on the subject, as well as our series of Writer’s Tips.  Yesterday however, some of us in the office had a sudden realization of a proven method of increasing readership that we’d never before identified…but has been right under our noses for quite some time.

It came about as I was writing a post on the exceptional Lisa Horne’s bulletin board, and I reflected once again upon just how many comments her articles generate.  “It’s simply unbelievable—she averages like 80 comments per article, and regularly breaks 200″ I said to Ryan Alberti, who works next to me in our office.

“Yeah she’s amazing.  Though half of those comments are probably hers…”

Light bulb.

Dave Finocchio overheard our conversation and came running in from the other room.  “Hey guys…there’s clearly a correlation between those who dominant the top writers list and the frequency with which they respond to the comments in their articles!”

It didn’t take me long to realize just how true this statement was.  I ran down a mental checklist of the Creatures who have mastered the art of replying to every comment they recieve: Salaar Shamsi…Alan Bass…Baby Tate…Andy McNair…

It then struck me that I’ve never communicated the effectiveness of this strategy to the user base as a whole—so I’m doing it now.

The best way to build up a reputation on Bleacher Report is to establish a name for yourself in a particular Community.  When you take the time to not only write a provocative article—but then to follow up and thank people for their compliments, engage them in compelling discussion, and further prove that your knowledge of the sport you love makes you an expert in the truest sense—you’re going to get hordes of fans.

You heard it here first, aspiring Creature: engaging directly with those who have taken the time to read your article and comment on it will help you get you the recognition you so desire.

So after publishing your article, make sure to get busy in the threads.

File Under: Writer's Tips, Community

The Retirement of the Teaser

Written by Zander Freund

33 comments

Oct 1 2008

By the end of the week, Bleacher Report will officially retire teasers in articles.

We made this decision largely based upon feedback we have received from writers and editors alike.  The consensus seems to be that while the intentions behind teasers are good, executing them properly is quite a difficult task—and that all too often they end up detracting, rather than adding, to the quality of the compelling sports content Bleacher Report is known for.

In honor of the teaser, we will officially retire the letter “t” on the site beginning this Friday—no writer shall every type that letter again on the Open Source Sports Network.  Our apologies to Florida and Auburn fans.

Feel free to share your thoughts in the comment threads below.

File Under: Community