If you haven't seen it, go to the sub-forum entitled, "What's Happening in Europe;" set the controls to cover the last year, and click on the report by "U.S. 'A' Team" on the OSY-400 world's championships.
It doesn't matter whether you run that category or class or have any personal interest in it; I don't, and I just now happened on the entry more or less accidently. But I'm glad I did, because the poster, whomever he/she is, did a knockout reporting job, so good that you can't help read the whole thing!
I haven't seen boatracing reporting this good in years, decades, maybe since Eileen Crimmin in the '60s. There have been a few others that have carried the torch for us. I think it was Mel Crook who wrote long pieces for Motor Boating, mostly on the Unlimiteds of the Forties and Fifties. Bill Knight of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer was among the few newspapermen who normally covered stick-and-ball sports to actually have some interest in powerboat racing. BSH driver and professional photographer Rusty Rae published a book on an APBA Stock Nationals in the seventies, and Craig Fjarlie has been doing interviews of the old-timers for some time. Those outside Reg. 10 will have some other names. In the '50s, there might have been more than one magazine on outboard racing alone, Outboard Speed Sport being one, and in the '60s, Hot Boat could be found by fans on any big store magazine rack, and they covered most of the APBA boat categories. There were a few other dedicated publications that came and went, long ago, and Bob Nordskog's Powerboat hung on for a long time, though by necessity it gave most of its attention to the types of boat which interested its advertisers.
But with outboard racing (by which I mean Stock/Mod/PRO) having slowly shrunk toward its current status as a little local in-crowd activity for unknown drivers, their families, and a handful of mildly curious folk who happen by during a race, the general public is never made aware of what they're missing and might enjoy. We trot out a number of likely or possible causes for this state of affairs, but THIS thread is about the lack of journalistic interest and coverage. And it's unfortunate because, for one, "U.S. 'A' Team" shows real story-telling talent!
"'A' Team," have YOU got any ideas on this situation? You gave us a pitside and turn-boat's close-up views of the action with your story, but what do you and others think about the best ways to get this story and others out to a general public that never would normally hear of it? Could the storytellers here write "canned" articles that local newspapers or general sports or boating magazines could consider running on? And you web experts, is it possible to reach a general audience or sports audience or pleasure boating audience on-line with a story of this kind, drawing a few of them to our sites? Obviously this calls for a somewhat different story than one written for the in-crowd at Hydroracer.
Ideas on this?
It doesn't matter whether you run that category or class or have any personal interest in it; I don't, and I just now happened on the entry more or less accidently. But I'm glad I did, because the poster, whomever he/she is, did a knockout reporting job, so good that you can't help read the whole thing!
I haven't seen boatracing reporting this good in years, decades, maybe since Eileen Crimmin in the '60s. There have been a few others that have carried the torch for us. I think it was Mel Crook who wrote long pieces for Motor Boating, mostly on the Unlimiteds of the Forties and Fifties. Bill Knight of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer was among the few newspapermen who normally covered stick-and-ball sports to actually have some interest in powerboat racing. BSH driver and professional photographer Rusty Rae published a book on an APBA Stock Nationals in the seventies, and Craig Fjarlie has been doing interviews of the old-timers for some time. Those outside Reg. 10 will have some other names. In the '50s, there might have been more than one magazine on outboard racing alone, Outboard Speed Sport being one, and in the '60s, Hot Boat could be found by fans on any big store magazine rack, and they covered most of the APBA boat categories. There were a few other dedicated publications that came and went, long ago, and Bob Nordskog's Powerboat hung on for a long time, though by necessity it gave most of its attention to the types of boat which interested its advertisers.
But with outboard racing (by which I mean Stock/Mod/PRO) having slowly shrunk toward its current status as a little local in-crowd activity for unknown drivers, their families, and a handful of mildly curious folk who happen by during a race, the general public is never made aware of what they're missing and might enjoy. We trot out a number of likely or possible causes for this state of affairs, but THIS thread is about the lack of journalistic interest and coverage. And it's unfortunate because, for one, "U.S. 'A' Team" shows real story-telling talent!
"'A' Team," have YOU got any ideas on this situation? You gave us a pitside and turn-boat's close-up views of the action with your story, but what do you and others think about the best ways to get this story and others out to a general public that never would normally hear of it? Could the storytellers here write "canned" articles that local newspapers or general sports or boating magazines could consider running on? And you web experts, is it possible to reach a general audience or sports audience or pleasure boating audience on-line with a story of this kind, drawing a few of them to our sites? Obviously this calls for a somewhat different story than one written for the in-crowd at Hydroracer.
Ideas on this?
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