The Washington Post has given the Nationals baseball team and its fans short shrift for the past few years. Many big-city dailies that cover a hometown major-league team assign two reporters to cover a season spanning eight months and more than 180 games. The Post devoted one reporter to regular game-day coverage.
“When that reporter needed a break,” says a public-relations agent with another team, “the Post would send an intern. They would drop the ball.”
So to speak.
This season, the Post is finally doubling up. James Wagner, a sports-crazed local kid, is joining Adam Kilgore to buck up coverage of a squad that’s predicted to break out of the cellar and compete for the pennant. “It’s too much for one guy to cover,” Wagner says.
It’s too much for one paper to cover. The Post has to compete with the Washington Times, the Washington Examiner, and a host of digital websites that give fans a smorgasbord of news and opinion.
“There are a lot of good independents doing a lot of great writing,” says Dave Nichols, who’s trying to build his District Sports Page into a website that can beat the Post on news and nuance. But Nichols has a day job as a litigation manager for a major law firm, and his bloggers are part-timers. Few of them have the time or resources to cover all 162 regular-season games, especially the 81 away games–which makes the Post the dominant player.
The Post has the muscle to throw two reporters into game-day coverage. Dave Sheinin pens some of the sweetest profiles in the business. Tom Boswell is still among the preeminent baseball columnists around. But Wagner, 25, has the potential to give Nats fans the best coverage yet.
“Being Latino and a Spanish speaker,” Wagner says, “I can break through language and cultural barriers.”
Wagner graduated from Lake Braddock Secondary School in Burke, but he spent years living in countries where his father was posted as a Foreign Service officer. In Nicaragua, Wagner’s dad fell in love with and married Ruth Villavicencio; Wagner and his brother and sister grew up speaking Spanish. The family spent years in Venezuela, and Wagner sometimes visits family in Nicaragua.
Four of the players on the Nationals team come from South or Central America. Three of them–Jesus Flores, Henry Rodriguez, and Wilson Ramos, the catcher kidnapped in the off-season–are Venezuelan.
“I know where they come from,” Wagner says. “I have them covered.”
This article appears in the May 2012 issue of The Washingtonian.
"Post" is Back on the Ball
The "Post" sports section has been sending interns to cover the Nats. Now a new writer is putting the paper back in the game.
The Washington Post has given the Nationals baseball team and its fans short shrift for the past few years. Many big-city dailies that cover a hometown major-league team assign two reporters to cover a season spanning eight months and more than 180 games. The Post devoted one reporter to regular game-day coverage.
“When that reporter needed a break,” says a public-relations agent with another team, “the Post would send an intern. They would drop the ball.”
So to speak.
This season, the Post is finally doubling up. James Wagner, a sports-crazed local kid, is joining Adam Kilgore to buck up coverage of a squad that’s predicted to break out of the cellar and compete for the pennant. “It’s too much for one guy to cover,” Wagner says.
It’s too much for one paper to cover. The Post has to compete with the Washington Times, the Washington Examiner, and a host of digital websites that give fans a smorgasbord of news and opinion.
“There are a lot of good independents doing a lot of great writing,” says Dave Nichols, who’s trying to build his District Sports Page into a website that can beat the Post on news and nuance. But Nichols has a day job as a litigation manager for a major law firm, and his bloggers are part-timers. Few of them have the time or resources to cover all 162 regular-season games, especially the 81 away games–which makes the Post the dominant player.
The Post has the muscle to throw two reporters into game-day coverage. Dave Sheinin pens some of the sweetest profiles in the business. Tom Boswell is still among the preeminent baseball columnists around. But Wagner, 25, has the potential to give Nats fans the best coverage yet.
“Being Latino and a Spanish speaker,” Wagner says, “I can break through language and cultural barriers.”
Wagner graduated from Lake Braddock Secondary School in Burke, but he spent years living in countries where his father was posted as a Foreign Service officer. In Nicaragua, Wagner’s dad fell in love with and married Ruth Villavicencio; Wagner and his brother and sister grew up speaking Spanish. The family spent years in Venezuela, and Wagner sometimes visits family in Nicaragua.
Four of the players on the Nationals team come from South or Central America. Three of them–Jesus Flores, Henry Rodriguez, and Wilson Ramos, the catcher kidnapped in the off-season–are Venezuelan.
“I know where they come from,” Wagner says. “I have them covered.”
This article appears in the May 2012 issue of The Washingtonian.
Most Popular in News & Politics
Most Powerful Women in Washington 2025
How Much Worse Can This Government Shutdown Make Federal Workers Feel?
Abigail Spanberger and the Virginia Governor Race: Can “Boring” Politics Win?
Trump’s Shutdown Antics Vex Republicans, Ireland Hopes to Sell Its DC Embassy, and Renaissance Festival Sues Most Foul Varlets
Washington DC’s 500 Most Influential People of 2025
Washingtonian Magazine
October Issue: Most Powerful Women
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Want to Live in a DC Firehouse?
DC Punk Explored in Three New History Books
The Local Group Fighting to Keep Virginia’s Space Shuttle
Alexandria’s “Fancy Pigeon” Has a New Home
More from News & Politics
DC Singer Kenny Iko Is Turning Heads on “The Voice”
Trump Lays Off Thousands, Blames Shutdown; Ed Martin Spitter Won’t Go to Prison; Jimmy Kimmel Sponsors Georgetown Player
New Anacostia Market Is a Dream Come True for Community
Photos: The Caps’ “Red Carpet” Start to the Season
Senators Vamoose as Shutdown Pain Increases, Trump’s Campaign for Nobel Peace Prize Foiled, and the DC Streetcar Is Toast
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This October
IRS Tells Furloughed Feds They’ll Get Back Pay After Trump Says They Might Not, Trump Lands a Big Peace Deal, and Publix Is Coming to NoVa
The Best DC-Area Private High Schools to Enroll Your Child In