 Associated Press's 2006 Sports Writer of the Year Janie McCauley '98
brings fresh perspective and energy to the press box with her current
assignments in the Oakland area. Photo by Hannelore Sudermann.
If Janie McCauley were telling this story, she wouldn’t bury the
lead. She’d say right away that she is the Associated Press’s 2006
Sports Writer of the Year.
Add a little color, some solid quotes like, “I was
surprised to get the award. There are so many good writers doing
good stories all around the country,” and a few action words like
“dwell,” “delve,” and “dive,” and that’s where many writers would
stop.
But Janie looks for the story beneath the story. She dwells on
details, delves into players’ personal interests, dives into their
lives outside of the stadiums and ball parks.
As far back as high school in Leavenworth, Janie knew she wanted
to write about sports. She and her brother would cherish their
family trips over the Cascades to watch the Sonics play in Seattle.
She would go to great lengths to be close to the players, shake
their hands, get their autographs, and even reach out and touch
their heads as they walked by the stands.
Throughout her years at Washington State University, she worked
as a stringer for the local papers. Every Friday night she was out
at a high school game in Garfield, or Troy, or Potlatch. Hard work
and hard networking landed her at Spokane’s Spokesman-Review
in 1998. Her fresh perspective and energy made her a darling of the
sports department.
In late 2000, McCauley was hired away by the Associated Press in
Seattle. It was there, covering the Mariners, that she caught the
attention of the AP’s national editors. She credits Ichiro Suzuki.
When the star player arrived in 2001, he was mobbed by Japanese
reporters. Janie kept her distance, made respectful requests for
interviews, and inquired about his personal habits. “I tried to
understand some of his unique rituals like stretching and massaging
his feet before and after the game,” she says. He trusted her and
gave her access, which led to some unusual stories about a
high-profile player.
In 2002, the AP editors asked her to move to California. She
didn’t have to think long. “I love baseball. And they have two
teams here.” She also covers college basketball, the Oakland
Raiders, some NBA, and some college football. If she wanted, she
could go to a game every night.
On July 7, Janie starts her day with a workout at a gym just a
few miles from the old house in Alameda that she shares with her
husband, Josh. It is the eve of her 72nd baseball game of the year.
When Barry Bonds was chasing Babe Ruth’s home run record this
spring, she didn’t take a day off. “I didn’t want to miss it,” she
says.
She aims her Honda CRV at McAfee Coliseum four hours before the
first pitch, which gives her time to set up her computer, check her
messages, and relish the peace of the empty stadium. After about an
hour of e-mails and a phone press conference with the Giants, she
heads down to the dugout for the take on the day. Standing in the
midst of a dozen other reporters, all men, she leans in and
listens, taking notes and occasionally biting her nail. Later, when
team manager Ken Macha heads to the water cooler, she steps close
for a private word.
Taking advantage of her time on the field, Janie also stops to
joke in Spanish with Antonia Perez, a 26-year-old member of the
Athetics. “My Spanish isn’t really that great, but it gets me
access to players that the other reporters don’t get,” she says. In
a story last year, Janie wrote about the language barriers for
Spanish-speaking and Japanese players. She noted that the two
groups are treated differently by the major leagues. The Hispanic
players often hang together for help communicating. The Japanese
have full-time interpreters. Still, both types of players are
disconnected from their teammates. That piece won her an AP award
for enterprise reporting.
In another story, she went to the home of Venezuela-born Omar
Vizquel, a Giants’ shortstop who escapes the pressures of baseball
through painting. One of her strengths as a reporter is an ability
to look for the details that transform the players into people.
But tonight Janie is simply wondering about the game. The stands
come to life, as the crowd of 20,700 arrives. There’s a hot rivalry
between the A’s and the Angels.
As the bright afternoon cools, Janie is typing, calling out
stats to the other reporters, and keeping an eye on the field where
the story will unfold. And it certainly does. By the seventh
inning, and as her deadline creeps closer, she focuses in. She
notes that Angels pitcher John Lackey is having a very good night.
When he’s on the mound, no one gets on base. Eighth inning, ninth,
and the game is over, with the Angels beating the A’s 3 to 0. “That
pitching performance was unheard of,” says Janie. “I can’t believe
what I just saw.”
The game may be over, but work isn’t. Janie grabs a notebook and
dashes down to the clubhouse. She’s one of the few women allowed
inside. “I wait until the guys are dressed to interview them,” she
says. “The players notice and appreciate that.”
A half-hour later, she returns to the press box with quotes from
the managers and the players, including Lackey, who had no idea he
was pitching so well.
Her fingers fly over her keyboard as she writes and then
rewrites her lead: John Lackey’s special night. At the end, after
10 p.m., she files her story, calls her editors, and starts packing
up. It was a great day and a great game, she says, as she heads out
to her car.
To read Janie McCauley's
entertaining story about the odd things baseball players take with
them on the road, click here.
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