NFL Gridiron Gab: A network of Football Blogs

Website: www.nflgridirongab.com

Interview With:  Matt Loede

When did you start NFL Gridiron Gab?

We kicked off in August of 2006…have been going strong ever since and have expanded our staff a lot over the last 8 months

What made you start it?

My business partner and I felt like we had enough connections through the media as well as our general love of football and the love of wanting to share our opinions.

What is your background?

I have been in the sports media for the last 13 years, I cover the Indians, Browns and Cavs, doing reports and updates for ESPN, Fox Sports, Westwood One, Sporting News and other outlets.  I have had a blast covering about 100+ games a year.

Do you blog for fun or are you trying to make it a career?  What is your goal with this blog?

Both to be honest…If it can be a career, great…we are looking to expand our advertising this year, and really get more mainstream already with outlets that pick us up already.

What was your tipping point?  What put you on the map?

We started getting picked up by various national outlets - USA Today, Palm Beach Post, CNN/SI, NBC Blog Buzz..I think that gave us a lift as far as hits and what we were all about

What type of blogging software do you use?

We use Wordpress

How is your staff paid?

Right now we are not in a position where we are paying anyone on a regular basis, but if we get trades for gift cards, whatever, we share the wealth

How hard was it to recruit your staff?

Not really, we put out a couple of posts asking for interested writers, and then it’s grown with friends of them and people asking us to come on board.

How much money do you make off your site monthly?

Right now it varies, but we usually make about $500-$1000 per month

If you could get something for free to help you out with your blog, what would it be? (Ex: design, marketing, ad optimization, etc)

Right now we really would like to get our site out there, so getting some ads out there for all to see would be great.

Any bold predictions for the future of sports on the internet?

I think it’s only going to grow, and so far it’s been great to see things get bigger since even we’ve been around

STN’s Take,

Matt has a great thing going over at NFL Gridiron Gab.  It looks like his experience and contacts in the business have helped him to grow pretty fast along with his great writing.  We like that he has separated out each team into its own domain so people can just go to that website if they are just interested in team news.  His sites are designed very well and they are very easy on the eyes.

Overall his site does a great job but we do have a few minor suggestions.  We would like to see him promote his network more.  On the upper right sidebar we would like to see his team pages first.  There are a many team page links so we would like to see each division and then if someone clicked on the division, it would expand to show the teams in that division.  Our second suggestion since many of the articles are long is that we would like to see him excerpt some of his posts so he can fit more articles on the front page.  Our last suggestion is to create a logo or design a better header image that makes the brand NFL Gridiron Gab more noticeable.

Chris Mottram of The Sporting Blog

Website: www.sportingnews.com/blog/TheSportingBlog

Interview With: Chris Mottram

When did you get started in the blogging business and how did it happen?

I was first introduced to sports blogging when I started at AOL as in intern for their first sports radio show the summer of ’04. They had recently launched AOL Journals, and by “journals” they really meant “blogs.” My brother, Jamie Mottram, had started Mr. Irrelevant about that same time, so he encouraged me to start a blog of my own. At the time, I had never heard the word “blog” before, but I knew I loved writing, and it was an outlet, so I started Show Me Your Blog (later called Saved By the Blog). I never imaged starting that blog would lead me to the point where I could make a profession out of it.

When did you start Saved By the Blog and when did you move over to Mr. Irrelevant?

I suppose the previous response takes care of the first part of this question. Jamie and I joined forces at Mr. Irrelevant last summer. We were both at the point where we had decent sized audiences, and were posting everyday, so it just seemed like a natural fit to join forces (and start actually turning a profit). Plus, we both wanted to get off of AOL Journals (let’s just say it’s not the best blogging product around), so we re-launched using Wordpress. For the record (and I’m not getting paid to say this): We love Wordpress. It’s highly recommended.

When did you start with Sporting News?

I started at SportingNews.com in October of ‘07. I guess that thoroughly answers your question in the least interesting – yet most direct – way possible.

How did Sporting News contact you or did you contact them?

While I was still at AOL last summer, I was contacted by Shawn Schrager who was already in Charlotte working for SportingNews.com as their Director of Programming and Product Development. We had previously worked together at AOL on “Sports Bloggers Live,” which was a blogger-driven pod/webcast hosted by my brother and me. SN was looking for someone to take charge of their blog content. I was lucky enough to be that someone.

Was there any negotiation with Sporting News or did they basically offer you the job and you said “I’ll take it”?

There were some negotiations. I demanded one million dollars. They offered $7.50/hour. We settled on an amount somewhere in between.

Does a Sporting News editor monitor your content or do they just let you do it on your own?

I do it on my own, but I can feel them watching my every move. Not that I’m paranoid or anything.

Did they give you any strict rules like what you can link to or what you can show?

I don’t think I can post anything that includes the words “f@#$, shit, coc$ or balls.” Other than that, I’m free to link to any sites as long as it’s not porn or whatever. Although if it’s something basic – like an AP story – I’m encouraged to use the SportingNews.com URL instead of, say, linking to ESPN.com.

Is Sporting News giving you a marketing budget?  If so, what kinds of marketing are you doing?

The only marketing I’ve done involves me begging other sites for links.

It looks like you have a few different writers from around the blogosphere, are they just paid per article?

I’m not at liberty to say what our pay structure is. Get me drunk and I’d probably tell you though.

Any advice for a young sports blogger trying to get started?

I was asked a similar question in an interview I did with The Big Picture. The best advice I could give is just post often. And don’t be lame. Or boring. Or think you’re smarter than the average sports fan, ‘cause you’re not. Take it easy on anything resembling “analysis.” Leave that to the idiots on ESPN.

In the end though, I think there are just certain people who understand what sort of content makes for a good sports blog. I realized this the other day when someone complimented me (I think) by saying – and this is the exact quote — “Yo man, I’m seriously not trying to kiss your ass or anything, but you Mottrams do a fantastic job of blogging. It’s not rocket science to find interesting shit (I do think you have to have an eye for it) but how come so many people fu&$ing suck at blogging?” To which I responded, “Sadly, the talent God gave me was blogging.”

Any bold predictions for the future of sports on the internet?

Less words, more moving pictures.

Is it tough being the younger brother of Jamie Mottram?

Yeah, it’s a real bummer. I have a white collar job that I happen to love, health care, all my limbs and digits, and a 47-inch HDTV waiting for me at home. Life is horrible.

STN’s Take:

If you’re a sports blog reader and not anti-establishment, you should be reading the Sporting Blog on a daily basis.  They have a great collection of writers over there to keep you entertained.  It is great to see someone like Chris work his way up the ladder to the position he is in today.  I think it gives all sports bloggers hope out there and shows that internships with media organizations are the way to go.

We do have a few suggestions for the Sporting Blog.  The first is that they should still have a blog roll.  We know its probably Sporting News not allowing it but we think it would give much more validity to the blog.  How can Chris go out and ask for links when he can’t give any back.  Is it really going to hurt Sporting News that much to have a few outgoing links on their blog?  The answer is No.  The second suggestion would be to work WordPress in as the Sporting News Blogging Platform.   Chris already loves Wordpress so we think he would agree.  There are too many benefits to pass up.  The New York Times and CNN do it so no newspaper has any excuse.

Featured Blog: Can’t Stop the Bleeding

Website: www.cantstopthebleeding.com

Interview With: Gerard Cosloy

When did you start Can’t Stop the Bleeding?

The Autumn of 2003.

What made you start it?

I’d read that David Pinto needed more money so he wouldn’t have to send his children to one of those ghastly public schools. I nearly cried the first time someone told me about it. Anyhow, I figured that if I started a semi-popular sports blog and managed to elbow my way into the BlogAds system via a David Pinto referral, I’d be doing my part to make sure the Pinto family crest wasn’t sullied by any riff raff.

I was also looking forward to using the words “riff raff” as often as possible.

What is your background?

I’m not gonna list my c.v. here. There’s a slightly inaccurate Wikipedia entry if anyone gives a shit. I’ve done this & that in terms of journalism, broadcasting and some medium-profile stuff in the music world. But none of it is particularly relevant to CSTB.

CSTB’s other contributors have a rather varied history in journalism, print and otherwise, but again, if anyone wants to connect the dots they are welcome to do so. I’m very grateful that anyone writes for CSTB for free when they’re paid to do so elsewhere.

Do you blog for fun or are you trying to make it a career? What is your goal with this blog?

I’ve got a career unrelated to CSTB. It’s fair to say the blog is a labor of love (or hate, depending on what we’re writing about).

I don’t think there’s a specific goal. The exchange of ideas, the running dialogue, is of greater interest to me than any greater plan for the blog. I’m a firm believer that if we’re doing something that cannot be found in dozen of other places as well if not better, everything will fall into place. And if we’re not considered appreciably more entertaining than another blog, I can live with that, too.

What was your tipping point?

I have no idea. I’m not sure that’s happened yet. Over time, people have found CSTB, sometimes through links on other sites, on other occasions because I’ve left a browser in the Apple Store on the CSTB URL. I guess that would qualify as marketing, right?

What put you on the map?

Probably all the jpegs of starlets and models. And Tom Sizemore googling himself.

What type of blogging software do you use?

Wordpress.

What ad network(s) do you use?

Yardbarker, BlogAds and Google.

How much money do you make off your site monthly?

Not nearly enough. Especially when you consider some of the YB advertisers have more money than God, use slave labor to manufacture their shoddy products, etc. Seriously, f$$$ you Washington Mutual.

If you could get something for free to help you out with your blog, what would it be? (Ex: design, marketing, ad optimization, etc)

I’m ok with my own primitive design skills, and I’m not so keen on marketing. At least not with CSTB in mind. I wouldn’t mind having a few more writers, preferably those conversant with the sports I rarely cover, but when it’s so easy for a writer (established or not) to start their own blog, I can’t be too upset about it.

What are some of your favorite blogs and what are some of your least favorite blogs?

favorites: Fitted Sweats, Wizznutzz, Detailed Twang, Boing Boing, No Mas, Yard Work, Radosh, The Feed (when he was publishing regularly), Bugs & Cranks, True Hoop,The Offside, Baseball Think Factory, Rebuilding Year, WFMU’s Beware Of The Blog.

least faves : I think we can file this under “who f@@#ing cares”. I’ve mentioned the above sites in the hopes someone will take a peak who isn’t already reading ‘em. But there’s little purpose in my making a list of the blogs I dislike. The ones I really can’t stand, I’m not reading very often. In which case, I’m not really qualified to comment.

Any bold predictions for the future of sports on the internet?

Not really. I see no reason why the current formula of tits=hits, pseudonymous commentary and heavy petting of Will Leitch’s baloney pony can’t continue for another few years at least. Whether or not I’m providing any sort of alternative is for others to judge. I guess it’s safe to say I don’t really spend much time thinking about “the future of sports on the internet”. I suppose there will be some kind of technological innovation that will enable me to watch a baseball game on the laptop whilst reading a telex mistakenly sent by a man in Tokyo who dialed the wrong number. But I don’t wanna get anyone’s hope up with this mad scientist shit. We all saw what happened on “The Island Of Dr. Moreau”.

It pretty much ended Fairuza Balk’s career.

STN’s Take:

As you can see if you love sarcasm and sports, Can’t Stop the Bleeding should be on your list of websites to visit daily. You can tell that Gerard has a passion for comedic writing and the traffic his site brings in proves that. He would of made our list of STN’s top 25 Blogs for December, but we didn’t know about Can’t Stop the Bleeding. We are sure he will make it next month.

Gerard says he is pretty happy with his primitive design skills though we think its time for a redesign or at least a new header image. He should put out an APB on his site for a designer to help him do a header image. I am sure there is someone out there that as some design skills that reads his blog. Gerard is also the second guy that has said Yardbarker Ads aren’t doing so well for him and it will be interesting to see if that is a continuing trend.

Fantasy Sports Live: Daily Fantasy Sports for Profit

Website: www.fantasysportslive.com

Interview With: Kevin Bonnet

How many founders does Fantasy Sports Live have and what are their names?

Kevin Bonnet, Paul McGuire, Jay, Mike, and Kent.

What are the founders’ backgrounds and qualifications?

I am a Product Manager at a technology company. I have a BSEE and an MBA from Pepperdine. My background experiences in online poker, sports betting, and fantasy sports gave me the opportunity to envision a post UIGEA fantasy sports industry, and develop the unique concept for the website. Paul McGuire is a well-known writer and blogger that covers professional poker. Readers of the Tao of Poker blog and the poker blogging community in general provided the initial seed of users for the website at launch. Jay is an ex-MLB pitcher and initial investor. His connections have been huge in securing our biggest additional investors. Mike is well known sales rep in the action sports industry. Kent aka Joe Speaker, is the spokesman for our website. Kent is a sports addict, accomplished writer, and poker blogger. Our website’s sports humor theme would have been difficult to pull off without Kent’s contributions.

What does your website do?

Our website allows people to profit from their sports knowledge by providing daily, fair fantasy sports contests of skill. Our contests are daily, so you don’t need to carry a rooster, make trades, waive players, make sit/start decisions, or make any type of season long commitment. You simply use your sports knowledge to craft the best possible fantasy team from today’s games and match-ups within the constraints of a salary cap. Our various salary cap draft methods allows for contests to form around the clock, and for the draft to be performed in just minutes at anytime prior to the start of the first game in the contest.

The best thing about our website is that it allows fantasy sports enthusiasts to profit long-term from competing in fantasy sports contests. This was something that is just not possible with traditional fantasy sports offerings. We run our contests every day, and payout over 91% of our entry fees in prizes on average. It is possible to gain a big enough edge, and run enough trials to be profitable long-term at fantasy sports on our website. With traditional season long fantasy contests too much of the entry fees are withheld, and you can only get one trial per year. Even if you win a massive prize one time, you will never know if it was because you got lucky or are truly great with the traditional offerings. FantasySportsLive.com allows you to find out where you stand long-term, and even where you stand today. The playing field is completely leveled everyday.

When did you launch?

June 2007

How do you plan on building your community?

We seeded the website with the poker blogger community, and are using an affiliate marketing model to expand on that.

What types of marketing do you utilize?

Affiliate Marketing, Sponsored Search, SEO, Gorilla Marketing, and Print

Do you have any revenue streams besides advertisement? Who is your ad provider?

We do not have any advertising on FSL. Our site is supported entirely through the fees we charge to enter fantasy contests.

Funding: Self funded, Angel Investment, or Venture Capital?

Self funded with family and friends

Are you looking for more funding?

Not currently, but would listen to the right offer.

What is your favorite feature on your site?>

Ability to enter contests and draft in minutes anytime 24/7 at your own convenience.

What type(s) of technology do you use?

XML for the live stat feed. Basic HTML for the website.

Any bold predictions for sports and technology in the future?

I think there is surge of innovation currently taken place in the fantasy sports industry that will lead to increased overall growth for many years to come. With the legality issues straightened out by the UIGEA, and licensing requirements evaporating away as we speak we are entering into unchartered, but very exciting times. I think those that can innovate and build a community the fastest in this evolving industry can overtake the well-established leaders. The technologies of live scoring updates and improved mobile Internet access combined with compressed fantasy seasons is leading to a sort of revolution. Imagine the sports junkie with no time for traditional fantasy sports. He could be stuck in a line at the post office or something, pull out his iPhone, and enter a contest on our website that starts in minutes and ends later that day. Now that is a reason to multitask.

STN’s Take:

That is one heck of a team Fantasy Sports Live has behind it. We really believe that one website is going to come out on top in the daily fantasy sports for money market and Fantasy Sports Live has a chance. Their site is designed well and they seem to have a solid amount of users. We set up an account and it was easy enough. We signed up for a no-cap contest and picked our team for tomorrow.

We have two suggestions. The first is that we would like to see a live draft option. For a site like this to come out on top, we really think a live draft option is very important. Last month we covered Draft Mix as one of our first featured websites. They had a live draft option but a much smaller community. Our second suggestion would be to involve some type of projection system and fantasy news content in the draft room so a person can quickly check information.

Featured Blog: Intentional Foul

Website: www.intentionalfoul.com

Interview With: Chris Richardson

When did you start Intentional Foul?

Intentional Foul launched on 11-13-2007

What made you start it?

I enjoy being a sports fan. There’s something oddly satisfying about wearing your team colors and being an outspoken supporter of your team, especially in enemy territory or a location that has a much different fanbase (like KC).

However, besides being a fan with an outspoken opinion, Intentional Foul offered me the opportunity to mesh my working knowledge of Internet marketing with an undying love for watching sporting events; complete with the attitude of a fan that’s currently a fish out of water.

What is your background?

Before I began working for Ticket Solutions, I worked for iEntry.com and was a contributor for WebProNews.com. I also worked on the WebProNews blog. As for sports, I grew up in a sports family. My brother plays JUCO basketball at Volunteer State and my father is a career coach. While not being the basketball player my brother is, I did play soccer extensively while I was growing up and during my adult years.

Basically, I’m a sports fan with a rudimentary understanding of Internet technologies and the blogosphere and was given an opportunity to combine these skills for my current employer.

Do you blog for fun or are you trying to make it a career? What is your goal with this blog?

Both—Launching and editing Intentional Foul is the biggest part of my Ticket Solutions’ demands. The goal for Intentional Foul is to embrace and attract like-minded or outspoken sports fans while leveraging the social media movement for our parent company.

What type of blogging software do you use?

Wordpress

What ad network(s) do you use?

None

How much money do you make off your site monthly?

Believe it or not, Intentional Foul is not here to generate ad revenue. Our corporate backer, Ticket Solutions, already has a primary source of revenue. We are here to engage sports fans and potential ticket buyers alike. Additionally, we are a resource for current Ticket Solutions customers who want to share their thoughts and feelings about the sports world we now inhabit.

What are some of your favorite blogs and what are some of your least favorite blogs?

Faves: Awful Announcing, Babes Love Baseball, Epic Carnival, The Sports Frog, EDSBS, SbB… the list goes on and on.

Least Favorite: Blogs that scrape someone else’s content

Any bold predictions for the future of sports on the Internet?

I think the proliferation of fans embracing sports blogs will only continue. Sports fans have already shown a tendency to zealously use other Internet technologies that give them a place to voice their opinions like forums and message boards. As the sports blogosphere continues to grow, I expect the fans will continue to flock to these sites.

I also expect blogger backlash from the traditional press to continue… as they themselves continue to embrace blogging by having their most recognizable reporters take to the medium. It’s almost like cutting off your nose to spite your face.

Another thing I’ve noticed is the adaptation of other Web 2.0 technologies to leverage some of this user-generated content. Digg clones like Yardbarker and BallHype come to mind. These services also try to engage the social web by allowing members to personalize their experience by adding pictures to their profiles and offering little touches like friend lists.

STN’s Take:

Intentional foul is very interesting because it doesn’t have advertisements and it was basically built to entertain Ticket Solutions customers. I am surprised more organizations that are somehow affiliated with sports don’t do this. It looks like Chris has a pretty good gig if his main job for Tickets Solutions is just the blog and it seems they don’t really care what he posts either because there is a lot of Intentional Eye Candy.

Since his blog is not really built for making money we really don’t have any suggestions. Its designed very well and its easy on the eyes. In fact we wouldn’t mind a redesign from whoever designed his blog.

Football Outsiders: Football Statistics from Outside the Box

Website: www.footballoutsiders.com

Interview with: Aaron Schatz

When did you start Football Outsiders?

I started messing around with football stats in December 2002, and we launched the site at the end of July 2003

What made you start it?

Well, I had been working on these advanced football stats, because I was a Bill James fan and a football fan and there really wasn’t much out there. I shopped my first couple articles to some connections I had through my previous job, people at ESPN and FOX were sort of interested, but felt it was content for a very small niche. So I decided I would just launch my own site and try to publicize things myself.

What is your background?

I have an odd background, I’ve had a ton of different careers — not just jobs, but career paths. I have a BA in Economics from Brown. I went into the radio business for a while, where I was a DJ and music director at an alternative station in Daytona Beach, Florida. When I left radio, I worked as a music journalist for a while, then a market research analysis. Finally in 2000, I got a gig writing a column called the “Lycos 50,” which talked about what people were searching for online — Lycos uses it for external PR and for internal market research. I started FO as a side project while I was working for Lycos.

Have you been able to turn Football Outsiders into a full time career?

Yes. I was laid off by the rapidly shrinking Lycos in February 2004, and I started to look for other jobs in the Internet search world, but it became clear after a while that I had made enough connections with FO that something was bound to happen. My first couple freelance deals didn’t come through until the season was about to start, but that was enough money for me to go off unemployment, and FO has been my career ever since.

The statistics you have on your website are amazing.  How many hours do you work a day?

Oh, I don’t know, ten hours maybe? What’s strange is that very little of what I do these days involves new research. During the season, I am too busy writing the articles that make me my living, and editing everyone else’s articles on FO, running the business end, dealing with advertisers, and answering e-mails. When I started doing this, I used to create the stats with a lot of manual cut and paste but at this point people have written programs for me that compile the numbers a lot faster. With the season almost over, the next month or two I’ll be doing new research and tweaking numbers, then we write the book, Pro
Football Prospectus 2008.

What was your tipping point?  What put you on the map?

Gregg Easterbrook was fired by ESPN in November 2003, because of something he wrote at his New Republic blog that was seen by some people as anti-semitic (and was also anti-Disney, which may be a bigger no-no for the WWL). I knew that my site appealed to the kind of intellectual football fans who read his column, so I used it to my advantage by starting a contest where our readers would “write Gregg’s column for him.” This was when the political blogosphere was really exploding, so I used this hook to get publicity from political writers like Glenn Reynolds who never would write about a football stats site
otherwise. Easterbrook eventually got wind of the contest, thought it was hilarious, and he actually wrote his TMQ column for FO for two weeks — for free — until he signed a new deal to write for NFL.com.

What type of technology do you use?

Wordpress

What ad network(s) do you use?

We use a combination of AdBrite and ContextWeb, plus Vibrant Media textlinks. We’re also on blogads, although I must admit to being disappointed, the amount of ads we sell through them has really dwindled this year.

How much money do you make off your site monthly?

Maybe $2,000? A little more? I don’t make a living off the site. The site makes me and my writers famous, and we make our money off our outside writing gigs — and then there’s the hefty chunk that comes in from selling fantasy football projections each August.

What are some of your favorite sports websites and what are some of your least favorite websites?

Well, Baseball Prospectus was one of the reasons I started doing this, I still read it every day, and I am proud that I’m now friends and business partners with those guys. Doug Drinen was another one of my big influences, the new Pro-Football-Reference is amazing and Drinen has a lot of interesting stat analysis ideas on the P-F-R blog. Any
self-respecting sports fan who lives in Boston should read Boston Sports Media Watch every day. I read Pro Football Talk, like everyone else. I like Deadspin, although I must admit that most of the blogs that have been stylistically inspired by Deadspin get too snarky for me. At a certain point, you start running out of interesting ways to make fun of people, and it just gets repetitive and mean-spirited.

And everybody wants to criticize ESPN, but the thing is, that site is so huge and encompasses so many things that you are bound to find both material you love and material (and style) that drives you insane. I still enjoy Bill Simmons, I read Matt Mosley’s Hashmarks, Pasquarelli’s Friday columns. I’m a baseball fan, I like Gammons and Stark and Neyer. I have a ton of respect for NBA analyst John Hollinger, although I don’t read him that often — frankly, it’s hardenough for me to follow a second sport now that I write about football for a living. No way I could follow a third sport.

Any bold predictions for the future of sports on the internet?

I don’t know. In many ways the technology drives changes in what possibilities there are for content, and I have no clue what
technologies will change in the next ten years. One thing I know is that the barriers for entry are so low on the Internet that there will always be new sites popping up, new ideas for sites, new talent appearing. Those new writers will complain that the last generation of Internet writers were sellouts, and this will last for a couple years, and then the best of those writers will sell out too, and more new sites will start, accusing those writers of selling out, and so on. Endless cycle.

STN’s Take:

For anyone who is heavily into reading between the lines when it comes to football statistics, Football Outsiders is a must visit.  We don’t really have the time to keep up with all their new stat terminology but we definitely pay for their fantasy football projections on a yearly basis.  Anyone that takes that much time to look at football stats should be better at predicting them then the average guy writing a column or some fantasy football magazine.

Aaron seems to to a great job at monetizing his traffic though we think a contextual ad at the end of each of his posts could bring in some solid cash for him.  Our only suggestion would be to organize his site a bit better.  When we go to his site, things seem to be all over the place.  We would like to see a little more organization. The top features seem to interrupt his main page and the upper right sections of “FO goes mainstream” and “Extra Points” kind of stick out.  If he moved his “Top Features” to the upper right and then made his right sidebar flow evenly, the main page would be much easier to read.

Peter Gammons Drops his Blog Roll

Amazingly ESPN Editors let Peter Gammons talk about his favorite blogs in his latest article Cyberspace Exploration (Insider privileges needed to read the article). It was great to see him mention some of the blogs featured here:

MLB Trade Rumors
Baseball Musings
Athletics Nation
Mets Blog

Here are the other blogs he talked about that we hope to feature:

Baseball Think Factory
The Baseball Analysts
Squawking Baseball
Sabernomics
Beyond the Box Score
Dan Agonistes
Minorleagueball
Deadspin
USS Mariner
Fire Brand
Ducksnorts
Viva El Birdos
Lone Star Ball
River Ave. Blues
FishStripes
Dodger Thoughts
Bronx Banter
The LoHud Yankees Blog
Reds Reporter
Bleed Cubbie Blue
Brew Crew Ball

We think this officially marks a point in time that blogs have truly arrived. They have pretty much already arrived but when people in the general public read Peter’s article, they are going to flock to their favorite teams blog. If you think about it, there is really no reason a fan of a certain team shouldn’t be checking their team’s official site and what they consider to be their favorite team’s best blog as well. Hat tip to The Big Lead for showing us the way and congrats to all the blogs that received a mention. This should do wonders for their traffic.

Featured Blog: With Malice

Website: www.with-malice.com

Interview With: Don Landrigan

When did you start With Malice?

With Malice… started on June 1st, 2006.

What made you start it?

After reading the absolutely wonderful ‘Kill Buss’ over at the very creative Pyle of List, I decided that I had to have a go at blogging. At that point in time, Pyle was on Wordpress, and there was a link at the bottom of the page to Wordpress, I hit it, and here I am.

What is your background?

Grew up in country Australia, and pretty much every kid growing up in my neck of the woods has a love of sport instilled in them. I have played sport - many different sports - all my life. 10 years ago I packed up, and moved to Japan. Now I’m married, and have a child of my own (he’s still a lil’ young for sport - 9 months old, but he has LOTS of sports-oriented clothing already!).

I’ve always been a basketball fan, whilst at high school became a fan of US Football (we had an exchange student), and in my first year of living in Japan I shared an apartment with a mad Seattle Mariners fan. It was either become a baseball fan or go nuts. Baseball’s huge here in Japan too, so it wasn’t a tough transition.

I’m still a mad-keen Australian Rules Football fan, & I love my rugby and cricket too.

Thus… my site ends up being pretty ecclectic.

Do you blog for fun or are you trying to make it a career? What is your goal with this blog?

Just for fun. I enjoy writing, and I must admit I do get a kick out of people reading it. I love talking about sports. Particular goals? I guess they’re more on a personal level - I just want to make the blog better… But I’d be lying if I said I wouldn’t absolutely love getting paid to do it.

What type of blogging software do you use?

Wordpress. Really impressed with them thus far, and I enjoy the simplicity. I like the nice clean theme I’ve got there… additionally, Wordpress has a pretty thriving community of users. Very helpful, and the support staff are quick to respond too.

What ad network(s) do you use?

None. At this point in time, Wordpress doesn’t allow advertising. To be honest, I am not sure I’d go with a network even if they did. I would probably just sell ’space’… and if that meant no advertising, so be it. I guess at this point in time, I’m not in the position to choose!

How much money do you make off your site monthly?

Absolutely zero.

If you could get something for free to help you out with your blog, what would it be? (Ex: design, marketing, ad optimization, etc)

Hmmm… probably marketing - as far as getting the name out there a little more. Sports blogging is very, very competitive. Writing? Always happy to have a few guest writers on board. At the moment, it’s pretty much ‘me’, and a few guest writers from time to time. It does get a lil’ tough to keep stuff up when ‘life’ gets busy.

What are some of your favorite blogs and what are some of your least favorite blogs?

Favourite blogs? Many… I also write at Epic Carnival, and a lot of the authors there I really like. Also a big fan of Deadspin. Additionally, Pyle of List, Deuce of Davenport, Blog A Bull, Forum Blue And Gold, Larry Brown Sports, Awful Announcing, Celticsblog.com, Signal To Noise, HoopsAddict, True Hoop, Extrapolater (tho’ Eric’s over at ‘Storming The Floor’ at the moment), Babes Love Baseball, Ghosts of Wayne Fontes, Strike Zones & End Zones, Five Tool Tool, Saturday’s A Rugby Day, and Raincoaster (non-sports, but whacky). I’m sure I’ve missed a heap of blogs who should be on that list…
Least favourite? Pretty much stop reading blogs that are over the top with profanity, or tearing down other writers.

Any bold predictions for the future of sports on the internet?

It’s interesting that there’s been a real swing of the mainstream sports media towards blogging. Every major sports network now has their own army of bloggers… and I see that increasing. It’s very hard for mainstream non-internet media to keep up with the discussing/narrative nature of the internet. Blogging’s definitely a part of it now. And I don’t see that changing any time soon.

STN’s Take:

As you can tell Don is a very cultured blogger based on his compete unique number of 8,699 last month he has grown his blog very fast. He covers a very wide variety of sports and we bet he sees a ton of traffic from all different parts of the world.

We would like to see Don move over to the hosted version of Wordpress so he can run some ads and make some money for all the hard work he has put in as a writer. His template looks great and his blog is very clean looking.

Sports-Reference: All the statistics one could ever want

Websites: www.baseball-reference.com, www.pro-football-reference.com, www.basketball-reference.com

Interview with: Sean Forman

What is your background?

I was a math and computer science professor at Saint Joseph’s University for six years before starting to doing the site full-time in May of 2006.

What made you want to start Baseball Reference?

It was spring of 2000, mainly I just wanted an online baseball encyclopedia and there were none out there.

What does your website do?

We present statistics for pro football, baseball and basketball. We have complete stats for all players and teams in league history and also scores for every game played in league history. We’ve recently started updating the sites daily and have expanded the offering (splits, game logs, etc) dramatically in the last year.

When did you launch?

Baseball and Football in 2000 and Basketball in 2004.

How have you built your community?

Organic growth. We do pretty well in search engine rankings, so we get a lot of traffic from people out looking for player and team stats.

What types of marketing do you utilize?

Mostly word of mouth. I’ve promoted our subscription feature the Play Index via google adwords, but beyond that it is from people liking our site and telling others.

Do you have any revenue streams besides advertisement? Who is your ad provider?

We sell ads through Federated Media and also have our own page sponsorship system for users who are big fans of teams and players. Right now those are probably 50-50 for us in terms of revenue.

Beyond that we have a subscription service on the baseball site that allows you to do things like get a list of every double hit by Vlad Guerrero or a list of every 10-SO game by Pedro Martinez.

Funding: Self funded, Angel Investment, or Venture Capital?

We are primarily self funded and have brought in one outside investor who has a lot of experience in the baseball stats industry.

Are you looking for more funding?

No.

What is your favorite feature on your site?

The Play Index brings the data that only groups like Elias had before right to your fingertips. Want to know how many 2-out hits Derek Jeter had against the Red Sox, you can find that in seconds with the P.I.’s event finders.

Any bold predictions for sports and technology in the future?

We’ll eventually have box scores for every game in major league history from 1871 to the present.

STN’s Take:

We consider the Sports-Reference’s sites the Craigs List of Sports Websites. Extraordinarily successful, very simple design. Sean was pretty much bound to be successful when he embarked on baseball reference. There was nothing like baseball reference on the web so he created it for himself and other people flocked. We are sure over the years the simple design with no pictures has helped Sean create his site while keeping his costs low.

We do think it may be time for a redesign though. Not a big one. We like the idea of no images and a very quick and easy to load page but we don’t like the information overload on the front page. We would like to see the left sidebar be smaller and a bit simpler. Providing the links without descriptions would be just fine. Also, I am not sure why the baseball standings are on the front page. No one is checking baseball standings right now. Sean may be better off feeding his blog into there or promoting some new type of content. Also, even though they pretty much come up very high on every search engine for every baseball player, we would like to see their pages indexed like this: http://www.baseball-reference.com/barry-bonds instead of like this http://www.baseball-reference.com/b/bondsba01.shtml. They may be able to rank ahead of Wikipedia if they made this move.

Featured Blog: The Big Picture

Website: zachls.blogspot.com

Interview With: Zach Landres-Schnur

When did you start The Big Picture?

A dark, stormy night in December, 2005.

What made you start it?

Combination of things, really. I was about to graduate college and a buddy of mine suggested that I should start a blog. I was pretty naive and thought that perhaps writing a blog would lead to something big…like a well-paying job, in a city I wanted to live in, where I didn’t have to work too hard and I had beautiful women hand-feeding me grapes. It hasn’t happened. Though it has led to long, sleepless nights with little monetary reward.

What is your background?

Journalism degree from the University of Washington. I cover prep sports and small colleges for The Seattle Times. I grew up in the Bay Area, so my rooting allegiances are still for San Francisco teams. When I was 5, I aspired to be an African American baseball player.

Do you blog for fun or are you trying to make it a career? What is your goal with this blog?

If someone would pay me, I’d love it. I’d do it for 15K a year plus benefits and a year-long supply of Newcastle. Fu** it. Coors.

Right now it’s just for fun, with a little money coming in from it. My realistic goal is building a site that very interactive and gets people talking, thinking and writing about sports (and hot chicks who are loosely affiliated with sports). An unrealistic goal is getting full-time work to blog for an already-established website. I’ve been in talks with Playboy On Campus, but not sure if it’ll go anywhere. If it does, I’ll invite you to the Mansion.

What type of blogging software do you use?

Blogger. (Cringe)

What ad network(s) do you use?

Adbrite, Adify and YardBarker. YardBarker has a big ad on my right sidebar, but I haven’t seen a dime. I’m shaking my metaphorical fist.

How much money do you make off your site monthly?

It varies…randomly I’ll get ticket sites offering to give me like $500 for some text links. That’s rare. Without those, maybe $100 a month. Maybe.

If you could get something for free to help you out with your blog, what would it be? (Ex: design, marketing, ad optimization, etc)

Good question. Probably design stuff. There are a lot of sites that look good and can use Photoshop for some really cool stuff. My site lacks on that end.

What are some of your favorite blogs and what are some of your least favorite blogs?

The big ones are big for a reason; Deadspin, The Big Lead, With Leather. The creativity of Kissing Suzy Kolber is really inspiring and sometimes gives me ideas on slow news days. One of my faves that doesn’t get a ton of hype is The Hater Nation. It doesn’t find the crazy stories, but it takes a fun, new, satirical angle on the daily sports scope. And it’s very well written by a guy who’s an Associate Editor at NFL.com and who has fathered more children than Shawn Kemp.

Least favorite…eesh, that’s asking for trouble. I won’t name names, though there are some sites that are good at finding those underreported stories and get linked by the big boys. Some of said sites are well-written, most aren’t. Those poorly-written ones sorta piss me off. Not really sure why. Probably just jealousy of getting that much more traffic on a given day.

I also don’t care for sites that give picks/predictions. I could tell you that USC was going to wallop Illinois. I don’t need to read it with analysis that was probably taken from actual reporters.

Any bold predictions for the future of sports on the internet?

Well, I work at a newspaper and the head honcho basically said we’re a sinking ship. So the Internet is the place to go! I’m jumping off the boat!

Look for newspapers going primarily on-line and breaking news happening on blogs. I still think people want the solid reporting that’s done in the print media, but, like a lot of big websites are already doing ( ESPN.com, Yahoo! Sports), the newspaper guys are getting plucked by the riches of the Web.

STN’s Take:

You always have to like the experienced newspaper writer who writes a blog. We really think that newspaper writers that don’t have their own personal blogs are not very smart. They might not have time to post everyday but its always a good to have something once a week. If there newspaper is against it, then they should just post anonymously. Zach is a great writer and this interview is probably one of the best written interviews we have received.

Our first suggestion would be to move to Wordpress. As everyone knows who reads this blog, we really think there is only one real way to blog and that is using Wordpress. Zack would like some help with design but we actually like the look of his site and the header image for what he has to work with. Sometimes the most simple designs can be the best. Our next suggestion would be to spend the $10 a year and get a domain name. Unfortunately most domains with The Big Picture are already taken so Zack will probably have to get creative. Lastly, if he isn’t making any money off Yardbarker Ads, he should take them down and make Yardbarker guarantee him money up front. His best option would be to go with Google Adsense. Blogger makes it really easy to use Adsense.