THE SKIP SHOT
An Inside
Look at illpolo.com
By Aaron Brown
PLAINFIELD,
IL -- With illpolo.com
entering its’ eighth year of covering the sport, I realize it might be
helpful to initiate new coaches, fans, parents, and players to what the site
provides and how things work. I’ll try to answer typical questions that some
people may have as the 2010 season gets into full swing.
Illpolo.com is basically a one-person operation. I always use
the word “we” to describe the work on the site, since I receive many
contributions from various coaches, parents, and players throughout the
season. Truth be told, the only other person that does any physical work
for the site is my wonderful wife Julie, who is a journalism teacher and
helps edit my work and updates the site whenever I am unable to do so.
Quite simply, illpolo.com is a voluntary effort done by one
person. I am a high school teacher at a school without a pool or a water
polo team that has chosen to cover the sport as a reporter instead of
coaching it. I started the site as a means of providing simple information
that was never available in one place (coaches list, team schedules, team
listings) and it quickly blossomed to the point where I was keeping track
of scores, standings, and other pertinent information to each water polo
season.
I continue to run the site out of habit more than anything else, though I
don't want to think of what would happen to water polo coverage in the
state of Illinois if I could not continue running the site. My wife should
probably get all the credit for the site continuing, since she could
tell me that I spend too much time working on the site; instead she encourages me to write more articles and go to more tournaments on the
weekends.
Occasionally, I will get a formal e-mail from someone that sounds like
they are sending it to some mega-organization with multiple employees in
a office somewhere in Chicago. That always makes me laugh because I
think of when I was first covering the sport at age 24 and basically
living out of my car because I was traveling all across the state
to cover as many games and tourneys as possible during the three-month
long season.
Trust me when I say that I am not looking for sympathy here, but I just
want to provide a little perspective of how the sport is being covered.
Last Saturday, for example, I had to delay going to a family
party in order to finish posting scores and recaps from tournament
championship games. After all, the only other option was to leave the
biggest games of the weekend unreported until the next morning, and we
can't have that!
Last night, I had to race home from graduate school because I
had a handful of texts and e-mails reporting scores that I had to get
posted immediately. Some nights, I'll be up well past midnight organizing
schedules and standings, writing previews, and getting ready for the next
day of games and then getting enough sleep so I can get up at 5:00am and
repeat the process.
Things like rankings and All-Illpolo Teams are simply
opinions. In most sports (albeit, college or professional), there are
numerous other sources which help to provide different opinions that provide
some sense of balance. Unfortunately, since there really aren’t any other sources
that cover the sport, I am sure most people look to illpolo.com and if
they don't agree with what is written, I usually hear about it in a
critical e-mail or phone call while I'm teaching at school the very same
day.
There are some ways that everyone can help make the coverage of our sport
the best. Many people already do provide valuable information or donations
that keep the information flowing and the web site running. We can always
use more help. And remember, when I am saying "we", I am talking about all
of us coaches, fans, parents, and players.