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Inside the Avs’ Locker Room: Fumbling questions after a blowout loss

Adrian Dater
Adrian Dater
December 10, 2018
Inside the Avs’ Locker Room: Fumbling questions after a blowout loss

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Adrian Dater

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JDC15

JDC15

December 10, 2018

It’s a delicate balance you guys have to tread w/earning the players trust so they answer questions with substance(truths) and not cliches (especially hockey players who are kings of the cliche) to asking the questions the fans want answers to. I don’t know how you even approach that after a game like that beyond avoiding asking questions that have obvious answers, we all know Tampa is super talented.

rozier24

rozier24

December 10, 2018

Go in and shock the system a bit and be specific. Ask something like what was the best part of your game tonight that you hope to build on next time…etc.

jpwheels

jpwheels

December 10, 2018

As a listener, I’ve sometimes cringed at the questions asked.
And I’m not singling you out Dater. It gets done by everyone. And it’s a tough spot.
I agree with both JDC and rozier — ask questions that don’t lead to canned answers and look for something positive to come up with. Of course, that last bit usually leads to a question like “are there any positives you can take out of this loss?” And a canned answer is sure to follow.
I’m not so sure a majority of fans are interested in the answers to “what happened out there tonight?” because we usually get the same retreaded answers. And after watching the game, I think most fans have a good idea of what happened.
Sometimes, a player will give a little insight to something specific that did/didn’t happen or went right/wrong, but that kind of rare. Candid, insightful answers to standard questions are jewels. That’s why I really appreciate hearing Cole interviews. And EJ can be a good interview too.

jpwheels Replying to jpwheels
Chris DeMott

Chris DeMott

December 10, 2018

Agreed, EJ had my favorite answer ever to perhaps one of the worst, yet constantly asked questions throughout sports. This time to a guy with a dislocated shoulder, “what can you do to stay healthy”… “Maybe I should drink more milk”.

mladen

mladen

December 10, 2018

The questions I hate are the “How do you feel” questions after a win etc.

ianmccarty

ianmccarty

December 10, 2018

(Caveat: I have not yet listened to these clips, so apologies to AD if he already took this tactic)

Maybe it’s about the specificity of the questions. Like most things done at a high level, the outcome of a game is the sum of hundreds of tiny moments. Asking a player to aggregate their opinion on all of those moments is going to produce a limp, mushy answer.

As AD put in the observations, perhaps questions like “How do you reduce weak-side scoring chances on the PK?” rather than “What role did special teams have tonight?” One demands a specific, tactical answer (probably one they are already talking about in video sessions and practice), the other a canned summary of what we all saw.

ianmccarty Replying to ianmccarty
jpwheels

jpwheels

December 10, 2018

100% agree, great example!

KCRybek

KCRybek

December 10, 2018

Just please ask a question. The worst is when reporters just ramble about something and expect the interviewee to pick up for them mid sentence.

KCRybek Replying to KCRybek
jpwheels

jpwheels

December 10, 2018

Yep, this is too funny.
When it happens, you can just tell the guy is looking for something to answer but always end up stammering about being better and staying with the process.

KCRybek Replying to KCRybek
Adrian Dater

Adrian Dater

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December 10, 2018

Good suggestion. 99 times out of 100, though, the answers are going to be the same variation of “We’ve got to be better, we weren’t good enough” to even the most specific of questions like that.

Bob_W

Bob_W

December 12, 2018

I think that the players are too close to their own part of the game to answer general questions especially right after the game when fatigue and emotion are probably draining anything approaching true causes and insight from their heads. I learn the most from the coach’s post-game press conference but even then he has not yet reviewed the video or talked to all of his staff.

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