Gary Shelton: The loss of the Tampa Tribune is difficult for this former rival

You live from headline to headline and from deadline to deadline. Those are the rules.

You try to make this story sharper than yesterday’s. You try to squeeze out the money quote. You try to get one source, one more fact, one more comment.

You work until the ink stains your fingers and, sometimes, your heart.

You swallow the pressure. You fight writer’s block. You die a thousand tiny deaths.

What was it that Red Smith once said? Writing is easy. You just open a vein and let it bleed. You try to avoid the heartache that comes with getting beaten, although a writer has never worked a beat and gone undefeated. You do the best you can do with the time and the space you have.

And you look across the pressroom, and you see the guy for the other newspaper doing the same thing.

No one will find joy in the death of the Tampa Tribune. Those were good people fighting the good fight for their readership.

Yes, I’m a longtime Tampa Bay Times guy, but my heart goes out to the other side now. Those are people with children, too. Those are people who cared about their product, too.

No one should be hard-hearted enough not to feel for those who worked for the Tribune. There is a sadness to the death of a newspaper that trumps even victory.

I’ve been around the deaths of some newspapers. I was in Miami when the Miami News folded. I was covering a game in Dallas when the Times-Herald went under. I stood outside with a friend as he pulled writers aside so they would hear before they went into the press box. I almost took a job at the Rocky Mountain News once, and that folded.

I grew up in newspapers. I spent 25 years at the Times. I still have my first column sig in what is called hot type.

Today, I think about Martin Fennelly, the fine sports columnist for the Trib.

I think of Roy Cummings and Ira Kaufman and Roger Mooney and Eric Erlandsson and the rest of them.

I think of Joe Henderson, the former sports writer now turned local columnist. Of Tom Jackson. Of Joanne Korth. Of Joey Johnson.

Oh, I have loads of friends at the Times, too, and I hope this means they are somewhat more secure in their jobs than they were. It isn’t an easy time.

But when you look at your doorstep today, a doorstep that may be emptier than yesterday, lift your cup for a newspaper that died young.

Walk proudly, guys.

***

Gary Shelton, a 25-year veteran sports writer for the Tampa Bay Times, covers sports for SaintPetersBlog, Florida Politics and Orlando Rising. He has twice won the APSE’s national columnist of the year and finished in the top 10 eight times. Shelton is a six-time Florida Sports Writer of the Year winner. Column courtesy of Context Florida.

Phil Ammann

Phil Ammann is a Tampa Bay-area journalist, editor and writer. With more than three decades of writing, editing, reporting and management experience, Phil produced content for both print and online, in addition to founding several specialty websites, including HRNewsDaily.com. His broad range includes covering news, local government, entertainment reviews, marketing and an advice column. Phil has served as editor and production manager for Extensive Enterprises Media since 2013 and lives in Tampa with his wife, visual artist Margaret Juul. He can be reached on Twitter @PhilAmmann or at [email protected].



#FlaPol

Florida Politics is a statewide, new media platform covering campaigns, elections, government, policy, and lobbying in Florida. This platform and all of its content are owned by Extensive Enterprises Media.

Publisher: Peter Schorsch @PeterSchorschFL

Contributors & reporters: Phil Ammann, Drew Dixon, Roseanne Dunkelberger, A.G. Gancarski, William March, Ryan Nicol, Jacob Ogles, Cole Pepper, Jesse Scheckner, Drew Wilson, and Mike Wright.

Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @PeterSchorschFL
Phone: (727) 642-3162
Address: 204 37th Avenue North #182
St. Petersburg, Florida 33704