Sports editors
honor best in the nation
The
sports sections of three MCC newspapers and a sports writer
at another have been named among the Top 10 in the nation by
The Associated Press Sports Editors.
More than 90 sports editors and
assistants participated in the judging of the Top 10 lists announced
at a meeting in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Tim Guidera of the Savannah (Ga.)
Morning News was ranked among the nation's Top 10 best sports
writers for his article about the final round of the 1999 Masters
golf tournament in Augusta, Ga.
The sports staff of the Amarillo
(Texas) Daily News and the Amarillo Globe-Times won two national
awards for being among the Top 10 in their size in the special
sections and enterprise categories.
Amarillo's Friday Night Flashbacks/Pigskin
Preview football section, a history of area high school football,
was listed in the special sections category and its year-long
series on top sports figures of the 20th century was listed
in the enterprise category.
"This isn't the Pulitzers, but
it is the Oscars of our industry, no doubt about it," said Amarillo
sports editor Jon Mark Beilue. "To be honored nationally by
APSE is about as good as it gets for sports print journalism.
"Like a lot of the good teams
we cover, our success was a team effort," Beilue added.
The Augusta Chronicle's sports
section, headed by sports editor Ward Clayton, was listed among
the nation's Top 10 in the general excellence category.
The newspaper's Masters Tournament
special section also ranked among the Top 10 in that category
for the eighth time in nine years.