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Kraft writes in The Conversation about media responsibility in a sports crisis

January 5, 2023

Kraft writes in The Conversation about media responsibility in a sports crisis

Damar Hamlin ambulance

Injuries are an unfortunate part of any sport – none more so than in the NFL, where players can be felled in front of a TV audience in the tens of millions.

Nicole Kraft

Typically, when a player suffers an injury, the media cuts to commercial and returns with replays of the injury – sometimes running it over and over, using every available camera angle, while analyzing what might have happened and the ramifications for the player and team.

But in the case of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin, who collapsed to the ground after a tackle during the “Monday Night Football” game between the Bills and the Cincinnati Bengals, it quickly became apparent that this was no broken arm or torn ACL. This was a matter of life and death. Paramedics worked to keep him alive on the field before he was transported to a hospital, where he remains in critical condition.

As the tragic scene played out, ESPN’s broadcasters and studio hosts were left to explain what was happening in real time, with virtually no information.

SSI DIrector Nicole Kraft, a professor of sports journalism, wrote about the role of media in a sports crisis for The Conversation.

Read the entire article at news.osu.edu.