(L-R) Jeff Weddington, Morgan Culler, PGA Tour Commissioner Tim
Finchem, and Amber Jones |
The FAMU students were rewarded with the opportunity by PGA
Tour Media Relations on a special invite afforded to FAMU Athletics. All three
students were interns in FAMU Athletics for the 2015-16 school year and were
rewarded for their professionalism and drive during the year.
FAMU Sports Information Director Vaughn Wilson escorted the students to the tournament. Wilson covered the PGA Tour for nine years as the sports editor of the Capital Outlook Newspaper and his work was published in black newspapers in Florida and across the nation via the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA).
FAMU Athletic Director Milton Overton was supportive of the
intern initiative.
"When we formed our internship partnership with our journalism
and business schools, we committed to Dean Ann Kimbrough and Dean Shawnta
Friday-Stroud that we would expose these students to the highest level of
professionalism and give them valuable experiences to prepare them for their
careers,” Overton said. “We are proud of the fact that our students got an
opportunity to experience professional sports media at its highest level.”
The day began with a tour of what is considered one of the
most technologically advanced media facilities in the world.
"When we walked into the media center at TPC at
Sawgrass, it was like we stepped into the future,” FAMU Intern Morgan Culler said. “I would never
have imagined that media would have the luxury of a dedicated press room, fully
multimedia-capable press auditorium, gourmet cafeteria and virtually anything
they could imagine to facilitate them providing coverage of The Players.”
After the tour of the media center, the interns were
escorted to the "First Timers" press conference. That press
conference was for players who were playing in the tournament for the first
time. The interns researched the players in advance and had selected
Tallahassee resident Hudson Swafford as one of their interview targets.
Swafford noticed the Rattler icon on the polo shirts of the interns and flashed
a smile as he recognized that the students were hometown media. Swafford was
the first of several interviews the interns had the opportunity to do with
current PGA golfers.
As the students made their rounds, they ran into Harold
Varner III. While talking to Varner, the unimaginable happened. PGA Tour
Commissioner Tim Finchem, who was making his rounds presenting each new player
with a pair of Tiffany cufflinks, was intrigued by the only three media persons
dressed in uniform. Once he was informed that the media crew was in fact the
students from FAMU, Finchem took out time to chat with and encourage the
students. For a few moments, because of the way they carried themselves, the
opportunity that journalism students across the country would give anything for
was right before them. A conversation with one of the most powerful men in all
of professional sports. To top things off, Finchem posed for photos with the
students.
Nearing the end of the trip, Wilson suggested that no trip
to TPC Sawgrass was complete without a visit to the most famous hole in golf –
the Island Green at No. 17. Marveling at the beauty of the stadium course, the
students were not only intrigued at the players and caddies playing the hole,
but also the technology the PGA Tour had dedicated to each area.
There was a free high-speed wireless network on the whole
course, cell phone repeater towers, multiple video boards, wireless camera
receivers and on the 17th hole, a remote camera similar to the ones used in the
NFL to capture the huddle.
"I never imagined, watching golf on television, that
this much technology was required for what we see. It is as if they make a
whole city right there on the golf course," said FAMU Intern Jeff Weddington.
Suddenly a big crowd drew near. It was a clear indication
that one of the stars of the PGA Tour was approaching. Wearing his purple Under
Armour polo shirt, Spieth approached to much fanfare. Taking his smooth swing.
He landed his shot just a few feet away from the center pin placement on the
island green. After signing autographs for some kids from the First Tee of
Jacksonville, he was on his way.
"The whole experience was beyond incredible. Being
exposed to this kind of technology drives me. It generated another thought
pattern of thinking that I will adopt as I more forward to a career in
journalism,” FAMU Intern Amber Jones said. “I couldn't have asked for a better opportunity than
being exposed to professionals in the field I am pursuing.”
The final stop of the experience took the students back to
the media facility for a conversation with ESPN golf analyst Michael Collins.
Collins took about 30 minutes with the students to detail his journey. Starting
as a standup comedian, Collins met some golfers and befriended them. From there
they would request him. His break came as he was hired by Sirius-XM to provide
on-course reporting. Finally, ESPN hired him away to do segments for its golf
coverage.
Collins told the interns, "This isn't work. I get paid to follow a sport I love and to develop new ways to report it. Sometimes I just pinch myself.”
Collins told the interns, "This isn't work. I get paid to follow a sport I love and to develop new ways to report it. Sometimes I just pinch myself.”