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Geoff Baker (journalist)

Geoff Baker is a Canadian-born journalist currently working as an NHL writer and columnist while also doubling as a sports enterprise and investigative reporter.[1]

Geoff Baker
Born
Montreal, Canada
OccupationJournalist
Years active1987–present

Early life and education edit

Baker was born in Montreal, Quebec, and raised in the suburb of Laval, Quebec. A graduate of Chomedey High School, Baker played football for the Vanier College Cheetahs[2] (CEGEP) 1987 provincial championship football team[3] and attended training camp with the Concordia University Stingers as a slot receiver in 1989.[4]

Journalism career edit

After summer internships at the Toronto Star and The Gazette in Montreal, Baker was hired full-time by The Gazette as a night police reporter in 1991.

Awards and recognition edit

In Canada, Baker won the country's National Newspaper Award three times in 1994 (spot news), 1997 (sports) and 2005 (sports) and was a top-three finalist in 1992 (spot news).[5] The final award, in 2005, was for a series on steroids use by young baseball players in the Dominican Republic. Those stories also helped Baker become the first Canadian to win an Associated Press Sports Editors (APSE) award in the highest-newspaper-circulation category.[6]

Baker won a second APSE award,[7] with the Seattle Times, in 2014 for a story about troubled indoor soccer owner Dion Earl. He has been a finalist for seven other APSE prizes with the Times, in 2006,[8] 2009,[9] 2010,[10] 2013,[11] and 2015.[12]

1998 Tim Johnson controversy and firing edit

Upon joining the Toronto Star in June 1998, Baker became aware that manager Tim Johnson had talked to players about serving in the U.S. Marine Corps and fighting overseas during the Vietnam War. But Baker knew Johnson had not served overseas and the manager quickly claimed he had never told such stories to players or coaches. On September 23, 1998, Baker wrote an initial story describing a rift among team coaches and a heated bar argument between them over Johnson's fake Vietnam stories. A much-larger, feature-length follow-up story, on October 18, 1998, quoted players on and off the record about having been told Vietnam stories by Johnson. The most damaging quotes came from former Cy Young Award winner Pat Hentgen, who described Johnson telling him about his Vietnam hardships while on the field at Fenway Park before a series with the Red Sox. Johnson had just told Hentgen he would not be starting in what was then a crucial series for the Blue Jays.

Johnson continued to deny he had told such stories until a Boston Globe column by Will McDonough in November 1998 mentioned that Johnson had told such war stories while serving as a Red Sox bench coach a few years earlier.[13] A few weeks later, at the 1998 baseball winter meetings in Nashville, Johnson held a press conference admitting he had lied about serving in the war. The Blue Jays allowed Johnson to stay on as manager (he had won 88 games his only season in 1998) but fired him in spring training when it became clear players no longer respected him.

2003 White Jays controversy edit

On June 28, 2003, the Toronto Star ran a Baker story and accompanying sidebar under an A-1 front-page banner titled "The White Jays?" along with accompanying headshots of the 25 players on the Toronto Blue Jays baseball team. The stories themselves were about how the team had taken a decisive turn away from Latin American players and towards U.S.-born products after international scouting cutbacks under the regime of GM J.P. Ricciardi.[14]

The front-page treatment of the stories sparked a widespread outcry in Toronto and more than 2,000 letters to the editor, to this day a record for Canada's largest newspaper.[15] Moneyball author Michael Lewis wrote about the series as part of a Sports Illustrated feature[16] that was later re-published as an afterword in the paperback version of his best-selling book.

The Toronto Star's ombudsman investigated and found no issue with the content of Baker's stories,[17] but did criticize the paper's editors for their packaging of the story and front-page treatment. Baker later wrote a follow-up feature on the Blue Jays and their Latin American cutbacks in October 2005. This time, without the racially charged front-page treatment of the 2003 "White Jays" stories, the work by Baker was well-received, despite containing much the same subject matter.

2004 Carlos Delgado controversy edit

On July 4, 2004, the Toronto Star published "Citizen Carlos":[18] a Baker-penned feature from Puerto Rico about how Blue Jays slugger Carlos Delgado was no longer standing on the field during the playing of God Bless America. Delgado had shared with Baker that he was silently protesting the U.S. invasion of Iraq. The Baker feature described Delgado's work with activists on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques and the fact that it had been the testing ground for uranium depleted shells dropped by the U.S. military on Iraq.

The story was later picked up by The New York Times[19] and other U.S. news outlets,[20] causing Delgado to be booed on subsequent trips to New York[21] to play the Yankees or Mets. Upon joining the Mets in 2006, Delgado addressed the situation and agreed to stand on the field with teammates when "God Bless America" was played, saying he had made his point and did not wish to cause distractions.[22]

2005 Dominican steroids stories edit

In April 2005, Baker and Toronto Star photographer Peter Power traveled to the Dominican Republic, where they spent a week touring the country's needle-ridden baseball fields to do a pair of feature stories on PED use by teenage prospects from that country.[23] The groundbreaking series described the use of cheaper farm animal supplements as steroids alternatives and also produced an exposé of the country's "buscones"—street-level hustlers grooming prospects for bigger paydays in the U.S.[24]

Baker won his third National Newspaper Award in Canada for the stories.[25] He also became the first Canadian to win an APSE Award in the United States, in the highest newspaper circulation category.[26]

The aftermath of the series led to Baker being hired by the Seattle Times. He has since traveled to Venezuela to write about steroids testing there[27] and was invited to speak at an October 2006 sports conference in Caracas[28] about the exploitation faced by Latin American ballplayers.

A photograph by Power from the Toronto Star series, of a young Dominican throwing a baseball in a sugar-cane field,[29] his bicycle perched against a tree in the foreground, was used by filmmaker Ken Burns to illustrate the opening of the Dominican portion of his 2010 baseball documentary, The Tenth Inning.

2010 Josh Lueke controversy edit

The Mariners made a blockbuster July 2010 trade of ace pitcher Cliff Lee to the Texas Rangers for Justin Smoak and three prospects, one of them a relief pitcher named Josh Lueke. There were reports all over Google about how Lueke had pleaded no contest to a charge of false imprisonment with violence after being arrested for rape and sodomy in 2008. At first, the Mariners, known for their "family friendly" image and support of a "Refuse to Abuse" campaign pertaining to violence against women, denied knowing about Lueke's background and added it was too late to reverse the trade or do anything further other than let Lueke play.

But on September 1, 2010, Baker published an A-1 story[30] disputing that version of events. Baker quoted Rick Adair, a former Mariners pitching coach—who had also been in charge of minor league pitchers in Texas in 2008—saying he had warned GM Jack Zduriencik all about Lueke's troubled past before the trade was made. The story also quoted Rangers GM Jon Daniels saying he had offered Zduriencik a chance to give Lueke back and take another player, but that he refused to do so.

The Mariners have never commented on the discrepancy between their initial statements and the version presented by the sources named in Baker's story. In September 2010, they fired Carmen Fusco, their head of professional scouting.[31] Fusco has since said he was made a scapegoat in the affair.[32]

The story finished in 4th place in voting for an APSE award for Explanatory Reporting. It won a regional SPJ award for Sports Reporting in the Pacific Northwest.[33]

2013 Eric Wedge/Mariners controversy edit

After a 16-year career as an MLB beat writer, Baker launched his new career as a sports investigative reporter with a December 8, 2013 feature story about the dysfunction permeating the upper levels of the Seattle Mariners hierarchy.[34] Baker specifically addressed the reasons why manager Eric Wedge had walked out on the team in September, leaving a $2 million contract extension on the table. Using on-the-record quotes from Wedge, Baker painted a dysfunctional situation brought about by Mariners CEO Howard Lincoln, resident Chuck Armstrong and GM Jack Zduriencik. The story also quoted former Mariners GM assistant Tony Blengino saying he had drawn up Zduriencik's entire resume and had helped falsely portray him as an expert in advanced statistics in order to get the job.

The story was nominated for an APSE award for Explanatory Reporting.[35] It won a regional SPJ Award for Sports Reporting in the Pacific Northwest.[36]

2016 Controversy Over NBA Arena Reporting edit

Baker's reporting on the proposed SoDo arena in the Stadium District of Seattle drew criticism from the SB Nation website Sonics Rising, a group of Seattle area fans lobbying for the return of NBA basketball. The site has campaigned openly for the city to support hedge fund operator Chris Hansen in efforts to build a public-subsidized arena and private sports and entertainment development in SoDo.[37] On February 22, 2016, Baker and the Editorial Board of The Seattle Times were accused by Seattle city councilman Tim Burgess of misreporting facts to suit personal bias against the arena. The allegation came via a memo introduced by Burgess in council after a front-page story by Baker suggesting council members delayed publicizing a report by architectural firm AECOM in 2015 that concluded KeyArena could be remodeled for NBA and NHL use.[38] Sonics Rising and two local bloggers used the occasion to again accuse Baker of biased reporting. They referenced a story of Baker's from the previous November about M.T. Phoenix, a company that offered to help finance a KeyArena renovation. The city never responded to or investigated the legitimacy of M.T. Phoenix and claimed that it legally could not entertain offers pertaining to KeyArena. The city later rebuffed a separate offer from businessman Victor Coleman, who was interested in a KeyArena renovation. Follow up stories on M.T. Phoenix, including one by Baker, found the M.T. Phoenix website contained inconsistencies.[39][40][41][42]

Following the Burgess memo claiming inaccuracies in Baker's ensuing story in February, the newspaper met with Burgess. Seattle Times editor Kathy Best afterwards issued a statement [43] that he had provided no example of factual errors in Baker's reporting and that no corrections would be made. Subsequent stories by Seattle Weekly[44] and the national Field of Schemes [45] website concluded that Baker's story had been correct in finding discrepancies between the AECOM report and the city's claim that KeyArena could not be remodeled for NBA and NHL. Both also found no merit to the Burgess claim of factual inaccuracies in Baker's story. Baker, in a follow-up report in April 2016, showed city hall officials had worried ahead of time that the AECOM report on KeyArena contradicted a city-issued environmental study on Hansen's Sodo arena.[46] On May 2, 2016, the city voted against selling a public street so Hansen could build the arena, effectively stopping the project. Baker's arena stories earned him a finalist nod for a 2016 APSE award in investigative reporting.

On September 12, 2017, the City of Seattle and Oak View Group agreed on a $600 million deal to renovate KeyArena for NBA and NHL teams.[47]

References edit

  1. ^ "Geoff Baker | The Seattle Times".
  2. ^ "Vanier Lauded in Gazette as Prime Football Talent Breeding Ground". Vaniercollege.qc.ca. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  3. ^ "All-Time Roster Cheetahs (1971-2014) : Football Collegial AA-AAA" (PDF). Vaniercollege.qc.ca. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  4. ^ Rob Pettapiece (March 28, 2009). "Out Of Left Field". neatesager.blogspot.com.
  5. ^ "Winners since 1949". National Newspaper Awards.
  6. ^ . seattletimes.com. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on December 5, 2015. Retrieved April 13, 2015.
  8. ^ The Dallas Morning News. . apsportseditors.org. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  9. ^ Indiana University School of Journalism. . apsportseditors.org. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.
  10. ^ . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.
  11. ^ . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.
  12. ^ staff, Seattle Times sports (March 3, 2016). "Seattle Times earns APSE 'Grand Slam' among 11 top-10 awards". The Seattle Times.
  13. ^ Clarke, Steve (2013). 100 things Blue Jays fans should know & do before they die. Chicago, Ill.: Triumph Books. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-62368-238-5. OCLC 829233054.
  14. ^ "ARTICLE...TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Whitest team in the majors - MajorWager Forums". majorwager.com.
  15. ^ "Big Push, Big Error". Ryerson Review of Journalism :: The Ryerson School of Journalism.
  16. ^ "Out Of Their Tree The author wrote a book, Moneyball, that drove baseball's clubby traditionalists crazy. They fought back. Now he does too". SI.com.
  17. ^ . newsombudsmen.org. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.
  18. ^ . Puerto Rico Herald. Archived from the original on July 6, 2008. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  19. ^ "Delgado Makes a Stand by Taking a Seat". The New York Times. July 21, 2004.
  20. ^ "Blue Jays Slugger Carlos Delgado Stands Up to War". politicalaffairs.net.
  21. ^ "Patriotism, Protest at Yankee Stadium". Los Angeles Times. July 25, 2004.
  22. ^ "The Silencing of Carlos Delgado". thenation.com.
  23. ^ Marty York (October 17, 2014). "Baker's insight will be missed by fans". Metro.
  24. ^ "zReportage ~ Story 063 - Complete Text". zreportage.com.
  25. ^ Citizen, Ottawa (May 26, 2006). . Canada.com. Archived from the original on March 22, 2016. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  26. ^ The Dallas Morning News. . apsportseditors.org. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  27. ^ . seattletimes.com. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.
  28. ^ "Only surprise in Wilson Ramos kidnapping is that it doesn't happen more often". The Seattle Times.
  29. ^ "165322118 Pictures & News Photos - Getty Images". gettyimages.com.
  30. ^ . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on August 10, 2014.
  31. ^ "Mariners". The Seattle Times.
  32. ^ "Thiel: Is there a bottom to Mariners' free-fall?". Sportspress Northwest.
  33. ^ . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015.
  34. ^ . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on December 16, 2014.
  35. ^ Indiana University School of Journalism. . apsportseditors.org. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015. Retrieved December 16, 2014.
  36. ^ "2013 SPJ Northwest awards". health-city.com.
  37. ^ "The Seattle Times Really Does Not Like Chris Hansen's SoDo Arena Plan". Curbed Seattle. February 23, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
  38. ^ "Seattle councilmembers rip Times' reporting on arena studies". KING5. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  39. ^ "Seattle Times Introduced us to M.T. Phoenix". SB Nation. November 16, 2015.
  40. ^ "Seattle Times Reporter Scrambling for Credibility". SB Nation. November 18, 2015.
  41. ^ "Paper's Petty Personal Vendetta Impeding SoDo Arena". Seattle Sportsnet. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  42. ^ "Thiel: Stop with the KeyArena remodel talk | Sportspress Northwest". Sportspress Northwest. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  43. ^ "About The Seattle Times' arena coverage". The Seattle Times. February 24, 2016.
  44. ^ "Home". Seattle Weekly.
  45. ^ deMause, Neil (March 2, 2016). "Seattle council did too ignore possibility of renovating KeyArena, says Seattle Weekly report".
  46. ^ "Seattle worried about clashing KeyArena reports, then delayed one". The Seattle Times. April 10, 2016.
  47. ^ "Oak View Group plans to renovate KeyArena by October 2020, spend $40 million on transportation". The Seattle Times. September 12, 2017.

geoff, baker, journalist, geoff, baker, canadian, born, journalist, currently, working, writer, columnist, while, also, doubling, sports, enterprise, investigative, reporter, geoff, bakerbornmontreal, canadaoccupationjournalistyears, active1987, present, conte. Geoff Baker is a Canadian born journalist currently working as an NHL writer and columnist while also doubling as a sports enterprise and investigative reporter 1 Geoff BakerBornMontreal CanadaOccupationJournalistYears active1987 present Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Journalism career 3 Awards and recognition 4 1998 Tim Johnson controversy and firing 5 2003 White Jays controversy 6 2004 Carlos Delgado controversy 7 2005 Dominican steroids stories 8 2010 Josh Lueke controversy 9 2013 Eric Wedge Mariners controversy 10 2016 Controversy Over NBA Arena Reporting 11 ReferencesEarly life and education editBaker was born in Montreal Quebec and raised in the suburb of Laval Quebec A graduate of Chomedey High School Baker played football for the Vanier College Cheetahs 2 CEGEP 1987 provincial championship football team 3 and attended training camp with the Concordia University Stingers as a slot receiver in 1989 4 Journalism career editAfter summer internships at the Toronto Star and The Gazette in Montreal Baker was hired full time by The Gazette as a night police reporter in 1991 Awards and recognition editIn Canada Baker won the country s National Newspaper Award three times in 1994 spot news 1997 sports and 2005 sports and was a top three finalist in 1992 spot news 5 The final award in 2005 was for a series on steroids use by young baseball players in the Dominican Republic Those stories also helped Baker become the first Canadian to win an Associated Press Sports Editors APSE award in the highest newspaper circulation category 6 Baker won a second APSE award 7 with the Seattle Times in 2014 for a story about troubled indoor soccer owner Dion Earl He has been a finalist for seven other APSE prizes with the Times in 2006 8 2009 9 2010 10 2013 11 and 2015 12 1998 Tim Johnson controversy and firing editUpon joining the Toronto Star in June 1998 Baker became aware that manager Tim Johnson had talked to players about serving in the U S Marine Corps and fighting overseas during the Vietnam War But Baker knew Johnson had not served overseas and the manager quickly claimed he had never told such stories to players or coaches On September 23 1998 Baker wrote an initial story describing a rift among team coaches and a heated bar argument between them over Johnson s fake Vietnam stories A much larger feature length follow up story on October 18 1998 quoted players on and off the record about having been told Vietnam stories by Johnson The most damaging quotes came from former Cy Young Award winner Pat Hentgen who described Johnson telling him about his Vietnam hardships while on the field at Fenway Park before a series with the Red Sox Johnson had just told Hentgen he would not be starting in what was then a crucial series for the Blue Jays Johnson continued to deny he had told such stories until a Boston Globe column by Will McDonough in November 1998 mentioned that Johnson had told such war stories while serving as a Red Sox bench coach a few years earlier 13 A few weeks later at the 1998 baseball winter meetings in Nashville Johnson held a press conference admitting he had lied about serving in the war The Blue Jays allowed Johnson to stay on as manager he had won 88 games his only season in 1998 but fired him in spring training when it became clear players no longer respected him 2003 White Jays controversy editOn June 28 2003 the Toronto Star ran a Baker story and accompanying sidebar under an A 1 front page banner titled The White Jays along with accompanying headshots of the 25 players on the Toronto Blue Jays baseball team The stories themselves were about how the team had taken a decisive turn away from Latin American players and towards U S born products after international scouting cutbacks under the regime of GM J P Ricciardi 14 The front page treatment of the stories sparked a widespread outcry in Toronto and more than 2 000 letters to the editor to this day a record for Canada s largest newspaper 15 Moneyball author Michael Lewis wrote about the series as part of a Sports Illustrated feature 16 that was later re published as an afterword in the paperback version of his best selling book The Toronto Star s ombudsman investigated and found no issue with the content of Baker s stories 17 but did criticize the paper s editors for their packaging of the story and front page treatment Baker later wrote a follow up feature on the Blue Jays and their Latin American cutbacks in October 2005 This time without the racially charged front page treatment of the 2003 White Jays stories the work by Baker was well received despite containing much the same subject matter 2004 Carlos Delgado controversy editOn July 4 2004 the Toronto Star published Citizen Carlos 18 a Baker penned feature from Puerto Rico about how Blue Jays slugger Carlos Delgado was no longer standing on the field during the playing of God Bless America Delgado had shared with Baker that he was silently protesting the U S invasion of Iraq The Baker feature described Delgado s work with activists on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques and the fact that it had been the testing ground for uranium depleted shells dropped by the U S military on Iraq The story was later picked up by The New York Times 19 and other U S news outlets 20 causing Delgado to be booed on subsequent trips to New York 21 to play the Yankees or Mets Upon joining the Mets in 2006 Delgado addressed the situation and agreed to stand on the field with teammates when God Bless America was played saying he had made his point and did not wish to cause distractions 22 2005 Dominican steroids stories editIn April 2005 Baker and Toronto Star photographer Peter Power traveled to the Dominican Republic where they spent a week touring the country s needle ridden baseball fields to do a pair of feature stories on PED use by teenage prospects from that country 23 The groundbreaking series described the use of cheaper farm animal supplements as steroids alternatives and also produced an expose of the country s buscones street level hustlers grooming prospects for bigger paydays in the U S 24 Baker won his third National Newspaper Award in Canada for the stories 25 He also became the first Canadian to win an APSE Award in the United States in the highest newspaper circulation category 26 The aftermath of the series led to Baker being hired by the Seattle Times He has since traveled to Venezuela to write about steroids testing there 27 and was invited to speak at an October 2006 sports conference in Caracas 28 about the exploitation faced by Latin American ballplayers A photograph by Power from the Toronto Star series of a young Dominican throwing a baseball in a sugar cane field 29 his bicycle perched against a tree in the foreground was used by filmmaker Ken Burns to illustrate the opening of the Dominican portion of his 2010 baseball documentary The Tenth Inning 2010 Josh Lueke controversy editThe Mariners made a blockbuster July 2010 trade of ace pitcher Cliff Lee to the Texas Rangers for Justin Smoak and three prospects one of them a relief pitcher named Josh Lueke There were reports all over Google about how Lueke had pleaded no contest to a charge of false imprisonment with violence after being arrested for rape and sodomy in 2008 At first the Mariners known for their family friendly image and support of a Refuse to Abuse campaign pertaining to violence against women denied knowing about Lueke s background and added it was too late to reverse the trade or do anything further other than let Lueke play But on September 1 2010 Baker published an A 1 story 30 disputing that version of events Baker quoted Rick Adair a former Mariners pitching coach who had also been in charge of minor league pitchers in Texas in 2008 saying he had warned GM Jack Zduriencik all about Lueke s troubled past before the trade was made The story also quoted Rangers GM Jon Daniels saying he had offered Zduriencik a chance to give Lueke back and take another player but that he refused to do so The Mariners have never commented on the discrepancy between their initial statements and the version presented by the sources named in Baker s story In September 2010 they fired Carmen Fusco their head of professional scouting 31 Fusco has since said he was made a scapegoat in the affair 32 The story finished in 4th place in voting for an APSE award for Explanatory Reporting It won a regional SPJ award for Sports Reporting in the Pacific Northwest 33 2013 Eric Wedge Mariners controversy editAfter a 16 year career as an MLB beat writer Baker launched his new career as a sports investigative reporter with a December 8 2013 feature story about the dysfunction permeating the upper levels of the Seattle Mariners hierarchy 34 Baker specifically addressed the reasons why manager Eric Wedge had walked out on the team in September leaving a 2 million contract extension on the table Using on the record quotes from Wedge Baker painted a dysfunctional situation brought about by Mariners CEO Howard Lincoln resident Chuck Armstrong and GM Jack Zduriencik The story also quoted former Mariners GM assistant Tony Blengino saying he had drawn up Zduriencik s entire resume and had helped falsely portray him as an expert in advanced statistics in order to get the job The story was nominated for an APSE award for Explanatory Reporting 35 It won a regional SPJ Award for Sports Reporting in the Pacific Northwest 36 2016 Controversy Over NBA Arena Reporting editBaker s reporting on the proposed SoDo arena in the Stadium District of Seattle drew criticism from the SB Nation website Sonics Rising a group of Seattle area fans lobbying for the return of NBA basketball The site has campaigned openly for the city to support hedge fund operator Chris Hansen in efforts to build a public subsidized arena and private sports and entertainment development in SoDo 37 On February 22 2016 Baker and the Editorial Board of The Seattle Times were accused by Seattle city councilman Tim Burgess of misreporting facts to suit personal bias against the arena The allegation came via a memo introduced by Burgess in council after a front page story by Baker suggesting council members delayed publicizing a report by architectural firm AECOM in 2015 that concluded KeyArena could be remodeled for NBA and NHL use 38 Sonics Rising and two local bloggers used the occasion to again accuse Baker of biased reporting They referenced a story of Baker s from the previous November about M T Phoenix a company that offered to help finance a KeyArena renovation The city never responded to or investigated the legitimacy of M T Phoenix and claimed that it legally could not entertain offers pertaining to KeyArena The city later rebuffed a separate offer from businessman Victor Coleman who was interested in a KeyArena renovation Follow up stories on M T Phoenix including one by Baker found the M T Phoenix website contained inconsistencies 39 40 41 42 Following the Burgess memo claiming inaccuracies in Baker s ensuing story in February the newspaper met with Burgess Seattle Times editor Kathy Best afterwards issued a statement 43 that he had provided no example of factual errors in Baker s reporting and that no corrections would be made Subsequent stories by Seattle Weekly 44 and the national Field of Schemes 45 website concluded that Baker s story had been correct in finding discrepancies between the AECOM report and the city s claim that KeyArena could not be remodeled for NBA and NHL Both also found no merit to the Burgess claim of factual inaccuracies in Baker s story Baker in a follow up report in April 2016 showed city hall officials had worried ahead of time that the AECOM report on KeyArena contradicted a city issued environmental study on Hansen s Sodo arena 46 On May 2 2016 the city voted against selling a public street so Hansen could build the arena effectively stopping the project Baker s arena stories earned him a finalist nod for a 2016 APSE award in investigative reporting On September 12 2017 the City of Seattle and Oak View Group agreed on a 600 million deal to renovate KeyArena for NBA and NHL teams 47 References edit Geoff Baker The Seattle Times Vanier Lauded in Gazette as Prime Football Talent Breeding Ground Vaniercollege qc ca Retrieved February 18 2015 All Time Roster Cheetahs 1971 2014 Football Collegial AA AAA PDF Vaniercollege qc ca Retrieved February 18 2015 Rob Pettapiece March 28 2009 Out Of Left Field neatesager blogspot com Winners since 1949 National Newspaper Awards The Seattle Times Local News Times sports department recruits 3 top reporters seattletimes com Archived from the original on February 10 2015 APSE Archived from the original on December 5 2015 Retrieved April 13 2015 The Dallas Morning News APSE Associated Press Sports Editors apsportseditors org Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Retrieved December 16 2014 Indiana University School of Journalism APSE apsportseditors org Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Other Sports Times reporters Geoff Baker Larry Stone earn APSE writing awards Seattle Times Newspaper The Seattle Times Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Geoff Baker Seattle Times Sports sections earn honors from APSE The Seattle Times Archived from the original on February 10 2015 staff Seattle Times sports March 3 2016 Seattle Times earns APSE Grand Slam among 11 top 10 awards The Seattle Times Clarke Steve 2013 100 things Blue Jays fans should know amp do before they die Chicago Ill Triumph Books p 45 ISBN 978 1 62368 238 5 OCLC 829233054 ARTICLE TORONTO BLUE JAYS Whitest team in the majors MajorWager Forums majorwager com Big Push Big Error Ryerson Review of Journalism The Ryerson School of Journalism Out Of Their Tree The author wrote a book Moneyball that drove baseball s clubby traditionalists crazy They fought back Now he does too SI com Pitch at Jays High and wide newsombudsmen org Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Citizen Carlos Jays Delgado Fights For Justice For The People Of A Small Puerto Rican Island Vieques Ravaged By Six Decades Of U S Weapons Testing Writes Geoff Baker Puerto Rico Herald Archived from the original on July 6 2008 Retrieved February 18 2015 Delgado Makes a Stand by Taking a Seat The New York Times July 21 2004 Blue Jays Slugger Carlos Delgado Stands Up to War politicalaffairs net Patriotism Protest at Yankee Stadium Los Angeles Times July 25 2004 The Silencing of Carlos Delgado thenation com Marty York October 17 2014 Baker s insight will be missed by fans Metro zReportage Story 063 Complete Text zreportage com Citizen Ottawa May 26 2006 Citizen wins National Newspaper Awards Canada com Archived from the original on March 22 2016 Retrieved February 18 2015 The Dallas Morning News APSE Associated Press Sports Editors apsportseditors org Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Retrieved December 16 2014 The Seattle Times Mariners Growing pains Venezuela deals with steroid testing seattletimes com Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Only surprise in Wilson Ramos kidnapping is that it doesn t happen more often The Seattle Times 165322118 Pictures amp News Photos Getty Images gettyimages com Mariners Coach says Mariners were told of Josh Lueke s criminal past Seattle Times Newspaper The Seattle Times Archived from the original on August 10 2014 Mariners The Seattle Times Thiel Is there a bottom to Mariners free fall Sportspress Northwest Local News SPJ Awards Seattle Times Newspaper The Seattle Times Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Dysfunction at the top Eric Wedge others point to trouble in Mariners front office The Seattle Times Archived from the original on December 16 2014 Indiana University School of Journalism APSE apsportseditors org Archived from the original on February 10 2015 Retrieved December 16 2014 2013 SPJ Northwest awards health city com The Seattle Times Really Does Not Like Chris Hansen s SoDo Arena Plan Curbed Seattle February 23 2016 Retrieved February 24 2016 Seattle councilmembers rip Times reporting on arena studies KING5 Retrieved February 23 2016 Seattle Times Introduced us to M T Phoenix SB Nation November 16 2015 Seattle Times Reporter Scrambling for Credibility SB Nation November 18 2015 Paper s Petty Personal Vendetta Impeding SoDo Arena Seattle Sportsnet Retrieved February 23 2016 Thiel Stop with the KeyArena remodel talk Sportspress Northwest Sportspress Northwest Retrieved February 23 2016 About The Seattle Times arena coverage The Seattle Times February 24 2016 Home Seattle Weekly deMause Neil March 2 2016 Seattle council did too ignore possibility of renovating KeyArena says Seattle Weekly report Seattle worried about clashing KeyArena reports then delayed one The Seattle Times April 10 2016 Oak View Group plans to renovate KeyArena by October 2020 spend 40 million on transportation The Seattle Times September 12 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Geoff Baker journalist amp oldid 1188227901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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