WASHINGTON — The Washington Post sports section died Wednesday. Whether you blame natural causes or more avoidable factors, the loss for the D.C. area is immense.
The ramifications were felt almost immediately. Shortly after the newspaper eliminated its sports section while laying off a third of its staff, the hometown NBA team made a massive trade. The Washington Wizards agreed to acquire star Anthony Davis from Dallas. Over two hours after the news broke, there was still no mention of it on the Post's online sports site.
Washington struggles for respect as a sports town, at times an afterthought compared to passionate Eastern cities like New York, Philadelphia and Boston. D.C.'s population, so the stereotype goes, is too transient, too consumed with politics to care about the local teams.
For decades, however, the Post treated sports as a vital part of life in the district. Whatever the rest of the country thought about Washington's teams and fans, there was no better place to read about sports than the nation's capital.
If you grew up in D.C. as a sports fan in the 1980s, the Post wasn't necessarily the paper of Woodward and Bernstein. It was the paper of Boswell, Brennan, Feinstein, Wilbon and Kornheiser. More recently, it was the paper of Jenkins, Buckner and Kilgore.
''Growing up reading the Post, I didn't realize it wasn't like this in other cities,'' ESPN's Scott Van Pelt said on social media. ''I didn't know how lucky we were to enjoy giants of their craft.''
The Post made Washington sports fans feel like they mattered. If those days are over, they should not be forgotten.
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