Sport Stackers: Substack Notes & Social Media for Sports Creators & Journalists
I’ve been watching sports writers on Substack grind themselves out trying to produce everything at once. Long-form articles every week. Notes every day. Newsletters on a schedule they set when they were feeling ambitious. Most of them burn out before they get traction. The thing is, you don’t need unlimited hours. You need a system that works inside the time you actually have. Two hours a week is a real number. I’ve tested it. It works when you build the week right. Here’s how to do it. HERE IS THE LINK TO THE RESOURCE https://sport-stackers-ecosystem-guide.netlify.app/ [https://sport-stackers-ecosystem-guide.netlify.app/] Start With Notes, Not the Newsletter Most writers go straight to the long-form article. I get it. That’s where we feel most like writers. But that’s also why so many people stall. Notes are where the real growth happens on Substack right now. They’re short. They’re fast. And they tell you exactly what your readers actually care about before you spend three hours writing something nobody responds to. Write three short notes early in the week. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday works. Each one is just a quick thought, an angle, a take you noticed mid-scroll. A press conference line that bugged you. A stat that told a different story than the highlights did. Post them. Watch what gets restacks. Watch what gets replies. The note that sparks conversation becomes your newsletter. The other two fade. That’s the whole point. The Writing Framework That Keeps It Simple Once you know which idea landed, you write the article. And when you sit down to write it, you don’t need to overthink structure. Start with a five-second moment. A play. A press conference clip. A number that made you stop. Something small and specific. Pull the reader into that moment first. Then extract the lesson. What does that moment actually tell you about the sport, the player, or the game when the cameras aren’t on? That’s your angle. That’s what makes your piece worth reading instead of the ten others covering the same game. Then connect it. Where does this land for someone who loves the sport or covers it themselves? What do they take away from reading your take on this? That’s the whole structure. A moment. A lesson. A connection. You can write a thousand words around that framework without staring at a blank screen for an hour. Show Your Process, Not Just Your Opinion A lot of writers think readers want hot takes. Some do. But what builds trust over time is showing how you actually think. Write a note about the film you watched before writing your last piece. Share the question nobody asked at the postgame presser. Tell readers what you noticed that didn’t make it into the final article. Use specific openers. “Yesterday I rewatched the third quarter and noticed something.” “After the final buzzer I went back and checked the shot chart.” Real timestamps. Real moments. That’s what separates your work from a thousand other sports opinions floating around. When you show your process, readers come back. They trust you. They start to feel like they’re watching you work, and that’s a relationship worth building. The Part That’s Actually Hardest The human posts are the ones most sports writers skip. I understand why. We got into this to write about the game. It can feel weird to write about anything else. But readers subscribe to people, not topics. Share the moment you fell in love with the sport. The game you watched as a kid. The player whose jersey you wore even though your friends thought it was a weird choice. Your actual opinion, especially the unpopular one. Your life outside the sport matters here too. Family. Music. Whatever you do when you’re not watching film. That stuff is part of who you are. Readers bond with who you are, and that bond is what makes them tell someone else about your newsletter. The Weekly Rhythm That Makes This Work Here’s a schedule that keeps you inside two hours a week. Monday: a sports note that shows your process. Tuesday: a human note that shares something real about you. Wednesday: another sports note, a different angle. Thursday: your newsletter drops, built around whichever note landed. Friday: one more human note, something light, something personal. That’s it. The newsletter almost writes itself because you’ve already tested the idea twice by the time you sit down to write it. You can move things around. Make it fit your sport, your schedule, your style. The point isn’t the specific days. The point is having a rhythm so you’re never starting from zero. What This Changes Most sports writers I talk to feel behind. Like they should be doing more. Posting more. Writing longer. Going deeper. The writers I’ve seen grow on Substack aren’t doing more. They’re doing less, but doing it consistently. They’re showing up every week with something small and real and useful. And over time, readers notice that. Two hours is enough. A note on Monday that becomes a newsletter on Thursday. A human moment on Friday that reminds someone why they subscribed. That’s a complete week. You don’t need a media company. You need a system that works inside the life you already have. -Robbin Marx PS Here’s a $20 Buck Gift from Kalshi and easy way to support the community http://kalshi.com/bleav [http://kalshi.com/bleav] Get full access to Sport Stackers: A Community for Substack Sports Creators at sportstackers.substack.com/subscribe [https://sportstackers.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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