Sportawy

Editorial Policy

Sportawy publishes sports news, analysis, rankings, schedules, previews, and how-to-watch coverage for readers following major U.S. sports conversations.

Articles are expected to separate confirmed facts from reports, rumors, predictions, analysis, and unclear details. Coverage should avoid invented quotes, injuries, trades, broadcast details, venues, dates, or statistics.

When information is unconfirmed, headlines and article copy should clearly label it as a report, rumor, prediction, or analysis.

Content Types

  • News briefs and developing updates
  • Analysis and features
  • Rankings and power rankings
  • Predictions and previews
  • How-to-watch guides
  • Schedules and event guides

Topic Selection

Topics may come from editorial calendars, schedule data, trend signals, source feeds, and ongoing league or event coverage. Priority is given to stories with enough facts and context to produce useful coverage.

Source Use

Coverage should be based on available source material. Source names and URLs are tracked in the publishing system, and unsupported facts should not be added to fill space.

External sources are used for verification context, event details, reports, and official updates when available.

Quality Gates

  • Minimum word-count and section expectations by content type
  • Source-count requirements before publication
  • Generic-content and repetition checks
  • Headline-safety checks for rumors, reports, predictions, and analysis
  • Featured image, SEO metadata, and structured-data checks where applicable

Headline Accuracy

Headlines should match the certainty of the story. Rumors, single-source reports, speculation, and predictions should not be written as confirmed outcomes.

Attribution and Corrections

Source attribution should be visible where appropriate, and readers can report errors through the corrections process.