UGA student covering Olympics in Rio

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A Peachtree City student will travel to Rio in August to cover the 2016 Olympic Games.

Nicole Chrzanowski is one of two students in the Grady Sports Media certificate program at the University of Georgia to have been selected by the United States Olympic Committee to report on the Games for the USOC’s various information channels, including its website, www.TeamUSA.org.

“It’s going to be a huge undertaking to basically be a member of the press corps at the Olympics, which is one of the events that most sports journalists aspire to cover,” said Vicki Michaelis, John Huland Carmical Distinguished Professor in Sports Journalism and director of Grady Sports at the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. “It’s a 17-day experiment in sleeplessness and constant deadlines. They’ll be in that same crucible as all of the professional journalists around them, and these are two students that I’m confident can handle that.”

Michaelis was the lead Olympics reporter for USA Today through six Olympic Games and worked as a freelancer with Team USA during the 2012 Games in London. That same year, she and Malcolm Moran, director of the Sports Capital Journalism Program at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, worked with the USOC to formalize a student assistant program for the 2016 Olympics.

“I’m deeply appreciative of the unique opportunity that the USOC is giving these students,” Michaelis said.

Through a competitive selection process that included reporting and writing preview stories on specific sports and athletes leading into the 2015 Pan American Games last July, 14 applicants from the Grady Sports program were narrowed down to four finalists by the USOC.

The finalists next completed a second round of assignments, including deadline coverage of a UGA women’s basketball game.

Chrzanowski, a public relations junior, plans to pursue a graduate degree in statistics and a career in sports analytics.

“This opportunity will give me invaluable real-life experience and teach me communications tools in practice,” she said.

“Grady Sports has provided me every single tool I need going into the Olympics,” Chrzanowski said. “Professor Michaelis and professor [Welch] Suggs have taught me professionalism, sports journalism from head to toe and how to be an invaluable asset to a team. I am grateful for all they’ve done for this program and Grady.”

There are so many learning experiences awaiting these two students, said Michaelis. “The learning curve is going to be steep. But by the end of the Games, they’ll both have a lot more confidence in what they can do as sports journalists and sports communicators.”