
However, one curious thing to note from the press coverage was how the victim was described. The basic fact is that Emma Winch is a rugby player who plays for Merthyr Tydfil - but strangely many articles in the headline or opening paragraph of the article don't call her that - indeed they almost go out of their way to avoid saying why she was there. A quick glance through some of the coverage shows that:
- Wales Online called her a "sportswoman" who was camping in a field
- The Independent and Daily Mirror simply call her a "woman"
- The Guardian, in two articles, call her a "rugby fan" or a "woman"
- The BBC called her a "rugby fan"
- The Sun called her a "camper"
- Daily Star called her a "camper"
Why? Do some journalists think that revealing that Emma was a rugby player would make readers somehow less sympathetic? The line taken by the BBC and Guardian in particular is plain weird - "rugby fan"? Do their writers/editors think that the only reason a woman might be at a tournament would be to watch?
Or to put it another way - if the roller had hit a tent occupied by a male rugby player would any newspaper have identified him as anything else?
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