Tim O'Brien

Sports Editor

Preston's Summary

Tim O'Brien is a sports editor with a focus on local sports in Dublin, Ireland. He writes for The Irish Times and The Beverly Review, and his work has also been featured in Varian Medical Systems, The Union, WTTV-TV, and The American Mind. Tim covers a wide range of sports topics, from local team updates to profiles of athletes and coverage of sporting events.

Preston is the artificial intelligence that powers the Intelligent Relations PR platform. Meet Preston

Geo Focus

Coverage Attributes:

Beta
Private Sector Announcements: 29 %
Event Coverage: 19 %
Government Announcement: 14 %
Evolving Stories: 12 %
Press Release: 7 %

Themes Covered:

Not enough data icon

Not enough data

Most Recent Topics:

  • Sports Disciplines
  • Team Sports
  • Public Event Safety
  • Disaster & Emergency Response
  • Individual Sports

Pitching Insights

Tim O'Brien's coverage includes a mix of local sports, weather, and government & politics. He may be interested in pitches related to local sports events or initiatives, weather-related topics specific to Dublin/Ireland, and announcements from the government or private sector within his geographic focus.

Given Tim's interest in high school athletics and road safety, he may appreciate content related to these areas such as new regulations impacting high school athletics or innovative approaches to improving road safety in Dublin.

Additionally, considering Tim's coverage attributes show a significant portion of articles citing data and including government announcements; he might be open to receiving insights from experts who can provide statistical analysis on relevant topics such as sports trends or political developments affecting the region.

This information evolves through artificial intelligence and human feedback. Improve this profile .

Journalists With Similar Coverage:

Based on similarity of content.
Publications
Most recent topics
Not enough data
Publications
Most recent topics
Not enough data
Most recent topics
Not enough data