Wikipedia:What is and is not routine coverage
![]() | This is an essay on Wikipedia:Deletion policy. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
![]() | This page in a nutshell: This essay encourages editors to avoid interpreting WP:ROUTINE to mean something that it doesn't. |
Editors and contributors to Wikipedia may have difficulty determining what is and is not routine coverage of people and or events.
The guideline WP:ROUTINE is a very good guideline. Routine coverages such as weddings, funerals, sports scores, and other "and finally..." stories can be used to add to a notable article some interesting and details about a subject. That does not necessarily mean that such articles good sources for establishing notability of a subject in the first place.
Editors should be careful in defining what is referred to as "routine" coverage. In the world of sports, it is true that many sporting events are routinely covered, but that does not make all coverage of a sporting event "routine" at all. Modern-day sporting events can appear regularly in blogs or in local news as sports scores (sometimes called "box scores") without details. Such box scores are examples of routine coverage. If an article goes into detail about the event, that is not necessarily "routine" coverage. Not every sporting event earns a feature article, and therefore that would not be "routine" coverage.
Be careful not to make WP:ROUTINE mean something that it does not.