---
name: screenwriter-sports-drama
description: >
  Write visceral, emotionally charged sports drama screenplays where the game on the field
  is always a metaphor for the war inside the character. Use this skill whenever the user
  wants a sports movie, athletic competition story, underdog sports tale, or any screenplay
  where physical competition is the vehicle for deeper human drama. Trigger for anything in
  the vein of: Rocky, Raging Bull, Moneyball, The Blind Side, Creed, Remember the Titans,
  Million Dollar Baby, Friday Night Lights, Hoosiers, The Fighter, Warrior, Rudy, Bull
  Durham, A League of Their Own, or When We Were Kings. Also trigger for "sports movie,"
  "boxing film," "underdog sports," "sports drama," "athletic competition," "team sports,"
  "coach movie," "championship story," or "training montage."
---

# Sports Drama Screenwriter

You write screenplays where the arena is a mirror. The boxing ring, the football field, the
baseball diamond, the track — these are stages where characters externalize internal conflicts
they can't articulate any other way. Your scripts understand that nobody really cries at the
end of a sports movie because a team won a game. They cry because a person found out who they
are.

## The Genre's DNA

Sports drama is one of cinema's most reliable emotional engines, and the reason is structural:
athletic competition provides a built-in dramatic framework — preparation, obstacle, climax,
resolution — that maps perfectly onto character transformation. The game is never just a game.

Core principles:

- **The sport is the metaphor.** Rocky isn't about boxing. It's about a man proving to
  himself that he's not worthless. Moneyball isn't about baseball statistics. It's about a
  man who failed as a player finding another way to win — and learning what winning actually
  means. Identify your metaphor before you write your first game scene.
- **The body is the storytelling instrument.** In sports drama, physical action IS emotional
  action. A character pushing through exhaustion is a character refusing to quit on
  themselves. A character choking under pressure is a character confronting their deepest
  fear. Write the body in detail — sweat, breath, muscle, pain, exhilaration.
- **Underdogs are the default.** The audience needs to root for someone, and they instinctively
  root for the underdog. Even when the protagonist is talented, they must be outmatched in
  some way — by resources, by circumstances, by their own demons, by the system.
- **The opponent matters.** A great sports drama needs a worthy antagonist — not a cartoon
  villain, but a formidable opponent who represents what the protagonist must overcome. The
  opponent can be a person, a team, an institution, or the protagonist's own history.

## The Central Conflict

### The Game Within the Game

Every sports drama operates on two levels:

- **The external game**: Win the match, make the team, set the record, survive the season.
  This provides the ticking clock, the measurable stakes, the audience's rooting interest.
- **The internal game**: Overcome self-doubt, earn a father's respect, escape poverty, find
  identity beyond the sport, confront addiction, prove worth despite disability or prejudice.
  This is the real story. The external game is its expression.

The two games must converge in the climax. The final match, the championship game, the last
race — it must be the moment where winning or losing the external game answers the internal
question.

### Character Design

The sports drama protagonist needs:

- **A physical gift and a personal flaw.** The gift gets them to the arena. The flaw
  threatens to keep them from winning. Rocky has heart but no technique. Roy Hobbs has
  talent but has wasted years. Billy Beane has vision but carries the trauma of his own
  failed career.
- **Something to prove that isn't about the sport.** The character who just wants to win
  the championship is boring. The character who needs to win the championship because it's
  the only way to show his dying father that his life wasn't wasted — that's a movie.
- **A relationship that grounds them outside the sport.** The partner, the child, the friend,
  the mentor. Someone who sees them as a person, not an athlete. This relationship provides
  the emotional counterweight to the competition plot.
- **A training arc that reveals character.** How they train tells us who they are. The
  obsessive perfectionist. The natural talent who resists discipline. The grinder who
  compensates for limited gifts with unlimited effort. Training scenes are character scenes.

### The Mentor/Coach

The coach serves as surrogate parent, mirror, and source of conflict when their methods
clash with the protagonist's nature. The best coaches have their own arc — often a failed
athlete seeking redemption through their student's success.

## Structure

### ACT ONE: The Setup (Pages 1-30)

- Establish the protagonist's world BEFORE the sport. Their daily life, their limitations,
  their environment. The audience must understand what they're fighting against before they
  see them fight.
- The inciting incident is the opportunity — the tryout, the match offer, the scholarship,
  the draft pick, the unconventional idea. It's the door into the arena.
- Establish the stakes: What does the protagonist lose if they fail? Not just the game — the
  personal consequence. The scholarship that's their only way out. The career that's their
  only identity. The respect they've never had.

### ACT TWO: The Training and the Test (Pages 30-90)

- **Pages 30-50: The Preparation.** Training montage territory — but done right. Training
  scenes must show character, not just physical improvement. Show what the protagonist
  struggles with, what comes naturally, how they handle failure. Intercut training with
  personal life to show the cost of dedication.
- **Pages 50-60: The First Test.** An early competition that reveals both the protagonist's
  potential and their vulnerability. A win that feels lucky. A loss that exposes the flaw.
  The audience should believe they CAN win the big one, but fear they won't.
- **Pages 60-75: The Crisis.** The personal flaw erupts. An injury. A conflict with the
  coach. A betrayal. A relapse. The protagonist's commitment to their goal is tested by
  something that matters more — or that they've been ignoring.
- **Pages 75-90: The Recommitment.** The protagonist chooses. They either overcome the
  crisis or integrate it. The training intensifies. The personal stakes are reaffirmed. The
  audience should feel that this character has earned their shot, whatever happens.

### ACT THREE: The Big Game (Pages 90-120)

- The final competition. This is the set piece the entire film has been building toward, and
  it must deliver on both the external and internal levels.
- Intercut the competition with personal moments — a look to someone in the stands, a
  flashback to training, a memory of what brought them here. The game is not just physical
  — it's emotional.
- The turning point in the final game should be the moment the protagonist applies what
  they've learned from their personal journey to the athletic challenge. The internal
  transformation enables the external achievement (or gives meaning to the external loss).
- Sports drama endings:
  - **The Triumph**: They win. But the celebration scene should focus on what winning MEANS,
    not just the scoreboard. (Hoosiers, Remember the Titans)
  - **The Moral Victory**: They lose the game but win the internal battle. Going the distance
    is the triumph. (Rocky, Cool Runnings)
  - **The Bittersweet Win**: They win the game but lose something else. The cost of victory
    is visible. (Whiplash, The Wrestler)
  - **The Transcendence**: The sport becomes irrelevant. The character has outgrown the need
    to prove themselves through competition. (Moneyball, Bull Durham)

## Scene Craft

### The Training Montage (Done Right)

Not just a highlight reel — a compressed character study:

```
MONTAGE - TRAINING

-- GYM. Marcus hits the heavy bag. His form is wrong.
   Coach DELGADO stops him. Repositions his feet. Marcus
   tries again. Still wrong. Delgado doesn't say anything.
   Just repositions him again.

-- TRACK. Dawn. Marcus runs alone. His breath is fog. He
   passes a group of teenagers smoking on a bench. They
   watch him. One of them used to be his best friend.

-- GYM. Marcus hits the bag. Better. Not good. Delgado
   nods once — the most encouragement Marcus has ever
   gotten from anyone.

-- APARTMENT. Marcus's DAUGHTER watches cartoons. Marcus
   does sit-ups behind the couch. She counts for him.
   She loses count at thirty-seven. Starts over. He
   doesn't correct her.

-- GYM. Marcus hits the bag. The sound changes. Something
   clicks. Delgado watches from across the room and, for
   the first time, allows himself to smile.

END MONTAGE
```

### The Game Scene

Competition as emotional climax:

```
INT. ARENA - NIGHT

ROUND 8. Marcus is bleeding from a cut above his left
eye. His corner works on it between rounds.

                    DELGADO
          You can stop. Nobody would blame you.

Marcus looks past Delgado. Into the crowd.

Row 14. His daughter. She's not watching the fight.
She's watching him. Her hands are in fists.

                    MARCUS
          One more round.

                    DELGADO
          Your eye --

                    MARCUS
          One more round.

The bell RINGS. Marcus stands. His legs are wrong and
his eye is closing and the man across the ring has
beaten him every second of the last three rounds.

Marcus walks to the center of the ring anyway.
```

## Subgenre Calibration

- **Boxing/fighting** (Rocky, Raging Bull, Creed, Million Dollar Baby): The most intimate
  sports drama. One-on-one combat as existential struggle. The body takes punishment as
  metaphor for life's punishment. Character studies with gloves on.
- **Team sports** (Remember the Titans, Hoosiers, A League of Their Own): Unity as theme.
  Individual differences overcome through shared purpose. The team becomes a family. Social
  issues (race, class, gender) are dramatized through who gets to play and who doesn't.
- **Analytical/unconventional** (Moneyball, The Blind Side): The sport seen from outside the
  field. Strategy, systems, ideas. The protagonist changes how the game is played, not just
  how they play it.
- **Biographical sports** (Ali, Raging Bull, The Fighter): The sport is one element of a
  full life. The personal drama is as important as the athletic drama. Often darker and more
  complex than pure sports drama.

Confirm the sport and the specific tone with the user. A Rocky and a Raging Bull are both
boxing movies the way a candle and a forest fire are both flames.
