After earning her master's degree, she began sports reporting and news anchoring across
the U.S. in Montana, Alabama and Florida.
"One of my biggest motivators when I come to work is making my parents proud because
they've done so much for me," she says.
After one of her stories was featured locally on CBS News, she was so excited that
her parents could finally have easier access to watch how years of her hard work has
paid off.
"It was definitely a grind," she says.
During graduate school, Sutton's hard work on and off the field allowed her to balance
the hectic life of being student athlete. She attended night classes after long soccer
practices that ended late in the afternoon, worked on campus sideline reporting for
UNT athletics' Mean Green productions, served as a teaching assistant and completed
several internships during graduate school.
"It was definitely a challenge," she says. "But it prepared me for life not only as
a journalist but as an adult."
She was inspired by two faculty members. Senior lecturer Brittany McElroy's background in television news and senior lecturer Carolyn Brown's documentary news style offered Sutton different perspectives and approaches to journalism
that she applies to her work today. Sutton took their undergraduate classes even as
a master's student and consistently attended their office hours to shape her career
goals.
"It's cool to have both of them as mentors in my corner," she says. "People who have
done the local news grind know what that looks like and are so open to providing insight."
Sutton says that these mentors and Mean Green athletics' emphasis on "building champions and preparing leaders" is what makes her proud to be a UNT alumna.
Ever since she first kicked a soccer ball at age 4, sports have always been a big
part of her life. In fact, athletic talent runs through her whole family -- her dad
played football in the Canadian Football League, her mom played college basketball
and her siblings played sports at the collegiate level.
"Sports are such an integral part of our family life that it was just so natural to
transition into a role where I was working in a sports environment," she says.
What she loves about sports journalism, about being a female reporter in a male-dominated
industry, is her ability to provide a different perspective and give a voice to those
athletes who might feel like they don't have one.
"Women are so much more instinctual to the emotional side of things, and it makes
the athletes more comfortable to open up about things people don't consider in their
lives," she says.
While some audiences have questioned her expertise as a woman in the sports world
she says, "you just have to have thick skin," and advises other women to "not buy
into it and roll with the punches." Sutton says that at the end of the day she knows
that she has the respect of the people around her and that's all she needs.
Reminding people that "athletes are people first" is something she has always stood
by because people often forget this aspect of sports. Sutton's introspective approach
to journalism begins with asking players not just about the X's and O's of the game,
but about their personal well-being and lives behind the scenes, giving them a breath
of fresh air and a chance to relax off the field.
"We will always need good journalists in this industry, and I think this generation
has an opportunity to bring a unique perspective and talents," she says.