My Story
“My name is Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., and my name is also Abdul Kareem, but I’ll explain about that much later.” A three-part personal essay on basketball, family, race and religion.
“My name is Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., and my name is also Abdul Kareem, but I’ll explain about that much later.” A three-part personal essay on basketball, family, race and religion.
Jack Olsen, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Sports Illustrated Nov 1969 1h30min Permalink
After the 1919 Black Sox scandal, Ring Lardner, America’s first great sportswriter, walked away from the game.
Douglas Goetsch The American Scholar Apr 2011 25min Permalink
The story of the 2010 NCAA championship game between Duke and Butler, and what would have been greatest shot in college basketball history.
Tim Layden Sports Illustrated Mar 2011 25min Permalink
On Baylor’s freshman basketball star Perry Jones and how the new era of one-season careers has changed the landscape of college basketball.
A profile of the highest paid coach in college basketball. A pioneer of one-and-done recruiting, Calipari is also the only coach in NCAA history to have two runs to the Final Four removed from the record books for rules violations.
S.L. Price Sports Illustrated Mar 2011 30min Permalink
The story of Nate Fleming—walk-on point guard at Oklahoma State, fan favorite, golden child—and the 2001 plane crash that took his life.
Tom Friend ESPN Jan 2011 Permalink
Guz Dominguez says he was trying to help baseball players from Cuba; the U.S. government says he was smuggling athletes. The truth is more complicated.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Jul 2008 1h5min Permalink
A 15-year-old dies shortly after collapsing from heatstroke during a high school football practice. Was it has coach’s fault? The state thought so, and put him on trial.
Thomas Lake Sports Illustrated Dec 2010 30min Permalink
A reporter heads to Istanbul, where Iverson is playing minor league hoops in a 3,200-seat arena and hanging out at T.G.I. Friday’s.
Robert Huber Philadelphia Magazine Dec 2010 Permalink
A profile of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, written at the midpoint of his career.
John Papanek Sports Illustrated Mar 1980 20min Permalink
A profile of Yao Ming published during his second season in the NBA.
Peter Hessler New Yorker Dec 2003 30min Permalink
Brian Windhorst was one of the first reporters to cover LeBron James. He was there in high school. There at the draft. There in Cleveland. And now he’s there in Miami, though the relationship is far from what it used to be.
A profile of Auburn quarterback Cameron Newton, junior college transfer and Heisman Trophy frontrunner.
Lars Anderson Sports Illustrated Nov 2010 10min Permalink
A profile of Ernie Adams, Bill Belichick’s mysterious right hand man.
Wright Thompson ESPN Feb 2008 15min Permalink
The story of a young man killed in Juarez.
Eric Nusbaum Pitchers and Poets Mar 2009 Permalink
Pitching a no-hitter in the middle of a multi-day acid bender was only one of Dock Ellis’ many amazing exploits.
Kliph Nesteroff WFMU Blog Sep 2009 25min Permalink
Or, the perils of promoting a middle schooler’s basketball skills. An excerpt from Play Their Hearts Out.
George Dohrmann Sports Illustrated Sep 2010 Permalink
Ten years ago, a pair of legendary TV executives decided it was time to change the formula for football broadcasting. One bet on Dennis Miller. The other bankrolled Vince McMahon and the XFL.
Julian Rubinstein New York Times Magazine Sep 2000 15min Permalink
Long before he lied about taking steroids and was indicted for perjury, Clemens was just a good ol’ boy from Texas with a world-class workout regimen.
Pat Jordan New York Times Magazine May 2001 15min Permalink
An interview with Sandy Koufax on “the management of excellence.”
Jack Olsen, Sandy Koufax Sports Illustrated Dec 1965 30min Permalink
How Madden NFL went from a programmer’s childhood dream to a $3 billion business.
Patrick Hruby ESPN Jul 2010 30min Permalink
Kevin Hart wanted a scholarship to play Division I college football. It didn’t come. So he made one up–and called a press conference.
Tom Friend ESPN Jan 2009 35min Permalink
Why all soccer fans should root for Holland to lose to Spain.
Brian Phillips Slate Jul 2010 Permalink
Ty Cobb, who would go on to be the greatest baseball player of his time, was a 17-year-old minor league prospect when his mother shot and killed his father at home in Georgia.
K. Rheinheimer Blue Ridge Country Jun 2010 Permalink
Argentina’s Lio Messi, the best soccer player on the planet, stands all of 5’7” and needed growth-hormone injections to get there.
S.L. Price Sports Illustrated May 2010 20min Permalink