Current:Home > InvestNew York Times to pull the plug on its sports desk and rely on The Athletic -WealthPro Academy
New York Times to pull the plug on its sports desk and rely on The Athletic
View
Date:2025-04-16 08:49:32
The New York Times will eliminate its 35-member sports desk and plans to rely on staff at The Athletic, a sports news startup the media outlet bought last year, for coverage on that topic, the paper announced Monday.
Two of the newspaper's top editors — Joe Kahn and Monica Drake — announced the changes Monday in a staff email, the Times reported. CEO Meredith Kopit Levien told staffers in a separate memo that current sports staff will be reassigned to different parts of the newsroom.
"Many of these colleagues will continue on their new desks to produce the signature general interest journalism about sports — exploring the business, culture and power structures of sports, particularly through enterprising reporting and investigations — for which they are so well known," Levien said in the memo.
Levien acknowledged the decision to axe the paper's sports desk may disappoint employees, but said "it is the right one for readers and will allow us to maximize the respective strengths of The Times' and The Athletic's newsrooms."
The company said no layoffs are planned as a result of the strategy shift, noting that newsroom managers will work with editorial staff who cover sports to find new roles.
The Times bought The Athletic in early 2022 for $550 million, when the startup had roughly 400 journalists out of a staff of 600. The Athletic has yet to turn a profit, the Times reported. The operation lost $7.8 million in the first quarter of 2023, although subscribers have grown from 1 million in January of last year to 3 million as of March 2023, according to the paper.
"We plan to focus even more directly on distinctive, high-impact news and enterprise journalism about how sports intersect with money, power, culture, politics and society at large," Kahn and Drake said in their memo. "At the same time, we will scale back the newsroom's coverage of games, players, teams and leagues."
With The Athletic's reporters producing most of the sports coverage, their bylines will appear in print for the first time, the Times said.
Unlike many local news outlets, the Times gained millions of subscribers during the presidency of Donald Trump and the COVID-19 pandemic. But it has been actively diversifying its coverage with lifestyle advice, games and recipes, to help counter a pullback from the politics-driven news traffic boom of 2020.
In May the Times reached a deal for a new contract with its newsroom union following more than two years of talks that included a 24-hour strike. The deal included salary increases, an agreement on hybrid work and other benefits.
Sports writers for The New York Times have won several Pulitzer Prizes over the years, including Arthur Daley in 1956 in the column, "Sports of the Times;" Walter Wellesley (Red) Smith in 1976 for commentary and Dave Anderson in 1981 for commentary.
— The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- In:
- The New York Times
Khristopher J. Brooks is a reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering business, consumer and financial stories that range from economic inequality and housing issues to bankruptcies and the business of sports.
TwitterveryGood! (39553)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- 'Big Brother' 2023 premiere: What to know about Season 25 house, start time, where to watch
- Group: DeSantis win in Disney lawsuit could embolden actions against journalists
- NASA reports unplanned 'communications pause' with historic Voyager 2 probe carrying 'golden record'
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- The stars of Broadway’s ‘Back to the Future’ musical happily speed into the past every night
- Folwell lends his governor’s campaign $1 million; Stein, Robinson still on top with money
- Gas prices up: Sticker shock hits pump as heat wave, oil prices push cost to 8-month high
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Judge denies Trump's bid to quash probe into efforts to overturn Georgia 2020 results
Ranking
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Mass shooting at Muncie, Indiana street party leaves one dead, multiple people wounded, police say
- Rapper G Herbo pleads guilty in credit card fraud scheme, faces up to 25 years in prison
- NASA rocket launch may be visible from 10 or more East Coast states: How to watch
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Ohio man convicted of abuse of corpse and evidence tampering 13 years after Kentucky teenager Paige Johnson disappeared
- Alabama health care providers sue over threat of prosecution for abortion help
- California juvenile hall on lockdown after disturbance of youth assaulting staff
Recommendation
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
6-year-old girl dead after being struck by family's boat at lake
Sam Asghari makes big 'Special Ops: Lioness' splash, jumping shirtless into swimming pool
Win, lose or draw: How USWNT can advance to World Cup knockout rounds, avoid embarrassment
Travis Hunter, the 2
Pee-wee Herman actor Paul Reubens dies from cancer at 70
Biden goes west to talk about his administration’s efforts to combat climate change
Haiti's gang violence worsens humanitarian crisis: 'No magic solution'