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Athletics Weekly

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
UK sports magazine

Athletics Weekly
Athletics Weekly masthead
EditorJason Henderson
CategoriesTrack and field
FrequencyMonthly
PublisherAthletics Weekly Ltd
Founded1945
First issueDecember 1945
CountryUnited Kingdom
Based inFarnham, Surrey
LanguageEnglish
WebsiteAthletics Weekly
ISSN0004-6671

AW (formerlyAthletics Weekly) is a monthlytrack and field magazine published in theUnited Kingdom by Athletics Weekly Limited. The magazine covers news, results, fixtures, coaching and product advice for all aspects oftrack and field,cross-country,road racing andrace walking. Between 1950 and 2020, it was calledAthletics Weekly and was published weekly.

In addition to its main website,Athletics Weekly partners with the UK Athletics sitePower Of 10 and owns records data websiteGBR Athletics.[1]

Jimmy Green years (1945 to 1987)

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The magazine was started as a monthly by PW "Jimmy" Green in 1945, with the first few issues produced from the back bedroom of a bungalow inKent which Green shared with his wife, Pam.

With post-war paper rationing still in force, Green used a mixture of determination and devilment to launch the first, self-published edition. It was numbered Volume II Issue I, but this was a deliberate error to fool the government into thinking the magazine had existed before the war. There was, of course, never a Volume I.

Green was also told by athletics and publishing experts that the idea would never work. “I thanked them for their advice and completely ignored it. I was pig headed,” said Green. Green's magazine went weekly in January 1950, published on Fridays, and has never failed to come out since.

In 1968, Green (who died in 1998, aged 88) passed the editorship to the enthusiastic and knowledgeable Mel Watman, who in a near-20-year reign steered the title to some success and continued to build its reputation for accuracy and authority.

Independently published by Kent Art Printers in a distinctive A5, pocket-sized format, the magazine reached its peak of popularity in the mid-1980s - coinciding with the marathon running boom following the firstLondon Marathon in 1981 - selling some 25,000 copies per week.

Emap years (1987 to 1999)

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The title was bought in 1987 byEmap and moved fromKent toPeterborough, where the management sought to repeat the publishing success of itsSmash Hits pop title and re-launched AW as an A4 title aimed at teenagers. Emap's youthful relaunch was very unpopular with traditional readers and damaged the magazine's reputation.

Mel Watman remained in a consultant role until he jointly launched ‘Athletics Today’, at which time the only other pre-Emap member of staff also left the magazine, after a marketing leaflet flagged him up as having joined ‘Athletics Today’ while still employed by Emap. New members of journalistic staff included UK international athletesPaul Larkins and Martin Gillingham and former English Schools Cross Country top 300 finisher and launch editor of North-East athletics magazine ‘InForm’ David Ogle. By late 1989, one-third of sales had been lost. Keith Nelson, Emap's choice as editor, moved on to edit ‘Country Walking’ magazine and subsequently launch ‘Trail Walker’ magazine with Emap, the latter which Ogle joined, subsequently edited and changed its name to ‘Trail’.

Aware of its loyal following's disgruntlement with the re-launch ofAthletics Weekly, in 1989Eddie Kulukundis funded the launch of a rival title,Athletics Today, jointly edited by Randall Northam and Mel Watman: for the first time in its existence,Athletics Weekly now faced competition.

Despite the sport's continued successes through the 1990s and the ultimate demise of its rival in 1993,Athletics Weekly struggled in vain to regain its reputation, even though results were published only days after events took place - whereas results in the original title could be published weeks afterwards.

Descartes years (1999 to 2010)

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After a decade's ownership, Emap admitted defeat and in April 1999 licensed the title to Descartes Publishing, a company established by businessman and athletics enthusiast Matthew Fraser Moat for the purpose. Descartes kept the title in Peterborough and went on to purchase the title outright in 2003. In February 2005 the magazine was awarded Sports BrandLeader status[2]and in December 2005 Athletics Weekly celebrated its 60th birthday with a charity calendar[3][4]and a special 100 page edition.[5]

In 2006 the title changed its publication date back to a Thursday, and increased in size to 64 pages a week; in 2007 an online digital version was launched and in 2009Athletics Weekly became the first magazine in the world to have all its content commercially available on theiPhone.[6][7] In 2010 the AW app was relaunched for theiPad.[8]

A sister company,Athletics Data Limited, was formed to manage the commercial rights ofAthletics Weekly's results data and in 2009Athletics Data was appointed to runPower of 10, a statistical website, forUK Athletics.[9]

Taking advantage of the renewed interest in the sport generated byLondon 2012 andUsain Bolt, the magazine was "highly commended" in the "Brand Extension of The Year" category at the 2009 Independent Publisher Awards[10] and won a "Media Pioneer Award" at the 2010 Specialist Media Show.[11]

In January 2010, the magazine celebrated 60 years as a weekly magazine.

Athletics Weekly years (2010 to date)

[edit]

In May 2010, ownership of the magazine passed to a new company "Athletics Weekly Limited", with a new publisher Richard Hughes.[12] In 2015 the magazine was bought byThe Great Run Company and they appointed 1984 Olympic 3000m silver medallistWendy Sly as managing director.[13]

In 2020, The Great Run Company sold Athletics Weekly and it was bought by the 21six Group. Publication of the magazine was briefly suspended during the early months of the Covid pandemic and while the magazine changed ownership, but 21six then relaunched the magazine as a monthly title in October 2020.[14] Since 2020 Euan Crumley has edited the monthly print magazine with long-time editor of the weekly publication, Jason Henderson, head of digital.

Editors

[edit]
  • PW "Jimmy" Green - 1945-1968
  • Mel Watman - 1968-1986
  • Barry Trowbridge - 1986-1987
  • Keith Nelson - 1987-1989
  • Steven Downes - 1989-1991
  • Paul Richardson - 1991-1992
  • David Clarke - 1993-1994
  • Paul Larkins - 1994-1995
  • Nigel Walsh - 1995-2001
  • Jason Henderson - 2001 to 2020
  • Euan Crumley - 2020 to date

References

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  1. ^"Records".thepowerof10.info.
  2. ^PRNewsWire (2005),Following IOC Visit, the Sport Industry Celebrates UK's Sport BrandLeaders, retrieved6 May 2010
  3. ^Daily Telegraph (29 November 2005),"All Change for the Calendar Girls",The Daily Telegraph, London, retrieved6 May 2010
  4. ^Daily Mirror (2005),Pin-Ups of Track and Field, retrieved6 May 2010
  5. ^IAAF (2005),Athletics Weekly celebrates 60th birthday, retrieved6 May 2010
  6. ^InPublishing (2009),Athletics Weekly quick off the blocks with app, retrieved6 May 2010
  7. ^What's New In Publishing (2009),Athletics Weekly notches up a First with Magazine App, retrieved6 May 2010[permanent dead link]
  8. ^InPublishing (2010),Athletics Weekly on the iPad, retrieved6 May 2010
  9. ^UK Athletics (2009),New Power of 10 Partnership, retrieved6 May 2010
  10. ^Press Gazette (2009),Independent Publisher Awards, archived fromthe original on 16 June 2011, retrieved6 May 2010
  11. ^Specialist Media Show (2010),Media Pioneer Awards, archived fromthe original on 7 May 2010, retrieved6 May 2010
  12. ^Athletics Weekly (2010),Athletics Weekly now under new management, retrieved6 May 2010[permanent dead link]
  13. ^"Wendy Sly to head up the Great Run Company's publishing team - Athletics Weekly".Athletics Weekly. 20 October 2015. Retrieved20 January 2016.
  14. ^"AW relaunches under new ownership".AW. 28 September 2020. Retrieved20 October 2022.

External links

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