Page 1: | Front page | Photo: Niels Nyholm |
Page 2: | Refreshing an old love affair Editorial |
Page 3-5: | Licence to speak A prominent doping fighter, Italy's Sandro Donati, was almost banned from speaking. Next step: Gene doping Genetic manipulation is an impending reality in sports. |
Page 6-7: | Power struggle WADA's president, Dick Pound, urged governments to support sport's anti-doping battle. |
Page 8-9: | The man they love to hate British reporter Andrew Jenning is gaining ground in the IOC he whips. |
Page 10-11: | Corruption in FIFA German sports editors Kistner and Weinreich hit hard on world football's establisment. | |
Page 12-13: | Wanted: More reform Norway's IOC-member Gerhard Heiberg pleads for continued democratisation. | |
Page 14: | Optimism under pressure Two anti-drug officers fought hard for letting optimism prevail. | |
Page 15: | Danger zone Eating disorders are widespread in elite sports, told Jorunn Sundgott-Borgen. | |
Page 16: | Bingo Painter, poet, philosopher, tennis player - at the age of 72, Torben Ulrich, is a true sports artist. | |
Page 17: | Money at risk Governments might withdraw their support to sport, warned the Danish Minister of Culture. | |
Page 18-19: | The bidding game The bonanza of televised sport poses a threat to democracy, said two of three media experts. | |
Page 20-21: | Not for the public eye Websites owned by big clubs could threaten sport in public media, says BBC's Pete Clifton. Ethics in business Sponsors work with ethical standards - why don't sports organisations? That was the question raised by Carlsberg's sponsor director. | |
Page 22-23: | Money in - values out English soccer culture has been wiped out by commercialisation, and many other countries feel the heat of a new professional sports structure. | |
Page 24: | Unequal match African football lovers read more about Manchester United than about their local teams. Why? asks IOC director Fekrou Kidané. | |
Page 25: | Exploitation or mutually beneficial business? Women demand their place in sport. | |
Page 26: | Mass sports rather than medals Third World countries should focus on people's sport, says economy professor Wladimir Andreff. | |
Page 27: | Power in hands of agents African track and field talents are fair game for European money makers, says experts. Broad ranging solution. | |
Page 28: | Failing integration Elite sport doesn't serve racial integration, says US professor John Hoberman. | |
Page 29: | Winning sport losing ground Winning sport is becoming a risky business for African leaders, concludes Terry Monnington, expert in African sports. | |
Page 30-31: | The many we's in sport The troll, the golem and the joker: Key figures in sport according to Dr. Phil Henning Eichberg. | |
Page 32: | The price of protest Canada's Giles Néron paid a high price for his fight for fair play. | |
Page 33: | The daily sport: A gift to the media Football for fun and Balkan democracy. | |
Page 34-35: | Facts and quotes | |
Page 36: | Contents | |
|
Click here to get the entire magazine, pp 1-36 = 4,6 MB |