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The Best American Sports Writing 2017

Page 48

by Glenn Stout


  RAMONA SHELBURNE

  Mamba Out. ESPN.com, April 19

  ALAN SHIPNUCK

  What Happened? Sports Illustrated, April 4

  ROBERT SILVERMAN

  Gay for Pay. Vocativ, June 7

  FLOYD SKLOOT

  He Had a Falcon. Boulevard, Fall

  PAUL SOLOTAROFF

  Caught Looking. Men’s Journal, October

  WILLY STALEY

  Thrashed. California Sunday Magazine, April 3

  BARRETT SWANSON

  Audibles. Mississippi Review, Winter

  ROBERT TANNENBAUM

  The Life and Murder of Stella Walsh, Intersex Olympic Champion. Longreads, August

  TOMMY TOMLINSON

  Ichiro Suzuki, Still Connecting. ESPN.com, July 19

  TOM VERDUCCI

  The Voice of Baseball. Sports Illustrated, May 10

  REEVES WIEDEMAN

  Arrow Heads. Harper’s, July

  DANIEL WILCO

  The Boxer Who Was Accused of Murder—Twice. The Cauldron, May 25

  ANDREW ZALESKI

  Sky Pilot. Wired, September

  Visit www.hmhco.com to find all of the books in The Best American Series®.

  About the Editors

  HOWARD BRYANT, is a senior writer for ESPN.com and ESPN The Magazine. He has been the sports correspondent for National Public Radio’s Weekend Edition Saturday since 2006 and worked at several newspapers, including the Boston Herald and the Washington Post. A Boston native, Bryant is the author of Shut Out: A Story of Race and Baseball in Boston; Juicing the Game: Drugs, Power, and the Fight for the Soul of Major League Baseball; The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron; and the three-book Legends series for middle-grade readers. Bryant was a 2016 National Magazine Award finalist for commentary.

  GLENN STOUT, series editor, is the author of Young Woman and the Sea, Fenway 1912, and The Selling of the Babe. He has been the editor of The Best American Sports Writing since its inception in 1991. He lives in Vermont.

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  Footnotes

  * The concept of emotional branding goes way back. In 1929, the American Tobacco Company gave cigarettes they called “Torches of Freedom” to women before New York City’s Easter Sunday Parade. The stunt promoted female empowerment—women’s rights activists supported it—and the number of female smokers more than tripled over the next 12 years.

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  † Bob Costas, who hosts the pregame show for NBC’s Football Night in America, ripped these commercials in an interview with the New York Daily News, saying: “Yeah, that’s right, the first thing I think of when I hear about 25 percent to 30 percent, by the NFL’s own admission, of its players will have cognitive difficulties is ‘Football Is Family.’ ”

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  * They were talking about C. J. Spiller, a perpetual disappointment for fantasy football owners who has already played for three different teams this year. The aliens can have him.

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