Establishment There were two previous magazines named
Sports Illustrated before the current magazine was launched on August 9, 1954. In 1936,
Stuart Scheftel created
Sports Illustrated with a target market of sportsmen. He published the magazine monthly from 1936 to 1942. The magazine focused on golf, tennis, and skiing with articles on the major sports. He then sold the name to Dell Publications, which released
Sports Illustrated in 1949 and this version lasted six issues before closing. Dell's version focused on major sports (baseball, basketball, boxing) and competed on magazine racks against
Sports and other monthly sports magazines. During the 1940s, these magazines were monthly, which prevented them from covering current events. There was no large-base, general, weekly sports magazine with a national following on actual active events. It was then that
Time patriarch
Henry Luce began considering whether his company should attempt to fill that gap. At the time, many believed sports was beneath the attention of serious journalism and did not think sports news could fill a weekly magazine, especially during the winter. A number of advisers to Luce, including
Life magazine's Ernest Havemann, tried to kill the idea, but Luce, who was not a sports fan, decided the time was right. Luce and editors of the planned magazine met in 1954 at
Pine Lakes Country Club, the oldest golf course in
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. The course's pro shop has a plaque mentioning the meetings, and the plaque also states that the first issue was given to the course. It is on display there. Myrtle Beach Area Golf Course Owners Association executive director Tracy Conner credits the magazine with making Myrtle Beach a golf destination. Many at
Time-Life scoffed at Luce's idea; in his
Pulitzer Prize–winning biography,
Luce and His Empire,
W. A. Swanberg wrote that the company's intellectuals dubbed the proposed magazine "Muscle", "Jockstrap", and "Sweat Socks". Launched on August 9, 1954, it was not profitable (and would not be for 12 years) and not particularly well-run at first, but Luce's timing was good. The popularity of spectator sports in the United States was about to explode, and that popularity came to be driven largely by three things: economic prosperity, television, and
Sports Illustrated. The early issues of the magazine seemed caught between two opposing views of its audience. Much of the subject matter was directed at upper-class activities such as
yachting,
polo and
safaris, but upscale would-be
advertisers were unconvinced that
sports fans were a significant part of their market.
Color printing In 1965,
offset printing began. This allowed the color pages of the magazine to be printed overnight, not only producing crisper and brighter images, but also finally enabling the editors to merge the best color with the latest news. By 1967, the magazine was printing 200 pages of "fast color" a year; in 1983,
SI became the first American full-color newsweekly. An intense rivalry developed between
photographers, particularly
Walter Iooss and
Neil Leifer, to get a decisive cover shot that would be on newsstands and in mailboxes only a few days later. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, during
Gilbert Rogin's term as Managing Editor, the feature stories of
Frank Deford became the magazine's anchor. "Bonus pieces" on
Pete Rozelle,
Woody Hayes,
Bear Bryant,
Howard Cosell and others became some of the most quoted sources about these figures, and Deford established a reputation as one of the best writers of the time.
Expansion of sports coverage After more than a decade of steady losses, the magazine's fortunes finally turned around in the 1960s when
Andre Laguerre became its managing editor. A European correspondent for Time, Inc., who later became chief of the Time-Life news bureaux in Paris and London (for a time he ran both simultaneously), Laguerre attracted Henry Luce's attention in 1956 with his singular coverage of the
Winter Olympic Games in
Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, which became the core of
SI's coverage of those games. In May 1956, Luce brought Laguerre to New York to become the assistant managing editor of the magazine. He was named managing editor in 1960, and he more than doubled the circulation by instituting a system of departmental editors, redesigning the internal format, and inaugurating the unprecedented use in a news magazine of full-color photographic coverage of the week's sports events. He was also one of the first to sense the rise of national interest in professional
football. Laguerre also instituted the innovative concept of one long story at the end of every issue, which he called the "bonus piece". These well-written, in-depth articles helped to distinguish
Sports Illustrated from other sports publications, and helped launch the careers of such legendary writers as
Frank Deford, who in March 2010 wrote of Laguerre, "He smoked cigars and drank Scotch and made the sun move across the heavens ... His genius as an editor was that he made you want to please him, but he wanted you to do that by writing in your own distinct way." Laguerre is also credited with the conception and creation of the annual
Swimsuit Issue. In 1984,
Mark Mulvoy became the youngest
managing editor in the magazine's history. He sought for
Sports Illustrated "to be the conscience of sports" through
investigative journalism. established
Sports Illustrated Kids for a younger audience, and doubled the swimsuit issue to 40 pages. The swimsuit issue became an annual special edition, and profits for
Sports Illustrated more than quadrupled. In 1990, Time Inc. merged with
Warner Communications to form the media conglomerate
Time Warner.
Sports Illustrated acquired FanNation.com in 2007 to compete in the
Web 2.0 market; the site
aggregated sports news and allowed
user-generated content. In 2014, Time Inc. was spun off from Time Warner.
Sale to Authentic Brands Group, Maven In 2018,
Meredith Corporation acquired parent company
Time Inc. Meredith planned to sell
Sports Illustrated due to not aligning with its lifestyle properties.
Authentic Brands Group announced its intent to acquire
Sports Illustrated for $110 million the next year, stating that it would leverage its brand and other assets for new opportunities that "stay close to the DNA and the heritage of the brand." Upon the announcement, Meredith would enter into a licensing agreement to continue as publisher of the
Sports Illustrated editorial operations for at least the next two years. In June 2019, the rights to publish the
Sports Illustrated editorial operations were licensed to the digital media company theMaven, Inc. under a 10-year contract, with
Ross Levinsohn as CEO. The company had backed a bid by
Junior Bridgeman to acquire
SI. In preparation for the closure of the sale to ABG and Maven,
The Wall Street Journal reported that there would be
Sports Illustrated employee layoffs, which was confirmed after the acquisition had closed. In October 2019, editor-in-chief Chris Stone stepped down. Later that month,
Sports Illustrated announced its hiring of veteran college sports writer
Pat Forde. In January 2020, it announced an editorial partnership with
The Hockey News, focusing on syndication of NHL-related coverage.''
In 2021, it announced a similar partnership with Morning Read
for golf coverage, with its website being merged into that of Sports Illustrated''. It also partnered with
iHeartMedia to distribute and co-produce
podcasts. In September 2021, Maven, now known as The Arena Group, acquired the New Jersey–based sports news website
The Spun, which would integrate into
Sports Illustrated. In 2022, ABG announced several non-editorial ventures involving the
Sports Illustrated brand, including an apparel line for
JCPenney "inspired by iconic moments in sports" (it was not the brand's first foray into clothing, as it launched a branded swimsuit line in conjunction with its
Swimsuit Issue in 2018), and
resort hotels in
Orlando and
Punta Cana. In September 2023, it expanded its resorts name licensing through a new partnership with
Travel + Leisure. On November 27, 2023,
Futurism published an article alleging that
Sports Illustrated was publishing AI-generated articles credited to authors who were also AI-generated; the latter practice apparently extended to their profile photos, which the website alleged were sourced from online marketplaces selling such photos. After
Futurism reached out to The Arena Group, the magazine purportedly removed some of the implicated writers and republished their articles under other AI-generated authors with notes disclaiming its staff's involvement. In response to the report, a spokesperson for
Sports Illustrated claimed that the affected articles were product reviews written without the involvement of AI by AdVon Commerce, a third-party company who they claimed used pseudonyms to "protect author privacy" and had already severed ties with; meanwhile, writers and editors at the magazine sharply criticized the alleged practices. Two weeks later, on January 19, Authentic Brands Group terminated its licensing agreement. As a result, The Arena Group announced that it would lay off the entire
Sports Illustrated staff. In March 2024, Authentic Brands Group licensed the publishing rights to
Minute Media in a 10-year deal, jointly announcing that the print and digital editions would be revived by rehiring some of the editorial staff. In August 2024, Minute Media and
RTA Media Holdings (and RTA's brand
Racing America) entered into a partnership, forming
Racing America on SI. This partnership allows Racing America's coverage of
NASCAR and grassroots racing to be presented to a wider audience through Sports Illustrated's platforms. ==Regular segments==