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Sports Illustrated senior writer Scott Price discusses his Sportsman of the Year subject Dwyane Wade, layoffs at SI, the Duke lacrosse case, and baseball in Cuba.
Writer Jack Cavanaugh talks about Gene Tunney, history's 'brainiest' heavyweight champion and twice a victor over Jack Dempsey.
Katie Hnida discusses the highs and lows of her quest to become the first woman to play D-I football.
Pickup guru Neil Strauss, author of The Game, brings his wooing advice to Copenhagen, along with a new Danish translation.
Joe Lapchick was a star in the earliest years of pro basketball, coached successfully at St. John's, helped integrate the NBAand is mostly forgotten today. His biographer talks about his eight-year project to revive Lapchick's name.
For the New York Giants' first 81 years, Wellington Mara played a host of invaluable roles. He also helped establish the NFL's pre-eminence. His biographer tells Gelf about Mara's life and legacy.
Author Cecil Harris talks to Gelf about breaking the color barrier in the NHL, why the league hasn't yet found its Tiger Woods, and the NBA's perverse relationship with prison culture.
The Wall Street Journal's Joshua Prager exposed treachery and secrets in the heart of America's favorite pastime in The Echoing Green. He tells Gelf how he got one of baseball's biggest stories ever, responds to his critics, and exposes his lust for baseball memorabilia.
Brad Snyder, author of A Well-Paid Slave, tells Gelf how the legal fight for free agency has made baseball better, how he came to terms with the flaws of his book's hero, and why this fall's World Series was a publicity boon.
Sports Illustrated's Jack McCallum wrote a book about his season on the bench of the Phoenix Suns. He tells Gelf why Steve Nash's race didn't win him the MVP award, what he really thinks of Charles Barkley, and why he'd like to see an NBA team in Vegas.
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