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Books & arts
Time, gentlemen
Jock Given
5 August 2024
Have we reached “Peak Djokovic”?
Books & arts
Reading the play
Richard Evans
2 August 2024
How the World Game restored my love of literature
Essays & reportage
Olympic origins
Jock Given
20 March 2024
Queensland premier Steven Miles is learning an old lesson about sporting venues: sometimes it is best to love the ones you have
International
Ashes to ashes
Rodney Tiffen
9 February 2024
Will burgeoning cricket franchises kill the institutions they rely on?
Correspondents
Rolling with the waves
Hamish McDonald
24 November 2023
The Solomon Islands prime minister has played off China and the West remarkably well
National affairs
Ruffling the hair apparent
Rodney Tiffen
2 November 2022
Once a key player in Rupert Murdoch’s Australian empire, Ken Cowley ended up on the outer
Books & arts
Field of dreams
Dean Ashenden
27 September 2022
Does sport have anything to teach Australian schools?
Books & arts
On quitting
Jock Given
5 September 2022
Does bowing out involve a kind of “self-discipline normally associated with persistence”?
Essays & reportage
Blood in the water
Nick Richardson
6 August 2021
Sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya’s bid for asylum in Tokyo is a reminder of how the 1956 Melbourne Games were riven by politics
National affairs
Dr X meets his end
Frank Bongiorno
12 June 2021
Buying the Sydney Swans bolstered the swashbuckling 1980s image of medical entrepreneur Geoffrey Edelsten, who died this week
Correspondents
Champions no more
Klaus Neumann
13 April 2021
Our correspondent detects parallels between the fortunes of German football and the travails of the Merkel government
National affairs
Speaking freely in special clothing
Graeme Orr
25 June 2020
What happens when sport moves from the back pages to the front?
Correspondents
Tokyo 2020 vs Covid-19
David Hayes
26 February 2020
Japan approaches its Olympics across a tightrope of risk
From the archive
The year the world came to call
Sara Dowse
6 November 2019
Melbourne’s Olympic year sums up why the fifties weren’t as dull as you might think
Books & arts
Predictable pile-ons
Julie Rigg
9 August 2019
Cinema
| The mob turns nasty in
Diego Maradona
and
The Final Quarter
Recovered Lives
Pitch and prejudice
Madeleine Lindsell
8 March 2019
Helen Australia (Nellie) Gregory (1863–1950) and Louisa Caroline Gregory (1865–1903), cricketers
Recovered Lives
Fearless on ice
Ross Carpenter
7 March 2019
Sadie Cambridge (1899–1968), ice-skating champion and coach
Books & arts
Collective madness
Ryan Cropp
14 August 2018
Books
| George Megalogenis gives a vivid account of the development Australian rules football. But what does it mean for politics?
Correspondents
“I am German when we win, but I am an immigrant when we lose”
Klaus Neumann
12 August 2018
Why did Mesut Özil, one of the most talented footballers of his generation, decide to quit playing for his home country?
National affairs
It’s not (just) cricket
Rodney Tiffen
7 July 2018
Are we seeing the destruction by stealth of the anti-siphoning rules?
From the archive
The tournament that takes over a city
Tim Colebatch
4 February 2018
Despite the sceptics, Melbourne’s Australian Open has become the biggest and best on the Grand Slam circuit
Books & arts
Passion play at Kardinia Park
Brett Evans
26 October 2016
Books
| James Button’s tale of a football club made good has all the elements of classical drama
Essays & reportage
Charles Anton, cultural agent
Philipp Strobl
21 October 2016
Postwar migrants brought from Europe ideas that helped shape Australian culture and industry, including the country’s early ski resorts
Essays & reportage
Green and pleasant memories
Tom Bamforth
11 August 2016
Tom Bamforth
discovers the afterlife of Melbourne’s Olympic village
Books & arts
Making history in Rio
Jane Goodall
8 August 2016
Television
| It’s best to be in two minds about the Olympics, writes
Jane Goodall
National affairs
For football, the future has already arrived
Brett Hutchins
23 June 2015
Talks between the Australian Football League, the National Rugby League and the biggest digital companies highlight the pressures on free-to-air broadcasters, writes
Brett Hutchins
Correspondents
Glasgow’s race for gold
David Hayes
24 July 2014
The Commonwealth Games meet a host city in flux, says
David Hayes
Essays & reportage
Germany on song
Klaus Neumann
24 July 2014
Germany and its football team have evolved in tandem over the past six-and-a-half decades.
Klaus Neumann
traces the story from the 1954 “Miracle of Bern” to…
Correspondents
Waiting for England
David Hayes
12 June 2014
The identity of Britain’s largest nation is a live question during every World Cup, says
David Hayes
Books & arts
Mortgaged to the machine
Jane Goodall
20 May 2014
What is the cost of feeding our national appetites?
Jane Goodall
watches ABC TV one Monday night
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