Gary Smith (sportswriter)

Gary Smith (born October 27, 1953)[1] is an American sportswriter. He is best known for his lengthy human interest stories in Sports Illustrated, where he worked from 1983 to 2013.[2]

Career

Smith worked as a sportswriter for the Wilmington News Journal, the Philadelphia Daily News, the New York Daily News, and Inside Sports before joining Sports Illustrated.[3] His writing has also appeared in Time, Rolling Stone, and Esquire.[4]

For many years, Smith's role as senior writer at Sports Illustrated has been to write four lengthy feature articles per year, most of which are in-depth personality profiles.[3][4] His wife, Sally, has described his motivation as follows: "He is not satisfied with putting facts together. He wants to understand what is the core conflict that has driven that person. He hopes to tell a secret that a person might not be aware of."[5] Several of Smith's subjects have attested to his profound insight.[6]

Smith has received many awards and honors for his work at Sports Illustrated. He won the National Magazine Award for non-fiction, the magazine equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize, a record four times and was a finalist for the award a record ten times.[2][6] His stories have appeared in The Best American Sports Writing series a record 12 times.[4] Some of his literary peers have called him "the best magazine writer in America"[5][7] and "America's best sportswriter".[7] He also has been cited as a role model by younger sportswriters.[8][9]

Bibliography

Smith has published two books; both are collections of his magazine features:

References

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