Neil Harman

Neil Harman
Born (1957-04-09) 9 April 1957
Nationality British
Occupation Journalist; author
Known for

The Times tennis correspondent

Wimbledon Annual writer

Neil Harman (born 9 April 1957) is the former chief tennis correspondent for The Times. Previously, Harman was football and tennis correspondent for The Daily Mail and tennis correspondent for the Sunday Telegraph.

Career

Journalist

Harman started his journalistic career at the Evening Echo (Southend) and later worked for the Birmingham Evening Mail. In 2002, Harman was appointed chief tennis correspondent for The Times.[1] In 2007, he became the first tennis journalist to be awarded the Sports Journalists' Association's "Sports News Reporter of the Year" award.[2] Neil also was the recipient of the ATP's Ron Bookman Award for Media Excellence in 2005. Neil is a past chairman of the Lawn Tennis Writers' Association and a former president of the International Tennis Writers Association.[3]

Harman has also written for ProTennisCoach.com, the tennis coaching website of Roger Rasheed, Paul Annacone, Brad Gilbert and Darren Cahill.[4]

Harman coined the term "Spice Boys" in a Daily Mail piece published in March 1997 to describe a group of high-profile footballers playing for Liverpool F.C. in the mid-to-late 1990s.[5]

Author

Since 2004, Harman has written the Wimbledon Annual: the official publication of the Grand Slam tournament.[6] Neil co-wrote the Davis Cup The Year in Tennis publication until 2006.

In 1999, Harman published an account of the rivalry between Tim Henman and Greg Rusedski over the preceding year. With David Beckham, Neil wrote Beckham's official biography.[7] Harman has also written Court Confidential, an 'insider' account of the tennis world, published in 2013. Neil also assisted Andy Murray in the publication of his biography Andy Murray: Seventy-Seven: My Road to Wimbledon Glory.

Plagiarism

In July 2014 it was revealed that Harman had plagiarized material for the official Wimbledon yearbook, which he had written since 2004. Harman admitted the allegation and subsequently resigned from the International Tennis Writers Association.[8][9] Harman was suspended from The Times in mid-2014.[10]

References

External links

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