Corriere dello Sport - Stadium

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Corriere dello Sport - Stadium
Corrieredellosport.jpg
description daily
sports newspaper
publishing company SportNetwork
First edition October 20, 1924
Frequency of publication Monday - Sunday
Sold edition 240,738 copies
(Media Mobile)
Range 1.503 million readers
(Audipress 2005II)
Editor-in-chief Alessandro Vocalelli
editor Corriere dello Sport Srl
Web link www.corrieredellosport.it

Corriere dello Sport - Stadio is an Italian , a day appearing sports newspaper . After the Gazzetta dello Sport and before Tuttosport, it is the most widely read sports title in the country. Corriere dello Sport - Stadio appears in a national edition and seven regional editions for Rome and Lazio , Bologna and the surrounding area, Emilia-Romagna , Tuscany , Campania , Apulia , Sicily and Sardinia . Alessandro Vocalelli has been the editor-in-chief since August 2003 .

editor

Is published Stadio - Corriere dello Sport from the Corriere dello Sport Srl , which in turn Sports Network belongs, its director Roberto Amodei is. Tuttosport also belongs to the SportNetwork group .

Content

The newspaper is largely devoted to football , around half of the pages belong to Serie A , but there is also space for Serie B , Serie C and also Serie D as well as Futsal , known in Italy as Calcio a 5 . In the back you will find mostly reports on motorsport , cycling , basketball , volleyball and many other sports.

Circulation and range

The sold circulation is 295,139 on Mondays and 240,738 copies on the rest of the week. Corriere dello Sport - Stadio is read by one and a half million people, including around 167,000 women. The Monday edition reached 2.25 million readers, the other editions 1.37 million.

The number of copies reached a peak in 1978, with 752,000 copies sold nationwide, 492,000 in the south and 260,000 in the north. The newspaper achieved a sales record with 1,699,966 copies sold on Monday, July 12, 1982 after the Italian national soccer team had become world champions . That record was only broken 24 years later by the Gazzetta dello Sport when Italy won its fourth world title in football in 2006.

Internet

Corriere dello Sport - Stadio can be accessed on the Internet every day from 4 p.m. with the same content as the printed version; a one-time free registration is required for this. Access to the front page is possible from 7 a.m.

history

Corriere dello Sport - Stadio was created in 1977 from the merger of two newspapers. On the one hand there was Corriere dello Sport , founded in Bologna on October 20, 1924, which came out three times a week. Three years later the editorial office moved to Rome, the newspaper changed its name to Il Littoriale and appeared daily. The second merger partner was Stadio , founded in 1945, a daily newspaper from 1948 based in Bologna. Corriere dello Sport, which gave boxing a lot of space, and the Gazzetta , which was devoted to cycling , quickly spread nationwide, while Tuttosport and Stadio remained limited to their region of appearance. After the end of the Second World War, Il Littoriale returned to its original name Corriere dello Sport .

On September 11, 1977, on the initiative of the then owner of the Corriere Francesco Amodei, the newspaper published in Rome merged with Stadio , which appeared in Bologna. The aim was to bring the readership from the south together with those from the north. The new newspaper was called Corriere dello Sport - Stadio . The issues were distinguished by the color of the title. While the green stadium was in the foreground in the north, the red Corriere dello Sport in the south was in front of the stadium behind . The two editorial offices also merged, with the majority of the staff in Rome being taken over, while many editors in Bologna left the newspaper and joined the newspaper Il Resto del Carlino . As a result of the merger, Corriere dello Sport - Stadio had nationwide reach, with the two local titles Gazzetta dello Sport and Tuttosport being more important in the north and especially in Piedmont .

Editors-in-chief

  • 1942: Alberto Masprone
  • 1943: Umberto Guadagno
  • 1944: Pietro Petroselli
  • 1947: Bruno Roghi
  • 1960: Antonio Ghirelli
  • 1961: Luciano Oppo
  • 1972: Mario Gismondi
  • 1976: Giorgio Tosatti
  • 1986: Domenico Morace
  • 1991: Italo Cucci
  • 1995: Mario Sconcerti
  • 2000: Italo Cucci
  • 2002: Xavier Jacobelli
  • 2003: Alessandro Vocalelli

literature

  • Italo Cucci, Ivo Germano: Tribuna Stampa. Storia critica del giornalismo sportivo da Pindaro a Internet . Rome 2003, ISBN 88-8073-081-9 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Corriere dello Sport - Stadio - general information. ( Memento of the original from May 7, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. sportnetwork.it @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sportnetwork.it