The Body Issue Explained
The Body Issue |
Frequency: | Yearly |
Company: | ESPN |
Firstdate: | October 19, 2009 |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Website: | ESPN The Magazine |
Finaldate: | September 6, 2019 |
The Body Issue was an annual edition of ESPN The Magazine that featured dozens of athletes in nude and semi-nude photographs, which was intended to rival the annual Swimsuit Issue from Sports Illustrated. The first issue debuted on October 19, 2009. The 2009 edition had six alternative covers featuring Serena Williams (tennis), Carl Edwards (NASCAR), Adrian Peterson (NFL), Dwight Howard (NBA), Gina Carano (mixed martial arts) and Sarah Reinertsen (triathlons). The Serena Williams edition sold the most copies. The 2009 issue was a financial success, achieving double the normal edition sales, greater sales than any bi-weekly issue in over two years and 35 percent more ad sales than comparable issues, which led to plans for extended marketing of the 2010 edition. The edition included the regular sports coverage. In the bodies section athletes were featured on and off the field. Even a picture during a knee surgery was included. The "Bodies We Want" section was a feature of the best bodies in the world of sports all posed nude but with strategic coverage of private parts. Another section showed the damage done to the human body in athletics such as Laird Hamilton's cracked heel and Torry Holt's crooked middle finger. One action photo captured six members of Major League Soccer's D.C. United simulating a free kick defensive wall while covering their genitalia. The 2019 issue was announced as also being the final print edition of the magazine. It was said it would continue in a digital form but this did not materialize.
2009
Some of the 2009 covers were revealed on shows such Monday Night Football and Good Morning America. The 2009 edition included the following:
- Baseball: Joba Chamberlain, Nelson Cruz, Iván Rodríguez
- Basketball: Dwight Howard, Cappie Pondexter
- Beach volleyball: Carol Hamilton, Greg Hunter, Noah Kaiser, Eddie Matz, Michele Rauter, Tim Struby
- Boxing: Manny Pacquiao
- Figure skating: Johnny Weir
- Football: Casey Hampton, Torry Holt, Adrian Peterson
- Golf: Sandra Gal, Anna Grzebien, Christina Kim
- Gymnastics: Shawn Johnson
- Horse racing: Alex Solis
- Ice hockey: Zdeno Chára, Bill Guerin, Chris Higgins, Mike Komisarek, Sheldon Souray
- Mixed martial arts: Gina Carano, Randy Couture
- Rock climbing: Steph Davis
- Rowing: Susan Francia
- Short-track speed skating: Allison Baver
- Skiing: Kristi Leskinen, Julia Mancuso
- Soccer: Natasha Kai, Bryan Namoff, Oguchi Onyewu, Chris Pontius, Clyde Simms
- Softball: Jessica Mendoza
- Stock car racing: Carl Edwards, Mark Martin
- Sumo wrestling: Byambajav Ulambayaryn
- Surfing: Claire Bevilacqua, Laird Hamilton
- Swimming: Ryan Lochte
- Table tennis: Biljana "Biba" Golić
- Tennis: James Blake, Serena Williams
- Track and field: Michelle Carter, Lolo Jones, Sarah Reinertsen
- Weightlifting: Cheryl Haworth
2010
The 2010 edition included the following:
2011
The 2011 edition included the following:
2012
The 2012 issue featured the following athletes:
2013
The 2013 issue featured the following athletes:
2014
The 2014 issue featured the following athletes:[1]
2015
The 2015 issue featured the following athletes:[2]
2016
The 2016 issue featured the following athletes:
2017
The 2017 issue featured the following athletes:
- Baseball: Javier Baez
- Basketball: Isaiah Thomas, Nneka Ogwumike
- Figure skating: Ashley Wagner
- Football: Julian Edelman, Ezekiel Elliott, Zach Ertz
- Hockey: Brent Burns, Joe Thornton, US Women's National Ice Hockey Team (Brianna Decker, Kacey Bellamy, Meghan Duggan, Jocelyne Lamoureux, Monique Lamoureux, Alex Rigsby)
- Mixed martial arts: Michelle Waterson
- Rugby: Malakai Fekitoa
- Skiing: Gus Kenworthy
- Snowboarding: Kirstie Ennis
- Soccer: Julie Ertz
- Softball: AJ Andrews
- Tennis: Caroline Wozniacki
- Track and field: Novlene Williams-Mills
2018
The 2018 issue featured the following athletes:[3]
Bird and Rapinoe, who were photographed together, became the first same-sex couple to appear on the cover of the magazine.[4]
2019
The 2019 issue released on September 4, 2019 and was the final printed issue of the ESPN Magazine. It featured the following athletes:[5]
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: ESPN Body Issue 2014: Official Photos Revealed for Featured Athletes. Mike. Chiari. 8 July 2014. Bleacher Report.
- Web site: ESPN Body Issue 2015: Official Photos Revealed for Featured Athletes. Mike. Chiari. 6 July 2015. Bleacher Report.
- Web site: ESPN Body Issue 2018: Official Photos Revealed for Featured Athletes . Rob . Goldberg . 25 June 2018 . Bleacher Report.
- News: Flynn . Meagan . Seattle sports stars Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe are first same-sex couple on cover of ESPN's Body Issue . 12 September 2023 . . 26 June 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230912184704/https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/06/26/seattle-sports-stars-sue-bird-and-megan-rapinoe-are-first-same-sex-couple-on-cover-of-espn-body-issue/ . 12 September 2023 . live . en.
- Web site: ESPN Body Issue 2019: Official Photos Revealed for Featured Athletes. Mike. Chiari. 4 September 2019. Bleacher Report.