Corriere dello Sport – Stadio

Corriere dello Sport - Stadio is an Italian, daily sports newspaper. It is according to the Gazzetta dello Sport, and before Tuttosport the most widely read sports magazines in the country. Corriere dello Sport - Stadio appear in a nationwide issue and seven regional editions for Rome and Lazio, Bologna and surroundings, Emilia -Romagna, Tuscany, Campania, Puglia, Sicily and Sardinia. Editor in chief since August 2003 Alessandro Vocalelli.

Publisher

Corriere dello Sport is published - Stadio by the Corriere dello Sport Srl, which in turn belongs Sports Network, whose director Roberto Amodei is. The sports network group is also Tuttosport.

Content

The paper is devoted largely to the sport of football, is one of roughly half of the pages of the series A, finds space but also the Series B Series C and Series D and the futsal in Italy Calcio a 5 known. In the back are mostly reports on motor sport, cycling, basketball, volleyball and many other sports to find.

Circulation and reach

The daily circulation of 295 139, Monday, on the remaining days of the week 240 738 copies. It is read Corriere dello Sport - Stadio one and a half million people, of which about 167,000 women. The Monday edition of this reached 2.25 million readers, the other expenses 1.37 million.

The edition number reached a peak in 1978, the nation's 752,000 copies were sold, of which 492,000 in the south and in the north of 260,000. A sales record with 1,699,966 copies sold, the newspaper posted on Monday, July 12, 1982, after the Italian national football team became world champions. This record was only 24 years later broken by the Gazzetta dello Sport, when Italy won in 2006 his fourth world title in football.

Internet

Corriere dello Sport - Stadio is available daily from 16 clock with the same content as the printed version of the Internet, plus a one-time free registration is required. Access to the front page is already possible from 7 clock.

History

Corriere dello Sport - Stadio originated in 1977 from a merger of two newspapers. This was the one Corriere dello Sport, founded on October 20, 1924 in Bologna, which came out three times a week. Three years later, the editors moved to Rome in order, the newspaper changed its name to Il Littoriale and appeared daily. Second fusion partner was Stadio, founded in 1945, daily newspaper from 1948 with its headquarters in Bologna. Corriere dello Sport, that granted the pit a lot of space, and the Gazzetta, which was dedicated to the cycling quickly met with nationwide distribution, while Tuttosport and Stadio remained confined to their appearance region. After the end of World War Il Littoriale returned to its initial name Corriere dello Sport.

On September 11, 1977 was due to the initiative of the then owner of Corriere Francesco Amodei, a fusion of the appearing in Rome Stadio newspaper, published in Bologna. So they wanted to merge the readership from the south with those from the north. The new newspaper called Corriere dello Sport accordingly - Stadio. The expenses were thereby distinguished by the color of the title. While the green " Stadio " stand in the north in the foreground, was on the issue in the south the red " Corriere dello Sport" before the underlying " Stadio ". The two editors teamed up with the majority of employees was transferred to Rome, while many editors in Bologna left the newspaper and the newspaper Il Resto del Carlino joined. The merger had Corriere dello Sport - Stadio nationwide reach, being in the north and especially in Piedmont the importance of the two local titles Gazzetta dello Sport and Tuttosport was bigger.

Editors

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