Sean Ingle is the Guardian's chief sports reporter. Twitter @seaningle
February 2025
Au revoir, Eurosport: home of the magnificent, pioneering and strange
Sean Ingle
After 36 glorious years we will miss this defiantly different programming once it has been swallowed up by TNT Sports
January 2025
World champion Russian pair and US skaters were onboard crashed plane
Let the guessing games begin: Coe revives spirit of 2012 in IOC pitch
No transparency please, we’re the IOC: Coe makes his pitch for world sport’s top job
Inside the race for the biggest job in sport – can Sebastian Coe win the IOC presidency?
Real Madrid become first football club to generate more than €1bn in revenue
The craziest thing about Erling Haaland’s £500,000-a-week salary? It makes sense
Sean Ingle
Eliud Kipchoge offers to mentor Alex Yee for Briton’s first London Marathon
Sifan Hassan rejects greatest-ever claim and confirms London Marathon entry
When will Sir Jim Ratcliffe learn from his mistakes at Manchester United?
Sean Ingle
ECB urges cricket’s leaders to take action over ‘gender apartheid’ in Afghanistan
UK Athletics charged with manslaughter over Paralympian’s death
Peter Hain urges South Africa to protest Afghanistan game at Champions Trophy
A vision of sport in 2050: robot leagues, chips in brains and players in their 50s
Sean Ingle
Luke Littler reveals that rewatching last year’s final defeat inspired PDC triumph
Littler’s imperious PDC world title may be start of darting domination
A quarter of a century on: what we got right and wrong about sport’s future
December 2024
Israelis free to play at World Indoor Bowls Championships after U-turn
Israeli players can now play at the World Indoor Bowls Championships in Norfolk after an initial ban was revoked
Arise, Sir Gareth: Southgate given knighthood in new year honours list
Gareth Southgate has been rewarded for transforming the fortunes and culture of the England football team with a knighthood in the new year honours list
Paris Olympics were great, so why not hold summer Games every two years?
Sean Ingle
The average sports fan is increasingly a big-eventer and there is a risk of the Games losing out in the attention economy