The Wisden Cricketer

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The Wisden Cricketer was the world's best-selling monthly cricket magazine[citation needed]. It was created in 2003 by a merger between The Cricketer magazine and Wisden Cricket Monthly. It is now no longer connected to Wisden and is called The Cricketer.

The magazine covers English professional cricket in depth and also carries reports on all Test Matches and one-day international cricket played around the world, together with a small amount of coverage of domestic cricket outside the United Kingdom. In addition, it covers amateur cricket in the United Kingdom.

It was first published by the specialist cricket publisher Wisden in England, until being acquired by Sky in April 2007.[1] It was then sold to its current owners, TestMatchExtra.com Ltd, in December 2010.[2][3]

Details[]

Available globally both at newsagents and via subscription, TWC had an audited sales figure of 34,559, 95 per cent of it from the UK. In 2008, it launched its website, aiming "to showcase the content of The Wisden Cricketer while exploring the greater flexibility that the web offers."[4]

The Wisden Cricketer formerly had a sister publication called Wisden Asia Cricket. It folded in July 2005, but in December 2005 a new publication from the same company called Cricinfo Magazine was announced, though that was closed down shortly after ESPN's acquisition of Cricinfo[citation needed]. The Wisden Cricketer: South African edition recently closed down, too.

Following the sale of the magazine to Test Match Extra, the magazine merged with the much older The Cricketer magazine and changed its name to The Cricketer (in association with Wisden) in May 2011. [5]The editor of The Wisden Cricketer for all its existence, John Stern, left later that month.

References[]

  1. ^ "The Wisden Cricketer magazine joins Sky". espncricinfo.com. April 2007.
  2. ^ "Sky sells 'Wisden Cricketer' to consortium". digitalspy.com. December 2010.
  3. ^ "Wisden Cricketer magazine sold". espncricinfo.com. December 2010.
  4. ^ "The Wisden Cricketer" 2009.
  5. ^ Oliver Luft (17 May 2011). "Wisden Cricketer renamed The Cricketer". Campaign. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
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