Resource Center

Stories

The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast.

These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need.

Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:



Search results for "sports" ...

  • HBO: NCAA Head Games

    Five years into football’s concussions crisis, one group of athletes may be in more danger than any other: college football players. That’s because while leagues from the NFL down to Pop Warner have sharply reduced contact in practice to limit the amount of hits to the head, the NCAA has yet to mandate any rules. A six-month Real Sports investigation found that, over the course of a year, the average college football player is exposed to 70% more hits to the head than an NFL player. All these hits can add up and make it harder for the brain to function and do the work of being a student. In other words, young men going to college purportedly to improve their minds are often doing precisely the opposite—they are damaging them. Once these athletes leave college they’re on their own to deal with the potential consequences. The NFL provides long-term medical care for its football players. The NCAA does not.

    Tags: broadcast; college football; athletes; concussions; health; NFL; NCAA; medical care

    By Producers: Josh Fine; Joe Perskie; Correspondent: Bernard Goldberg; Associate Producer: Beret Remak; Editor: Mike Long

    HBO

    2012

  • HBO Real Sports: Hockey's Darkest Day

    In 2011 a plane carrying a Russian hockey team crashed shortly after takeoff--the deadliest accident in the history of professional sports. A five-month Real Sports investigation uncovered massive safety problems in the Russian hockey league. The league spent millions on player salaries but "a few bucks" on everything else--including travel. The plane that crashed was operated by a cheap, third-rate company that had been banned from flying to Europe because they had been cited so many times for major safety violations. The crew of the plane hadn't even completed their training. Our investigation showed that the lack of safety in the world’s second best hockey league—called the KHL—often extends to the ice where KHL team doctors use IV’s and drugs to get their players to perform better on the ice. One young star died after receiving an injection of banned drugs from team doctors. When it came to travel, the lack of safe conditions was nearly universal. Practically every team flew on a Soviet-era jet—jets that make up 3% of the world’s fleet but account for 42% of the world’s accidents. These jets are in such poor condition that most Russian airlines wont use them. Yet even after the crash the KHL continued to use these planes, a fact they initially denied. Shortly after we interviewed the KHL Vice President, the league changed its rules. Now teams fly strictly on modern equipment.

    Tags: Russia; Russian hockey team; plane crash; the KHL;

    By Correspondent: Bernard Goldberg; Producers: Joe Perskie; Josh Fine; Associate Producer: Nisreen Habbal; Editor: Tres Driscoll

    HBO Sports

    2012

  • Our Money, Their Failures

    A six-week investigation by The Virgin Islands Daily News into the people and the money connected to the U.S. Virgin Islands governor's proposal for a $55 million sports complex. The investigative report was published on one day across 11 pages and achieved the result of stopping the project and forcing the governor to pledge no further contracts without vetting the principals. In the case of the sports complex that the governor and some V.I. senators were trying to push through, the investigation uncovered misrepresentations and a string of financial failures by a number of the private parties in the deal with the governor.

    Tags: Government; governor; Virgin Islands

    By Joy Blackburn, reporter; Gerry Yandel; J. Lowe Davis; Stephen Cheslik, editors

    The Virgin Islands Daily News

    2012

  • Unfair Game

    Texas high school athletics rules prohibit students from transferring from district to district for athletic purposes, but that hasn’t stopped coaches and administrators from openly flouting the rules to assemble state championship-caliber teams as part of an underground recruiting system that puts athletics over academics. WFAA investigative reporter Brett Shipp's reports showed how improper recruiting helped Dallas' Kimball Knights build back-to-back state champ basketball teams, and how former Dallas Cowboy Deion Sanders' new school, Prime Prep Academy, also drew in blue-chip players against the rules.

    Tags: High school athletics; sports; coach; recruiting system; state champion team

    By Brett Shipp, investigative reporter; Billy Bryant, photographer and video editor; Jason Trahan, producer

    WFAA-TV (Dallas)

    2012

  • Betrayal of Trust

    The Orange County Register detailed the culture of exploitation that surrounded young female gymnasts who have fueled the sport's success since the early 1980's. Specifically, the Register investigation revealed the coach of the 1984 U.S. Olympic team had sexual relations with three young gymnasts he coached.

    Tags: Olympics; U.S. Gymnastics; 1984; Coach; Sexual Abuse

    By Scott M. Reid

    Orange County Register (Santa Ana

    2011

  • ESPN Outside the Lines: Gambling & Youth Football

    "This investigation discovered rampant gambling on young boys playing football in the highly competitive South Florida Youth Football league."

    Tags: gambling; youth football; sports; ethics; broadcast

    By Paula Levigne; Greg Amante; Dwayne Bray; Chris Buckle

    ESPN (Television Network) (Bristol, CT)

    2011

  • ESPN Outside the Lines: Luck of the Draw

    The analysis of 10 years of men's and women's Grand Slam draws shows the top two men's and women's seeds in the U.S. Open faced easier opponents in the first round than is statistically probable if the draws were truly random.

    Tags: tennis; U.S. Open; French Open; Grand Slam; sports

    By Paula Lavigne; Willie Weinbaum; Alok Pattani; Chris Buckle; Carolyn Hong; Dwayne Bray

    ESPN (Television Network) (Bristol, CT)

    2011

  • Commonwealth Games Medical Scam

    The story examines the massive overshoots in the budget for the Commonwealth games. The investigation focused on the purchase of highly inflated medical equipment made by the state government for players and spectators of the games.

    Tags: Commonwealth Games; Delhi; sports; Commonwealth

    By Sidharth Pandey

    NOTV 24x7

    2010

  • ESPN Outside the Lines:What's Lurking in Your Stadium Food

    Health department inspection reports for food and beverage outlets at stadiums and arenas home to Major League Baseball, National Football League, National Hockey League, and National Baseball Association teams showed that more than half of them had been cited for a "critical" or "major" health inspection.

    Tags: sports; stadium; arena; stadium food; health; safety; food preparation

    By Paula Lavigne; Lindsay Rovegno; Dwayne Bray; Ronnie Forchheimer; Chris Buckle

    ESPN (Television Network) (Bristol, CT)

    2010

  • The Hidden Life of Guns

    The investigation details the way guns move through society, from retail sales to street crimes. The Post set out to break the secrecy imposed by Congress and an examination of how gunes are used in crimes. Their investigation included creating a database of more than 35,000 guns traced to crimes; a comprehensive database of 511 police officers killed by firearms; lists from confidential sources of the top 12 gun dealers who have sold the most weapons trace from Mexican crime scenes over the past two years.

    Tags: guns; gun laws; crime; gun dealer; illegal gun trade; Mexico; criminal statistics; Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; National Shooting Sports Foundation; Tiahrt Amendment;

    By David S. Fallis; James V. Grimaldi; Sari Horwitz; Cheryl W. Thompson

    Washington Post

    2010