- Sports
- Sports before 1800
- Promotion of Sport and Physical Education
- The Amateur Ideal and Professional Sports
- Sports Journalism
- Sports Betting
- Women in Sports
- Violence in Sports
- Sports and Canadian Nationalism
- Creation and Donation of Trophies
- Hockey — The Sport
- Hockey — The Protagonists
- Other Winter Sports
- Summer and Indoor Sports
- Combat Sports
- Water Sports
- Equestrian and Motor Sports
- Recreational Hunting and Fishing
- The Olympic Games
Sports Journalism

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In the 19th century, media coverage of sports and of the debates about them (see The Amateur Ideal and Professional Sports) increased considerably for a number of reasons: the rising popularity of sports; the proliferation of leagues and competitions arising from the development of organized sports; and the growth of mass media and the invention of the telegraph, which permitted the rapid transmission of sporting results. Greater attention to sports in the press resulted in separate sports sections in newspapers and the emergence of sports editors, as the biography of Henry John Prescott Wilshere GOOD explains:
“Good had begun work in Toronto in 1872 as a proof-reader for John Ross
In the following biographies one can trace the development of sports journalism and the expansion of sports coverage in Canadian print media: