Calacus Weekly Hit & Miss – Lewes FC & Gordon Elliott

We look at the best and worst communicators in sport as Lewes Football Club set gender equality standards and trainer Gordon Elliott is banned for dead horse photograph.

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Calacus Weekly Hit & Miss – Kaiviti Silktails & England cricketers

We look at the best and worst communicators in sport as Kaiviti Silktails show quarantine gratitude by singing to hotel staff and England cricketers have a Twitter spat after a heavy Test defeat.

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Calacus Weekly Hit & Miss – The ECB & Sam Burgess

We look at the best and worst communicators in sport as Joe Root and Chris Silverwood react quickly as Moeen Ali’s return home causes controversy and Sam Burgess falls foul of the law again.

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The time for empty condemnation is over – trolling must end now

If social media is an echo chamber for society at large, it underlines the challenges faced by sports stars in the digital age as online trolls become a greater source of abuse and distress.

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Calacus Weekly Hit & Miss – IIHF sponsors & Atletico Madrid

We look at the best and worst communicators in sport as sponsors withdraw from Ice Hockey World Championships and Atletico Madrid fail to find a loophole as Trippier suspended.

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Calacus Weekly Hit & Miss – IFAB & The Australian Open

We look at the best and worst communicators in sport as IFAB introduce concussion substitutes and the Australian Open enforces strict quarantine on elite tennis players.

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Lessons learnt from the top sports crises of 2020

There’s no doubt that 2020 has been a strange year, but despite the lockdowns, sport from grassroots to elite level has still been full of drama and controversy on and off the field.

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crisis management, cycling, diversity, drugs in sport, football, media training, olympicsDavid AlexanderCOVID-19 pandemic, sports crisis communications, crisis planning, lockdown breaches, Aston Villa, Jack Grealish, Ross Barkley, England football, Phil Foden, Mason Greenwood, Manchester City, Manchester United, sports sponsorship, Sun Yang, Olympic Games, Olympic swimming, FINA, World Anti-Doping Agency, WADA, the Court of Arbitration for Sport, CAS, Duncan Scott, Mack Horton, Rio 2016, Swiss Federal Tribunal, Bayern Munich, Dietmar Hopp, Bundesliga, German Football League (DFL), Hoffenheim, Wolfsburg, Hansi Flick, Hasan Salihamidzic, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Herbert Hainer, Paris Saint-Germain, Istanbul Basaksehir, UEFA Champions League, Sebastian Coltescu, Pierre Webo, Demba Ba, Presnel Kimpembe, PSG, FC Barcelona, UEFA, Black Lives Matter, Kylian Mbappe, Lionel Messi, birofax, Ernesto Valverde, La Liga, Josep Bartomeu, Ronald Koeman, Carlos Tusquets, Quinn Simmons, Trek-Segafredo, Donald Trump, Christian Coleman, Usain Bolt, sprinting, Tokyo 2020, independent Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), Sam Burgess, Rabbitohs, rugby league, National Rugby League (NRL), Australia, Football Association, Greg Clarke, Department for Digital Culture Media and Sport, DCMS, media training, British Gymnastics, Larry Nassar, Olympic medallists, Amy Tinkler, Nile Wilson, Hannah Whelan, Dan Keatings, Sydney 2000, Lisa Mason, Catherine Lyons, Amanda Reddin, Jane Allen, Ros Anwyl, Tokyo Olympic Games, Gymnast Parent Alliance, Whyte Review, Sport England, UK Sport, British Athletes Commission (BAC), NSPCC