The New York Times is disbanding sports department and will rely on coverage from The Athletic, a website it acquired last year for $550 million.


What You Need To Know

  • The New York Times is getting rid of its sports department and will instead rely on sports coverage from its website The Athletic going forward

  • The move impacts more than 35 people in the sports department, according to a report on the company's website

  • Journalists on the sports desk will move to other roles in The New York Times newsroom

  • There are no plans for layoffs

The decision impacts more than 35 people in the sports department, according to The New York Times. Journalists on the sports desk will move to other roles within the newsroom and no layoffs are planned.

"Though we know this decision will be disappointing to some, we believe it is the right one for readers and will allow us to maximize the respective strengths of The Times's and The Athletic's newsrooms," New York Times Co. Chairman A.G. Sulzberger and CEO Meredith Kopit Levien wrote Monday in a letter to staff.

They say sports coverage will be expanded under the shift.

"Under our plan, the digital homepage, newsletters, social feeds, the sports landing page and the print section will draw from even more of the approximately 150 stories The Athletic produces each day chronicling leagues, teams and players across the United States and around the globe," they wrote.

The New York Times Co. announced early last year that it was buying The Athletic as part of a strategy to expand its audience of paying subscribers at a time when the newspaper print ads business continues to fade.

Last month, The Athletic laid off about 4% of its newsroom staff, nearly 20 journalists, as part of reorganization efforts.