Bill Dwyre
Bill Dwyre was a three-times-weekly sports columnist for the Los Angeles Times from 2006-15. Before that, he was sports editor of the paper for 25 years. Dwyre was named national editor of the year by the National Press Foundation in 1985 for the paper’s coverage of the ’84 Olympics and winner of the Red Smith Award in 1996 by the Associated Press Sports Editors for sustained excellence in sports journalism. He was sports editor of the Milwaukee Journal from 1973 to 1981, when he joined The Times. Dwyre was named National Headliner Award winner in 1985, sportswriter of the year in Wisconsin in 1980 and sportswriter of the year in California in 2009.
Latest From This Author
Former Dodgers catcher Mike Scioscia remembers teammate Fernando Valenzuela as a leader who let his dominant pitches do the talking.
Peter Ueberroth and the leadership of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics proved that a mammoth event like the Games could be won as soon as the Olympic flame is lit.
D. Wayne Lukas, the 88-year-old trainer for Preakness-winning horse Seize the Grey, isn’t ready to retire after an elite horse racing career.
Olga Fikotova Connolly, who recently died at age 91, was an Olympic champion at the center of a East vs. West controversy at the 1956 Olympics.
Indian Wells has hosted one of the world’s most prestigious tennis tournaments over the last 25 years thanks to its steadfast founders and devoted fans.
Zenyatta’s 2009 Breeders’ Cup Classic win and her 19-1 record established her as one of the greatest thoroughbreds in the history of horse racing.
Former Indiana coaching great Bob Knight held a grudge against lovable UCLA legend John Wooden, exposing his tendency to be a jerk and a bully.
The money-driven implosion of the Pac-12 has shown how toothless the NCAA has become in supporting ‘student athletes’ and fans. It’s all about the money.
It has been 25 years since Jim Murray, the man who was part Los Angeles Times Sports columnist, part Don Rickles and part Socrates.
Johnny Lujack, the oldest living Heisman winner until his death Tuesday at age 98, was an unassuming World War II veteran, athlete and broadcaster.