The Players’​ Tribune

The Players’ Tribune

Spectator Sports

New York, NY 27,195 followers

The voice of the game.

About us

The Players’ Tribune is providing athletes with a platform to connect directly with their fans through impactful long- and short-form stories, social media, video series and podcasts — and bringing people closer than ever to the games they love.

Website
http://www.theplayerstribune.com
Industry
Spectator Sports
Company size
51-200 employees
Headquarters
New York, NY
Type
Privately Held
Founded
2014
Specialties
Sports, Original Programming, Podcast, Social Media, Short-form stories, and Long-form stories

Locations

Employees at The Players’​ Tribune

Updates

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    27,195 followers

    Steven Stamkos says goodbye to the Lightning and the city of Tampa: “I never thought I’d have to do one of these. It doesn’t quite feel real that I won’t be a Bolt this fall. But over the past few weeks, I’ve had this really deep sense of how lucky I was to be one for 16 years. So I just want to share some memories, and say some thanks to everyone who has been a part of this journey.”

    Thank You, Tampa Bay | By Steven Stamkos

    Thank You, Tampa Bay | By Steven Stamkos

    theplayerstribune.com

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    27,195 followers

    Ilkay Gündogan in 2021: “To be clear, my parents did a great job raising me and my brother, Ilker. But I was studying so much that I hardly had time for anything else. My life was just school and training. When my friends went out on a Friday night, I’d stay at home because I had a game the next day.⁠ ⁠ I missed out on a lot. I kind of feel like I sacrificed my youth.⁠ ⁠ And the crazy thing is that I didn’t even know if I was gonna turn professional. A lot of kids are like, “Oh, I’m gonna become a footballer.” But I never had that laser focus. I had exams to pass. And to me, football was still supposed to be fun.⁠ ⁠ The first time I seriously thought about turning pro, I was 17. I was with the Bochum first team on a preseason camp, which was the first time I had joined a professional team for an extended period. I played in two friendly games, and I scored in one and assisted in the other. I was like, Huh, I could do something here.⁠ ⁠ About six months later, the day arrived: I left home to sign a professional contract with Nürnberg.⁠ ⁠ And then came all those things that I had never really thought about.⁠ The first thing you realise is that you have to leave your family and friends. Imagine this kid who has spent his whole life in the same city, close to his parents and brother and cousins, and now he has to travel 450 kilometres away to live on his own. Then he has to make the step up to senior football, which is just a completely different world from youth football. He gets injured after two weeks. Then he gets frustrated with the older players, because they are simply wrong about many things — but his Turkish upbringing has told him not to disrespect his elders, so he stays quiet.⁠ ⁠ That was me at Nürnberg. It was a total shock to the system.⁠ ⁠ Back then I actually remember being grateful that Schalke had rejected me. I had already faced this huge disappointment, so I was kind of prepared for another struggle. In the end, that’s what helped me break through at Nürnberg and have two successful seasons there.⁠ ⁠ The longer you go in life before suffering a setback, I think, the harder it is to handle.” Read the full story: playerstribu.ne/Guendogan

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    In 2021, Derek Jeter wrote a letter to his younger self: “The funny thing is, you will fail so much in the minors that it will turn into a positive. You’ll learn to convince yourself, truly, that the only thing that exists in the world is the next at bat, the next ground ball, the next moment.⁠ ⁠ If there is one key to success that I can give you, it’s to treat every game like you’re still in Little League. When you were completely oblivious to the fear of failure. When it’s all just fun. If you can embrace that mindset even in the majors, then the last at bat won’t exist. There’s no failure. There is only the moment. The pitcher. The ball. The game. The thing that you love more than anything in the world.⁠ ⁠ And the beauty of baseball is that every day is a new chance to get it right.⁠ If you can keep pushing through the failure, you’ll keep building yourself up, and eventually you’ll get a chance to live your dreams in pinstripes. You will wear that famous navy cap. The same one you’re wearing now, on your way to junior high. You will walk out under that giant Kingdome roof in Seattle for your first major league game and spot your father in the stands. He’ll be playing it cool. But you’ll see what it means to him. Everything will seem like it did that first time you walked into Tiger Stadium as a kid. Somehow everything will be bigger. It will be even more colorful and alive. It will seem unreal.⁠ ⁠ After the game, you and Dad will meet up, and he’ll say, ‘I’m proud of you, son.’ And you’ll go for a postgame meal together at the first place that comes to mind.⁠ ⁠ You’ll go to McDonald’s.⁠ ⁠ You’ll sit there having hamburgers and fries as a New York Yankee. You and your dad. Your idol. The guy who used to sit on the couch with you before afternoon kindergarten and compete — and I mean compete — in playing along with The Price is Right. The guy who you watched in awe, just playing softball in Kalamazoo.⁠ ⁠ Nothing will ever take that moment away.” Read the full story: playerstribu.ne/JeterNYY

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    In 2019, Christian Yelich wrote about how his mom saved his baseball career: “‘I’ll give you five bucks if you get a hit today.’⁠ ⁠ That’s what got me into the car....⁠ ⁠ But also it was just a really good bribe on her part, too, because it was a two-part thing. It wasn’t just about me going to the game. My mom’s offer also ensured that I would try hard once I got there....⁠ ⁠ So on what I’m pretty sure was the first pitch I saw, I swung the bat like there was no tomorrow. Bat struck ball and, well, I’d love to tell you I hit a seed down the first base line or something … but to be honest with you the ball only went about five feet.⁠ ⁠ I took off for first base as fast as I could, like my life depended on it. But I probably could’ve just walked to first at that point. You know how those little-kid games go. Basically if you hit the ball forward, and it stays in fair territory, it’s gonna be a base hit. And that’s what this one turned out to be.⁠ I had a huge grin on my face when I reached first base and looked over toward the bleachers. Like….⁠ ⁠ That’ll be five bucks!⁠ ⁠ Pay up, Mom.⁠ ⁠ When you’re seven and someone gives you $5, it’s like you just hit the lotto. I felt like I could buy anything in existence at that point, but I’m pretty sure I just spent all my money at the snack shack by the field.⁠ ⁠ And then from that point forward, for whatever reason, I was never worried about being hit by a pitch again. After I put the ball in play that one time it was like, Hey, look … everything’s going to be fine with baseball.⁠ ⁠ It only took one hit. And five bucks....⁠ ⁠ Everything I’ve done up to this point as a player, everything I’m doing now, and everything I do in the future … all of that would’ve been wiped away if my mom wouldn’t have cared as much as she did back then. There would’ve been no draft-day celebration for me, no magical run to the NLCS, no MVP. None of that exists without her.” Read the full story: playerstribu.ne/Yelich

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Funding

The Players’ Tribune 3 total rounds

Last Round

Series B

US$ 40.0M

See more info on crunchbase