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Jon Wertheim
Lewis Jonathan Wertheim (born November 11, 1970 in Bloomington, Indiana), also credited as L. Jon Wertheim, is an American sports journalist and author who has produced work in most major forms of media. He is a senior writer for Sports Illustrated and has been part of the magazine's full-time writing staff since 1996. As a correspondent for 60 Minutes on CBS, he has covered a wide range of topics within and outside of sports. He is the author of eleven books and is an on-air tennis commentator, primarily for Tennis Channel. He has hosted and been a guest on multiple sports and news podcasts. He was executive producer and on-air reporter for the 2025 HBO Max documentary Surviving Ohio State.
Wertheim is Senior Enterprise Writer for Sports Illustrated. He writes stories about professional tennis, basketball, mixed martial arts and other sports as well as deeply interviewed stories about the athletes who participate. He has also written stories that cover broader cultural and legal issues that relate to sports. Examples are his reporting on the use of anabolic steroids by elite athletes and the Ohio State University abuse scandal. The Ohio State reporting ("Why Aren't More People Talking About the Ohio State Sex Abuse Scandal?"),[2] focused on the decades-long abuse of male wrestlers by the team doctor, as well as the university's cover-up. It was the basis for the 2025 HBO Documentary Films Surviving Ohio State for which Wertheim was Executive Producer and on-air reporter. Aired by HBO Max, the documentary received a duPont-Columbia journalism award.
Wertheim writes the weekly Tennis Mailbag for SI.com, in which he responds to readers questions and comments about the sport, business, and culture of tennis.
Wertheim has been a correspondent for the CBS News program 60 Minutes since 2017 where he has covered diverse topics including Denmark's increasing wealth due to new-generation weight-loss drugs, George Clooney's Broadway role as pioneering journalist Edward R. Murrow, and the prevalence of Australian actors in Hollywood. He was one of the reporters for the episode "A Central Ally/The Lost Music" which received an Emmy nomination. He has been the author of a number of extended interviews with sports stars such as Caitlin Clark and Rafael Nadal. On December 14th, 2025, 60 Minutes aired a Wertheim story on the remarkable turnaround of the Indiana Hoosiers football team from his hometown of Bloomington, Indiana. Not just an athletic story, it also covered how changes in the business of modern college sports have affected what has happened for the Hoosiers team.
Wertheim has produced stories for CBS News Sunday Morning including "Daria Kasatkina, the world's bravest tennis player" about the Russian-born player who is openly gay and has been an outspoken critic of Russia's war on Ukraine. Kasatkina has since become a permanent resident of Australia.
On December 21, 2025, 60 Minutes aired a Wertheim story about the Kanneh-Mason siblings, virtuoso classical musicians from Nottingham, England.
Changes in 2025 and 2026 at CBS News resulted in significant upheaval in the 60 Minutes organization. Under Bari Weiss's leadership firings included Sharyn Alfonsi, Cecilia Vega, Draggan Mihailovich, and correspondent Scott Pelley. Executive Producer Tanya Simon was also fired and replaced with Nick Bilton. Three remaining correspondents: Lesley Stahl, Bill Whitaker, and Wertheim put out a statement on June 5, 2026 that they would be staying on saying in part “We don’t want to see 60 Minutes die."
Wertheim is the author of eleven books, including Strokes of Genius: Federer, Nadal, and the Greatest Match Ever Played, which gives a stroke by stroke analysis of the 2008 Men's Singles Wimbledon final between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal and is a co-author (along with Toby Moskowitz) of the New York Times bestseller Scorecasting: The Hidden Influences Behind How Sports Are Played and Games Are Won, a wide-ranging statistical analysis of common misconceptions in American sports.
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Jon Wertheim
Lewis Jonathan Wertheim (born November 11, 1970 in Bloomington, Indiana), also credited as L. Jon Wertheim, is an American sports journalist and author who has produced work in most major forms of media. He is a senior writer for Sports Illustrated and has been part of the magazine's full-time writing staff since 1996. As a correspondent for 60 Minutes on CBS, he has covered a wide range of topics within and outside of sports. He is the author of eleven books and is an on-air tennis commentator, primarily for Tennis Channel. He has hosted and been a guest on multiple sports and news podcasts. He was executive producer and on-air reporter for the 2025 HBO Max documentary Surviving Ohio State.
Wertheim is Senior Enterprise Writer for Sports Illustrated. He writes stories about professional tennis, basketball, mixed martial arts and other sports as well as deeply interviewed stories about the athletes who participate. He has also written stories that cover broader cultural and legal issues that relate to sports. Examples are his reporting on the use of anabolic steroids by elite athletes and the Ohio State University abuse scandal. The Ohio State reporting ("Why Aren't More People Talking About the Ohio State Sex Abuse Scandal?"),[2] focused on the decades-long abuse of male wrestlers by the team doctor, as well as the university's cover-up. It was the basis for the 2025 HBO Documentary Films Surviving Ohio State for which Wertheim was Executive Producer and on-air reporter. Aired by HBO Max, the documentary received a duPont-Columbia journalism award.
Wertheim writes the weekly Tennis Mailbag for SI.com, in which he responds to readers questions and comments about the sport, business, and culture of tennis.
Wertheim has been a correspondent for the CBS News program 60 Minutes since 2017 where he has covered diverse topics including Denmark's increasing wealth due to new-generation weight-loss drugs, George Clooney's Broadway role as pioneering journalist Edward R. Murrow, and the prevalence of Australian actors in Hollywood. He was one of the reporters for the episode "A Central Ally/The Lost Music" which received an Emmy nomination. He has been the author of a number of extended interviews with sports stars such as Caitlin Clark and Rafael Nadal. On December 14th, 2025, 60 Minutes aired a Wertheim story on the remarkable turnaround of the Indiana Hoosiers football team from his hometown of Bloomington, Indiana. Not just an athletic story, it also covered how changes in the business of modern college sports have affected what has happened for the Hoosiers team.
Wertheim has produced stories for CBS News Sunday Morning including "Daria Kasatkina, the world's bravest tennis player" about the Russian-born player who is openly gay and has been an outspoken critic of Russia's war on Ukraine. Kasatkina has since become a permanent resident of Australia.
On December 21, 2025, 60 Minutes aired a Wertheim story about the Kanneh-Mason siblings, virtuoso classical musicians from Nottingham, England.
Changes in 2025 and 2026 at CBS News resulted in significant upheaval in the 60 Minutes organization. Under Bari Weiss's leadership firings included Sharyn Alfonsi, Cecilia Vega, Draggan Mihailovich, and correspondent Scott Pelley. Executive Producer Tanya Simon was also fired and replaced with Nick Bilton. Three remaining correspondents: Lesley Stahl, Bill Whitaker, and Wertheim put out a statement on June 5, 2026 that they would be staying on saying in part “We don’t want to see 60 Minutes die."
Wertheim is the author of eleven books, including Strokes of Genius: Federer, Nadal, and the Greatest Match Ever Played, which gives a stroke by stroke analysis of the 2008 Men's Singles Wimbledon final between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal and is a co-author (along with Toby Moskowitz) of the New York Times bestseller Scorecasting: The Hidden Influences Behind How Sports Are Played and Games Are Won, a wide-ranging statistical analysis of common misconceptions in American sports.