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Media Information 2012/13 Reach 100,000 sports enthusiasts in Sussex THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO SPORT IN SUSSEX

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Page 1: SussexSport Media pack

Media Information 2012/13

Reach 100,000 sports enthusiasts in Sussex

The compleTe guide To SpoRT in SuSSex

Page 2: SussexSport Media pack

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport

The Concept

• SussexSportistheonlysportsfocusedmagazineinSussex.We bring you the most in-depth coverage of sport in the county from The Albion to grass roots from archery to yachting.Our passion is sports and we are as enthusiastic about it as our 100,000 readers. Each issue of Sussex Sport is packed with interviews from top sporting personalities, features, competitions and news. Our editorial is written by journalists who know their sport better than anyone, from local to national you name it we cover it.

Editorial

• Comprehensive Coverage of the Big Two – The Albion and Sussex County Cricket Club

• Grass Roots Sport – if it moves, we’ll feature it• A-Z Guide of sporting venues and clubs• Future Champions – Schools and youth sport• Strong online model to compliment printed version

Statistics

• Highly targeted volume distribution• Estimated readership of over 100,000• Each issue covers the same core features alongside topical features• Highlyaffluentapproachablemarketwithdisposableincomes• Coffee table quality covers – longevity due to a high quality product• High-end and endorsed editorial• Partnerships with major Sports clubs in Sussex

Let me say that such an excellent Sport Publication for Sussex is long overdue. I find the presentation very readableand feel happy to have advertised with you. What value for money!Ian MuzioBrighton Marquees

ThemostwidelyreadSussexsportspublication.

The compleTe guide To sporT in sussex • FREE

IssuE 08

Vincente • Claude Davis • Steve King • London 2012 update

Josh Gifford • Paul Weaver • Tony Cottey • Eastbourne College

Sophie Johnstone • Sussex Sports Awards • Ham Manor Golf Club

Meet Alex and our other

Olympic hopefuls

MakingWaves

The compleTe guide To sporT in sussex • FREE

IssuE 09

London Calling: Olympic and Paralympic 12-page special

The Big Interview: Alastair Hignell • Sussex success in the FA Cup

The Gaffer • Gemma Spofforth • Brighton Marathon Blog • The Punter

Mauricio Taricco • Greg Rusedski • Andy Stewart • Full A-Z

The magazine with community spirit

Olympic Exclusive

sally Gunnell

The compleTe guide To sporT in sussex • FREE

IssuE 10

Brighton Marathon special: report and pictures

London Calling: Olympic and Paralympic focus • Sally Gunnell

The Big Interview: Mike Yardy • Albion’s local hero • Crawley new boys

Meet Mr Angry • Andy Stewart • The Punter • Full A-Z

The magazine with community spirit

Marathonrecord

breakers

SS-Issue-10.indd 1 16/04/2012 15:29:52

Page 3: SussexSport Media pack

Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport

is a dynamic monthlymagazineprofilingALL sport throughout Sussex. It’s an absolute must for every sports enthusiast in Sussex, whether playing, coaching, spectating or simply enjoying.

“As the county’s only quality magazine that covers professional and grass roots sports across Sussex, we have extensivereachandinfluencebothinthemajorsportsorganisations across the area but also at local level, which is essential to ensure our advertisers can maximise their opportunities”

Alan Prior, Publisher

“Sussex Sport’s experienced and versatile editorial team are always on the look out for interesting and dynamic stories. As well as working with the main county clubs, B&H Albion and Sussex CCC, we’re just as enthused by what a local football and cricket team is up to. That’s the beauty of Sussex Sport, it has extensive reach and talks to a wide demographic”

Mike Donovan, Editor

ThemostwidelyreadSussexsportspublication.

Page 4: SussexSport Media pack

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport

Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport

Advertising with such a quality magazine as Sussex Sport directly led to us winning a major contract at a prestigious local golf club. Steve Duffell, Managing Director Duvale PLC

ALASTAIR Hignell sat in his power chair by the sea shore and breathed in the ozone.

“Beautiful,” he uttered quietly after welcoming me into his Magical Kingdom (aka Kemp Town, Brighton).

The former England rugby international, Gloucestershire cricketer and television and radio broadcaster savours the moment. Appreciative of what his new home city has given him, he believes it helps him improve the quality of his existence and increases his life expectancy.

Hignell’s been reinvigorated after swapping “vertical” Cotwsolds for “flat” Brighton last September.

He has had multiple sclerosis, a progressive, incurable disease of the nervous system, since 1999.

The 56-year-old says: “Brighton’s a magical place to live. Magical is the right word. It’s been eye-opening .”

We return to the bricks and mortar of his ’kingdom’. To a large, high-ceilinged front room in a huge flat on the ground floor of a converted three-levelled mansion occupied by the district’s founder Thomas Read Kemp in the mid-19th century (according to the blue plaque on the outside wall). Light and airy, its white walls reflect the rays of the winter sun. Deep, expansive windows allow a sea view. Original features intact. Tasteful paintings and object d’art break

up the brilliant monotone.Sussex Sport is made to feel at home

by Higgy’s wife of 31 years, Jeannie, who makes us all a cup of tea.

Even the family cat, three-year-old Gladys, does her bit by posing for photographer James Boardman alongside the main subject.

A more pleasing environment for an interview one would struggle to find.

I’m struck by Hignell’s modest manner, wit and recall in story-telling,

But what is most noticeable about him is his outlook to life. He focuses on what’s important in it.

He says: “To be told when you’ve been used to a very healthy, fit, active life, that you had an incurable, progressive,

debilitating disease was a kick in the stomach. I was absolutely wiped out for a while.

“I went through the process of trying to create medical history and be the one who knocked it to one side. I overworked and overtrained trying to prove I was better than it, that I could

beat it. I spent a lot of time getting angry and frustrated because my efforts weren’t working.

“I began understanding it, going with the flow, accepting help when it had been difficult to ask for any. With fantastic support from Jeannie who said it wasn’t ‘mine’it was ‘ours’.

“I’ve got an awful lot to be thankful for. That’s worth concentrating on. In our world we should be saying this country

isn’t a

bad place to live. Our weather can

The B

ig Interview

10 | issue 10 issue 10 | 11

The B

ig Interview

SussexSportSussexSportIn May 2005 he scored 257 against

the touring Bangladeshis at Hove and finished a prolific summer with more than 1,500 first-class runs.

At 31, and having gone through the process himself, what does he tell the younger member of the Sussex squad about turning potential into consistent performances?

“I had been around the likes of Murray Goodwin and Chris Adams who were seasoned performers and I wanted to be like that,” he said. “I was batting a lot with Murray at the time and rather than seeing him as the senior partner I wanted to contribute on equal terms with him.

I wanted to stand on my own two feet and that is what the youngsters here have to do. They have to find their own way.

“You can watch someone like Kevin Pietersen and decide you want to bat like him but ultimately you have to decide what you’re about. You can’t be someone else.”

Yardy was part of the most successful team in Sussex’s long history, winning three County Championships, the C&G final at Lord’s and three 40 overs titles. And when he succeeded Adams as captain in 2009 he led the county to their first Twenty20 success on a memorable night at Edgbaston when he led the squad around the outfield for a lap of honour and the stands reverberated to the sounds of the county’s hoary old anthem ‘Good Old Sussex by the Sea.’

It is a different Sussex team these days. No Adams or Mushtaq Ahmed.

No James Kirtley, Jason Lewry or Robin Martin-Jenkins, all retired and difficult to replace. But with an emerging team Sussex still managed to reach the knockout stages of both one-day competitions last year and finish a respectable fifth in the Championship. Yardy gradually immersed himself back into his job and at Scarborough last August he became only the 16th batsman in Sussex’s history to score hundreds in both innings of a Championship match.

He insists that the current squad is stronger than the one he inherited four years ago because there is good cover in most positions. And there is a touch of class about any side containing the likes of Goodwin, Ed Joyce, Chris Nash, Luke Wright, Monty Panesar and Amjad Khan – all international cricketers in their own right.

But the county season is a long haul. Five intense months when days off are cherished and players such as the captain have to deal with the constant switch of emphasis from four-day to one-day cricket.

“Challenging for honours on all three fronts is hard,” admits Yardy.

“This squad could although it will be really difficult. What we cannot do is let a performance in one competition roll over into the next game in a different format. That’s where we will see the benefit of a good squad because if you can rest a few players for the one-day game without weakening your chances then you can be competitive.

“We won the Championship in 2007 with something like 12 or 13 regulars but I don’t think that is realistic anymore – everyone has to contribute.

“A successful year for me is winning a trophy. Last year we lacked that killer instinct and we need to develop a cutting edge which can finish teams off when we are in a winning position.

“We won’t be rated by anyone else. That doesn’t worry me. No one predicted we would win three Championships in four years and to be competitive we have to be on it every day. But if we work hard and allow people to make mistakes as long as they learn from them we will be fine.”

And so, it seems, will their captain. “I feel excited about going to cricket which wasn’t the case for a long while,” he smiles. “And it isn’t just cricket. I feel excited about life.”

Those youngsters might aim for the next one in Rio in four years or the one beyond that. At the very

least, I believe London 2012 will encourage them to have a more active and healthy lifestyle.And it is good to know Sussex is playing its part - as it should be.

The county has provided loads of training facilities for Olympian and Paralympians and well done to all at East Grinstead Sports and Country Club, Olympos in Burgess Hill, the All England Jumping course at Hickstead, Broadbridge Heath Leisure Centre in Horsham, Pavilions in the Park in Horsham, K2 Centre in Crawley, Yellowave Beach Volleyball in Brighton, Devonshire Park in Eastbourne, Bewl Water, Lewes Leisure Centre, Goodwood Estate and the University of Chichester for the part they are playing.The venues provide for a multitude of sports (including swimming, synchro-swimming, archery, athletics, badminton, basketball, boxing, cycling, equestrian, fencing, football, gymnastics, trampolining, handball, hockey, judo, table tennis, taekwondo, triathlon, volleyball, kayaking, canoeing and wrestling). A whole variety of Paralympic sports are also catered for too such as archery, athletics, boccia, equestrian, football, goalball, judo, volleyball, swimming, basketball, fencing, rugby, table tennis and tennis.A few Olympic nations are basing themselves in Sussex with Barbados at Broadbridge Heath, K2 and Crawley Boxing Club. Bahamas are also at the K2 along with Finland’s Paralympians. So the people of this county have an opportunity to see how these athletes go about preparing first hand, to

witness the blood, sweat and tears and study the methods employed to get mind and body right for their Games.

Parents talk about wanting to find a way of inspiring their kids but in order to discover that path they have to commit themselves to certain things. And they can show that commitment by taking their children along to the training venues to see Games athletes.The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity should be grabbed with both hands.

As a bonus, the Olympic teams from the Caribbean will further inspire ourcounty’s children by involving themselves in the Sussex School Games - the county’s Olympic and Paralympics combined - at the K2 in July. What a buzz that will be for the youngsters! Active Sussex, who are the link to providing sport for so many in the county, want to make sure the legacy left by London 2012 is to increase the number of participants, coaches and organisers in Sussex sport.The county seems to be doing its best to take advantage of the world’s great sporting extravaganza coming to these shores. There’s been concern expressed about the sedentary ways of our youth and that they are more into computer games than fresh air and exercise. Now youngsters from Brighton, Hastings, Chichester, Crawley, Burgess Hill and beyond can discover a world outside their bedroom games at events and places that will motivate, stimulate and, ultimately, do them the world of good.

I’m excited by the role I’ve been given for London 2012 as a British Olympic Association ambassador. I will be responsible for making sure the family and friends of athletes are looked after. I’ll also be taking dignitaries out

and providing hospitality on behalf of companies as well as doing TV work. I’ve got a pretty full diary but I also want to enjoy the Games as a spectacle as much as possible. My husband Jon and I have got tickets for the boxing and the BMX cycling. Our children, Finley, Luca and Marley, will enjoy the bikes. I also hope the BOA will sort us one evening at the track.

I want to see as many different sports as possible and enjoy being part of the whole thing as a fan.

Security is a massive area when it comes to the Olympics and the whole Village in London has been designed with security in mind. It was the first consideration before any buildings were built. It’s blown me away just what actually goes into organising a Games. The logistics of it are just crazy.

It looks to me like they’ve thought of everything and it has been brilliantly organised so far. We’ve got to keep our fingers crossed and trust in what we do and how we do it.

* Sally was talking to Mike Donovan

Come and watch the Olympians training in your back yard Sally Gunnell continues EXCLUSIVE column leading up to the Games

SussexSport SussexSport

32 | issue 10

London 2012

London 2012

issue 10 | 33

“Parents talk about wanting to find a way of

inspiring their kids but in order to discover that path

they have to commit themselves to certain things”

Page 5: SussexSport Media pack

Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport

Active Sussex’s relationship with Sussex Sporthasbeenextremelybeneficialthroughexcellent sponsored editorial and advertising coverage in the magazine.Andy Duck, Communications Officer Active Sussex

ALASTAIR Hignell sat in his power chair by the sea shore and breathed in the ozone.

“Beautiful,” he uttered quietly after welcoming me into his Magical Kingdom (aka Kemp Town, Brighton).

The former England rugby international, Gloucestershire cricketer and television and radio broadcaster savours the moment. Appreciative of what his new home city has given him, he believes it helps him improve the quality of his existence and increases his life expectancy.

Hignell’s been reinvigorated after swapping “vertical” Cotwsolds for “flat” Brighton last September.

He has had multiple sclerosis, a progressive, incurable disease of the nervous system, since 1999.

The 56-year-old says: “Brighton’s a magical place to live. Magical is the right word. It’s been eye-opening .”

We return to the bricks and mortar of his ’kingdom’. To a large, high-ceilinged front room in a huge flat on the ground floor of a converted three-levelled mansion occupied by the district’s founder Thomas Read Kemp in the mid-19th century (according to the blue plaque on the outside wall). Light and airy, its white walls reflect the rays of the winter sun. Deep, expansive windows allow a sea view. Original features intact. Tasteful paintings and objet d’art break up the brilliant monotone.

Sussex Sport is made to feel at home by Higgy’s wife of 31 years, Jeannie, who

makes us all a cup of tea.

Even the family cat, three-year-old Gladys, does her bit by posing for photographer James Boardman alongside the main subject.

A more pleasing environment for an interview one would struggle to find.

I’m struck by Hignell’s modest manner, wit and recall in story-telling,

But what is most noticeable about him is his outlook to life. He focuses on what’s important in it.

He says: “To be told when you’ve been used to a very healthy, fit, active life, that you had an incurable, progressive, debilitating disease was a kick in the stomach. I was absolutely wiped out for a while.

“I went through the process of trying to create medical history and be the one who knocked it to one side. I overworked and overtrained trying to prove I was better than it, that I could

beat it. I spent a lot of time getting angry and frustrated because my efforts

weren’t working.

“I began understanding it, going with the flow, accepting help when it had been difficult to ask for any. With fantastic support from Jeannie who said it wasn’t ‘mine’it was ‘ours’.

“I’ve got an awful lot to be thankful for. That’s worth concentrating on. In our world we should be saying this country isn’t a bad place to live. Our weather can be pretty awful sometimes but overall it is not a bad environment. It’s pretty good. There are some fantastic people we bump into and meet every day. We should treasure all of it.

“I hope living in Brighton and breathing in the ozone is going to help. Some of the conclusions I’ve come to with having an incurable disease are that it is important to get your mind right about your relationship with it and reaction to it. To be positive. To make decisions. To be in control of things. One of the things we said was to make decisions before they were forced on us, like the one to move to Brighton.

Higgy’s Magic KingdomBrighton’s a breath of fresh air for former England rugby ace and first-class cricketer with MS. MIKE DOnOvAn meets him

“We’ve benefited ourselves. The fact that we’ve got the sea nearby is a fantastic bonus. I’m breathing fresh air and that’s going to do me good. Whatever the doctors might say about the condition of the disease I KnOW that I’m taking active steps to look after myself and to deal with what I’ve got.

“There are drugs out there that help but none cure MS, so you have to make choices all the time about what you do and how you deal with it. I’m CHOOSInG to breathe some lovely fresh air. Still enjoy the beautiful sunshine, the coast, the sea. It’s EMPOWERInG me to do myself better.”

The road to Brighton was a long one.

Hignell says: “We’d been looking for the right apartment ever since I was diagnosed. Life is getting more difficult due to MS - steps, stairs

and slopes, that sort of thing. We lived in Stroud, a very vertical town, and we realised in the long term it would be more of a challenge than we would like.

“I don’t drive but like to feel independent and do things without being reliant on people driving me everywhere. I’m slightly obstinate. Jeannie would say that.

“When we came to visit one of our two sons Dan (the other is Adam) in Brighton last year - he’s doing an MA at university - we noticed there was a

lot of the city which was quite flat, particularly when you get close

to the sea.“We looked at the

promenade and saw there were things we could do together and the treatment centre’s only four miles away

in Shoreham.”Hignell has written an autobiography -

Matches, Microphones and MS - which details his illness.

It also, of course, covers a glittering career on and off the sporting stages of the world and largely one of being in the right place at the right time.

How he played first-class cricket as a right-handed bat for Gloucestershire - scoring nearly 7.500 runs - over ten years up to 1983.

And how, alongside it, he earned 14 caps and played in three Six nations tournaments as a rugby fullback with England seniors from the age of 19.

The journey with the oval ball began when he made his debut as a 16-year-old in men’s rugby in Sussex.

He says: “I was playing for Old Perseans who had asked me to join after seeing me in under-19 trials in Cambridge where I was born and brought up. They invited me on tour. It was glamorous and exciting.

SussexSport

08 | issue 09 issue 09 | 09

The B

ig Interview

The B

ig Interview

SussexSport

The

BigInterview

Pictures by James BoardmanThose youngsters might aim for the next one in Rio in four years or the one beyond that. At the very

least, I believe London 2012 will encourage them to have a more active and healthy lifestyle.And it is good to know Sussex is playing its part - as it should be.

The county has provided loads of training facilities for Olympian and Paralympians and well done to all at East Grinstead Sports and Country Club, Olympos in Burgess Hill, the All England Jumping course at Hickstead, Broadbridge Heath Leisure Centre in Horsham, Pavilions in the Park in Horsham, K2 Centre in Crawley, Yellowave Beach Volleyball in Brighton, Devonshire Park in Eastbourne, Bewl Water, Lewes Leisure Centre, Goodwood Estate and the University of Chichester for the part they are playing.The venues provide for a multitude of sports (including swimming, synchro-swimming, archery, athletics, badminton, basketball, boxing, cycling, equestrian, fencing, football, gymnastics, trampolining, handball, hockey, judo, table tennis, taekwondo, triathlon, volleyball, kayaking, canoeing and wrestling). A whole variety of Paralympic sports are also catered for too such as archery, athletics, boccia, equestrian, football, goalball, judo, volleyball, swimming, basketball, fencing, rugby, table tennis and tennis.A few Olympic nations are basing themselves in Sussex with Barbados at Broadbridge Heath, K2 and Crawley Boxing Club. Bahamas are also at the K2 along with Finland’s Paralympians. So the people of this county have an opportunity to see how these athletes go about preparing first hand, to

witness the blood, sweat and tears and study the methods employed to get mind and body right for their Games.

Parents talk about wanting to find a way of inspiring their kids but in order to discover that path they have to commit themselves to certain things. And they can show that commitment by taking their children along to the training venues to see Games athletes.The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity should be grabbed with both hands.

As a bonus, the Olympic teams from the Caribbean will further inspire ourcounty’s children by involving themselves in the Sussex School Games - the county’s Olympic and Paralympics combined - at the K2 in July. What a buzz that will be for the youngsters! Active Sussex, who are the link to providing sport for so many in the county, want to make sure the legacy left by London 2012 is to increase the number of participants, coaches and organisers in Sussex sport.The county seems to be doing its best to take advantage of the world’s great sporting extravaganza coming to these shores. There’s been concern expressed about the sedentary ways of our youth and that they are more into computer games than fresh air and exercise. Now youngsters from Brighton, Hastings, Chichester, Crawley, Burgess Hill and beyond can discover a world outside their bedroom games at events and places that will motivate, stimulate and, ultimately, do them the world of good.

I’m excited by the role I’ve been given for London 2012 as a British Olympic Association ambassador. I will be responsible for making sure the family and friends of athletes are looked after. I’ll also be taking dignitaries out

and providing hospitality on behalf of companies as well as doing TV work. I’ve got a pretty full diary but I also want to enjoy the Games as a spectacle as much as possible. My husband Jon and I have got tickets for the boxing and the BMX cycling. Our children, Finley, Luca and Marley, will enjoy the bikes. I also hope the BOA will sort us one evening at the track.

I want to see as many different sports as possible and enjoy being part of the whole thing as a fan.

Security is a massive area when it comes to the Olympics and the whole Village in London has been designed with security in mind. It was the first consideration before any buildings were built. It’s blown me away just what actually goes into organising a Games. The logistics of it are just crazy.

It looks to me like they’ve thought of everything and it has been brilliantly organised so far. We’ve got to keep our fingers crossed and trust in what we do and how we do it.

* Sally was talking to Mike Donovan

Come and watch the Olympians training in your back yard Sally Gunnell continues EXCLUSIVE column leading up to the Games

SussexSport SussexSport

32 | issue 10

London 2012

London 2012

issue 10 | 33

“Parents talk about wanting to find a way of

inspiring their kids but in order to discover that path

they have to commit themselves to certain things”

Page 6: SussexSport Media pack

readersUsing Acorn demographic data our readers are aged between 25 – 65, with an average household income of £76,000 pa. Males make up 71% of our primary readers. A considerable number of our readers fall into one of three Acorn categories:• Wealthy Achievers• AffluentExecutives• Prosperous Professionals

Our readers are people who participate enjoy and watch sports regularly at all levels across Sussex and have disposable incomes to allow this.Over60%ofouradvertisershavecontinuedadvertisingwiththetitlesincethefirstedition.

distribution20,000copiesofSussexSportaredistributedtospecifictargetedareasacrossSussex.Our distribution team carefully monitor who the magazine goes to, this ensures there are optimumopportunitiesforthetargetmarket,reflectinginmaximumexposureforadvertisers.• 2,500 copies are delivered door to door to the most prestigious properties in Brighton and Hove• SussexSportisalsodistributedtohighprofilesportsclubsacrossthecounty,including

Brighton & Hove Albion, Sussex CCC, Hickstead, Brighton Racecourse, Plumpton Racecourse, Crawley Town, Goodwood Racecourse, Fontwell Racecourse, all Golf Clubs, Gyms, Health Clubs, Tennis Clubs, Bowls Clubs amongst other Sports Clubs

• Selected Hotels, Bars, Restaurants, Health and Beauty Salons and Dentists• Each issue of Sussex Sport is available online allowing access all over the world 24 hours a day

marketingWeensureourmagazinemaintainsitshighprofilebycontinuedMarketingandPR,including:• Partnerships with Key events in Sussex such as the Active Sports awards and The

Rockinghorse Charity• SCFA race day at Fontwell Park Racecourse in aid of The Chestnut Tree House• Media Partnerships with key sporting venues and businesses across Sussex • Advertising boards at The PROBIZ County Ground (Sussex CCC), Sussex County FA

Headquarters (Lancing), Fontwell Park Racecourse, Brighton Racecourse.

Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport Sussex Sport

Publishers Of: Official sPOnsOrs: Official Publisher: Official suPPOrter: Official Partners:

SUSSEXSports Awards

Publishers Of: Official sPOnsOrs: Official Publisher: Official suPPOrter: Official Partners:

SUSSEXSports Awards

Publishers Of: Official sPOnsOrs: Official Publisher: Official suPPOrter: Official Partners:

SUSSEXSports Awards

Publishers Of: Official sPOnsOrs: Official Publisher: Official suPPOrter: Official Partners:

SUSSEXSports Awards

Publishers Of: Official sPOnsOrs: Official Publisher: Official suPPOrter: Official Partners:

SUSSEXSports Awards

Publishers Of: Official sPOnsOrs: Official Publisher: Official suPPOrter: Official Partners:

SUSSEXSports Awards

OfficialPartners

Page 7: SussexSport Media pack

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

Sussex Sport www.sussexsport.co.uk

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Sussex Sport

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Page 8: SussexSport Media pack

Contact UsThe Pinnacle Group, Newhaven Enterprise Centre Newhaven, East Sussex, BN9 9BA

To advertise:[email protected] number 07702 812 190 08707 707 765