John Leonard Powers is an American journalist and author. He wrote for The Boston Globe for more than four decades in the Sports, Metro, Sunday Magazine, and Living sections, later becoming a freelance correspondent for the newspaper.
John Leonard Powers was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the first child of a Boston policeman, Powers graduated in 1966 from Boston Latin School.
In 1970 he earned an A.B. cum laude from Harvard University and, while there, wrote for the sports section of The Harvard Crimson student newspaper. From 1970 to 1972, Powers served as a United States Navy line officer aboard an aircraft carrier, the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Powers has covered every Olympic Games (summer and winter) since 1976, except the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, when the U.S. boycott led the Russians to refuse to issue a visa.
Besides covering the Olympics, Powers has written about nearly all major sports, at both the college and professional levels, and filed stories from five continents. His range encompasses not only "major" sports like football, baseball, and basketball, but includes smaller sports like gymnastics and rowing.
He was a vital contributor to The Third H Book of Harvard Athletics, the standard reference on the athletic history of his alma mater. In soccer, Powers has reported from five FIFA World Cups and two FIFA Women's World Cups.
He has led the Boston Globes coverage of the Boston Marathon and covered that event for nearly five decades.
Many sportswriters consider him the dean of Olympic journalists.
Powers was an integral part of a highly regarded sportswriting team at the Globe. âÂÂFrom the mid-1970s to the early '80s,â Sports Illustrated wrote in 2009, âÂÂthe Globe contained arguably the greatest collection of reporting talent ever assembled in a sports sectionâ¦â He has also written or co-authored 11 books.
Powers shared the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for a special issue of The Boston Globe Sunday Magazine titled âÂÂWar and Peace in the Nuclear Age.âÂÂ
In 2011, Powers received the Boston Athletic Association's Will Cloney Award, presented to an individual who has promoted the sport of running, especially locally.
Powers was a Poynter Fellow at Yale University.