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Current BW Magazine Table of Contents

January 12, 2004 BW Magazine Table of Contents

January 12, 2004 The Best & Worst Managers of 2003 Table of Contents



QUALITY INVESTING
Introduction


The Best Managers
Rose Marie Bravo
Jonathan Grayer
Dr. William McGuire
Serge Tchuruk
Vivek Paul
Arthur Levinson
Ken Thompson
George David
Steve Jobs
James McNerney
Bob Wright
Orin Smith
Craig Barrett
Terry Semel
Yun Jong Yong
Peter Chernin
Paul Tagliabue


Managers to Watch
Repeat Performers
The Freshmen
The Repurposed


The Worst Managers
Jurgen Schrempp
Nobuyuki Idei
Peter Burg
Joe Galli
Wayne Harris
Robert Glynn
Contracting Trouble


The Fallen Managers
Phil Condit
Conrad Black
Dick Grasso
The Rest of the Fallen
Second Acts
On Trial
Egg on Enron faces
The Mutual-Fund Scandals
A White Knight
PR Fiascoes
New Names


Miss Manners Regrets






JANUARY 12, 2004
THE BEST & WORST MANAGERS OF 2003 -- THE BEST MANAGERS

Paul Tagliabue
National Football League

Shortly after ESPN premiered its drama series, Playmakers, last August, the phone rang in the office of Michael D. Eisner, CEO of ESPN parent Walt Disney (DIS ) Co. An irate Paul Tagliabue, commissioner of the National Football League, was calling to complain that the show portrayed players as thugs. The show stayed on the air, but Tagliabue's willingness to challenge the creative license of Disney says a lot about how jealously this 63-year-old lawyer guards his fiefdom.


In 15 years as the NFL's caretaker, he has helped turn it into a $5 billion-a-year business -- up from $970 million when he came in. Ratings were up this season, and the NFL launched its own TV channel. Tagliabue's attention to revenue sharing and a salary cap made the NFL the most competitive pro league. All of which qualifies the commish as an unsung MVP candidate.

Key Accomplishments
-- Oversaw the launch of the NFL Network, a cable and satellite channel.

-- Welcomed Sirius Satellite Radio as NFL's official radio network in a $220 million, seven-year deal.




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