He
has traveled the world in pursuit of stories as different as:
Walking
into Afghanistan
with the mujahadeen as they fought the Soviets
Going
into Baghdad with the victorious
Iraqi soccer team as the battle between insurgents and the US Military waged
around them
Visiting
China in
pursuit of underworld characters counterfeiting American golf clubs
Heading
to Damascus to find the last living
terrorist from the 1972 Olympics
Living
with football legend Walter Payton and his family as Payton courageously
battled cancer.
Traveling
Europe and the Middle East
interviewing Iraqi athletes tortured by Saddam Hussein's son, Uday, chairman of
the Iraqi Olympic Committee
Hitting
the campaign trail with candidates from both parties during the 1988
Presidential campaign
Traveled
to the back alleys of Amsterdam to
interview a chemist making undectable steroids for athletes - before Barry
Bonds made such chemists famous
A
1984 graduate of Ball State
University with degrees in both
journalism and history, Yaeger began his career in journalism as a reporter for
the San Antonio Light where he rose through the ranks to pen investigative
features for the daily. He later moved on to the Dallas Morning News. Following
his stint in Dallas, Yaeger worked
as a political editor for the Florida Times-Union. He is also a two-time
finalist for the National Magazine Award and has been included three times in
Best American Sportswriting.
After
four years, he dedicated himself solely to the pursuit of writing books.
Yaeger's first book, Undue Process: The NCAA's Injustice For All, was published
by Sagamore Publishers in 1990. He has since gone on to write ten other
sports-related books and co-authored the highly-publicized New York Times
Best-seller, Under The Tarnished Dome: How Notre Dame Betrayed Its Ideals For
Football Glory and 1998's Sports Book of Year, Pros & Cons: The Criminals
Who Play in the NFL. In the fall of 2000 Don published Never Die Easy, The
Autobiography of Walter Payton with Random House. It became a New York Times
Bestseller Recently, his book, Ya Gotta Believe, about the battle baseball
legend Tug McGraw fought against cancer also became an instant Times
bestseller. Due out this fall is The Turning of the Tide.
After
several years of freelancing for SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, Don joined the magazine's
staff full-time in July 1996. Two years, later he was promoted to Associate
Editor, where his work was to cover not just sporting events but the legal
issues, controversial happenings and major issues affecting the world of
sports.
Yaeger
and his co-author William Nack were finalists for a 2000 National Magazine
Award in the public interest category for their cover story, "Who's
Coaching Your Kid?: The frightening truth about child molestation in youth
sports." This important piece triggered follow-up reports by programs such
as Dateline, 20/20 and The Oprah Winfrey Show. It also resulted in changes to
the laws of several states -- as well as several youth sports organizations,
including Little League of America-- to require background checks of coaches
and volunteers.
Born
and raised in Hawaii, Yaeger has
traveled extensively. The Dominican Republic,
Honduras, Japan
and Great Britain
can be counted among the countries in which he has resided. Yaeger also owns a
political consulting business and a public relations firm. He also serves as an
adjunct professor in the Department of Journalism at the University
of Florida and the College
of Communications at Florida
State University.