Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 29. Chapters: 11 Freunde, Best Eleven, Calcio 2000, Calcio Italia, Don Balon, El Grafico, European Sports Media, Fenomeno Inter, Forza Milan, FourFourTwo, FourFourTwo (Australia), France Football, Galatasaray (magazine), Hala Madrid, Hurra Juventus, Inside United, Kicker (sports magazine), Kick Off (magazine), Match (magazine), Mistica, Offside (magazine), Placar, Revista Santastico, She Kicks (magazine), Shoot (football magazine), Soccer America, Soccer International, The Blizzard (magazine), Total Football (magazine), Voetbal International, When Saturday Comes, World Soccer (magazine). Excerpt: The Blizzard is a quarterly football magazine edited by Jonathan Wilson, published in both download and hard copy formats by Blizzard Media. The magazine is sold on a pay-what-you-like basis, with each issue available from as little as 1p in a range of download formats, and from 6 (+P&P) for a hard copy. The recommended retail price is 3 for download copies and 12 per issue for hard copies. The Blizzard took its name from an eclectic Victorian Sunderland-based newspaper set-up by Sidney Duncan, which ran for 12 issues and was established in 1893. The Editor's Note, which began Issue Zero, set out the magazine's ethos as an alternative to that which was currently available in football media. Jonathan Wilson wrote: "I'd been frustrated for some time by the constraints of the mainstream media and, in various press-rooms and bars across the world, I'd come to realise I wasn't the only one who felt journalism as a whole was missing something, that there should be more space for more in-depth pieces, for detailed reportage, history and analysis. Was there a way, I wondered, to accommodate articles of several thousand words? Could we do something that was neither magazine nor book, but somewhere in between?As I floated thoughts...