An Impossible Boxing Day: Why European Football Stops at Christmas
European football fans ask themselves this question every single Christmas. Why aren’t there matches on?
European football fans ask themselves this question every single Christmas. Why aren’t there matches on?
Digital tech is one of the fastest growing areas in sports stadium management.
Technology is changing the world of sport in many ways and its use is growing rapidly.
Last year, the 30th of December, FC Barcelona issued a statement making it official that its goalkeeper Marc-André Ter Stegen suffered from tendinopathy in the right knee that required treatment
The IoTwins project, financed by the European Union in its Horizon 2020 programme, will be used to develop an Espai Barça management tool.
The strategy of major sports clubs is to consolidate the global impact they have had in recent years.
For the 2020-2021 season, European football has suffered an estimated loss of 4 billion Euros, the NBA has calculated 500 million dollars, the NFL 1,300, and the MLB 200.
Right now, the question is inevitable: How can we make a one hundred and fifty-year-old sport, with rules that have remained unchanged, attractive for a generation that has grown up surrounded by screens.
With the pandemic affecting us all across the globe, we are having to adapt to different ways of living and working. And this is no different in the world of sport.
The pandemic has taken away what is most important within stadiums, the audience.