Need advice when choosing your next training program? Take the path!
Formulario
Cookies
We use our own and third party cookies and other similar technologies to offer you our services, personalize and analyze your browsing, which allows us to understand how our website is being used and which contents are more relevant. Likewise, it also enables us the use of additional functionalities such as showing third party contents or sharing contents with social networks, as well as managing the advertising we show you both on our website and on other third party websites, which could be personalized depending on your browsing and interests in our contents. You can accept all cookies clicking the button “ACCEPT COOKIES” or refuse them by clicking the button “REFUSE COOKIES”. For more information access our Cookies Policy available through the “MORE INFORMATION” button.
A year ago, one of the greatest experts in European football stadiums, Paul Fletcher, published a research about the impact of these buildings to the urban environment. He analysed the cities that had been home to the UEFA Champions League in the last decade, suggesting many interesting insights.
Football has a huge ability to transform society. However, as the greater clubs are the stars of
today, we often look only at the ability of their star players as trend creators, or at the analysis of teams’ sports success.
Teams, athletes and sports clubs have supported charitable causes for a long time. They are rooted in their communities and have the obligation to support them.
We have a completely wrong idea of how philosophy was born. The image of wise men who never got up from their seats clung to their academies and universities, has little to do with philosophers like Socrates, one of its greatest representatives.
There are two things that the president of the Forest Green Rovers, does not admit in his football club: that players eat red meat, or that fans can buy it at the stadium.
Covid-19 has subjected the International Olympic Committee and its headquarters in Tokyo to an unprecedented situation, and one of the greatest challenges for governance in modern sport.