The case of Bolton Wanderers is yet another example of how different football clubs are to normal companies – and why they rarely pass away into total, terminal, permanent death.
Football supporters can make a difference when it comes to Premier League clubs prioritising profit over fans.
Eye in the sky: the ‘spidercam’ is just one of the technological innovations bringing ever more information to football fans.
J. Glover/Wikimedia Commons
Once the stuff of tweeting birds and rolling cartoon eyes, bumps on the head are now linked to dementia. Will Smith’s latest movie tells how sports authorities tried to cover it up.
Australia struggles to rise above the fray in Korean news, consigned to one of a number of countries that form an international community. But football seems to be a clear exception to this.
Cristiano Ronaldo in action for Real Madrid.
Albert Gea/Reuters
Just as football coaches reconsidered when to opt for a two-point conversion after the NFL made a change, the Fed adjusts its decisions in line with an evolving economy.
We’ve entered the home straight to Euro 2016.
EPA/Ian Langsdon
As football grapples with numerous scandals, the Euro 2016 draw brings a welcome focus on the game itself rather than on the intrigue of its boardrooms.
A boy plays next to a football centre in Cape Town’s Khayelitsha township.
Mike Hutchings/Reuters
No-one seriously believes that football – followed by so many, and accepted as legitimate by most of the community – could be killed off in Australia by a handful of media mouthpieces.
Liberté, egalité, fraternité.
Action Images via Reuters / John Sibley