Can women’s football be a game changer?
Queer identities, widely accepted on the pitch in women's football, may be the way to challenge gender norms in some societies.
Queer identities, widely accepted on the pitch in women's football, may be the way to challenge gender norms in some societies.
The last time Ghana's men's national football team won a tournament was thirty-seven years ago. The team is beginning to feel like yet another failing state institution.
The story of Surya Bonaly, and her unwillingness to yield to racist demands and expectations in the sport of figure skating.
What a documentary film on running can tell us about Ethiopia's development trajectory.
The international body governing track and field announced that the longest distance race to be held will be the 3000 meters. We know who will benefit least from this change.
Who gets to host future editions of the men's soccer World Cup is not just big business, but also a bargaining chip in international relations.
The Arsenal 'Visit Rwanda' sponsorship deal is government image management 101.
Star players in Cameroon's national soccer team have always doubled as PR pawns for the protracted rule of the country's aging and hard-line head of state.
Rugby in South Africa is generally understood to be a white sport, but contemporary statistics reveal that a great many more black people than white people play rugby there.
When former Springbok Ashwin Willemse walked off a SuperSport TV set, he forced conversations on racism in South African rugby and its sports media.
Organized US Soccer is perceived as middle class and white. Seattle, Washington wants to break with that via its professional women's team.
Is France's World Cup championship team a bellwether for France's political future?
The author, French: "When the game is over in Russia, I’ll go play another at the field down the street. I’ll find a song to sing on the way."
The 2010 World Cup was tumultuous for France; both an athletic failure and a site of social conflict. The French Football Federation doesn't want to repeat it.
Fascists love Kylian Mbappé and hate Karim Benzema. Between these two lies the problem of romanticizing the French team as an African team.
A possible French victory hovers like a thin layer of hope that barely veils the simmering anger at France’s neglect of the islands and pessimism about the future.
Focusing on sports allegiance to Nigeria, offered a break from pondering over all of its social ills.
In 1982, Reinaldo, a striker prone to making black power salutes, was left out out of Brazil's World Cup squad.
Watching the World Cup with a young Nigerian professional footballer in Seattle, U.S.
The success of Belgium's national football team as a key site for political struggles over identity, race and immigration.