
“guardian.co.uk/ football is the best football site on the internet, period. Over the past few years we've earned a worldwide reputation for combining razor-sharp journalism with a wit that fizzes like a David Beckham free-kick.”
Sean Ingle
Editor
guardian.co.uk/football
Editor
guardian.co.uk/football
Over the last few years, guardian.co.uk/football has established
a reputation as the place to go to
for lively, irreverent and intelligent
coverage of the nation’s favourite
sport. On the site you’ll find upto-
the-minute news, features and
exclusives, all the coverage from
the Guardian and Observer’s sports pages – plus a hefty dollop of intelligence, irreverence and reader interaction.
a reputation as the place to go to
for lively, irreverent and intelligent
coverage of the nation’s favourite
sport. On the site you’ll find upto-
the-minute news, features and
exclusives, all the coverage from
the Guardian and Observer’s sports pages – plus a hefty dollop of intelligence, irreverence and reader interaction.
Award winning site
Popular sections
The Fiver
The "cult" daily football email is funny, informative and free. It rounds up the best of the day’s news, gossip and comment and lands in our
subscribers’ inboxes by 5pm each day.
Minute-by-minute match reports
Our interactive minute-byminute football reports have become well known in their own right. During World Cup 2002 we had over one million impressions for South Korea
v Italy, while our spoof Americanised report on USA v Mexico was mistakenly read out by Gary Lineker on the BBC’s World Cup coverage.
The "cult" daily football email is funny, informative and free. It rounds up the best of the day’s news, gossip and comment and lands in our
subscribers’ inboxes by 5pm each day.
Minute-by-minute match reports
Our interactive minute-byminute football reports have become well known in their own right. During World Cup 2002 we had over one million impressions for South Korea
v Italy, while our spoof Americanised report on USA v Mexico was mistakenly read out by Gary Lineker on the BBC’s World Cup coverage.
The Gallery
It’s a simple idea: get guardian.co.uk readers to draw/photoshop famous footballers for laughs, but it
works brilliantly. Just imagine Gary Neville as Che Guevara, David Seaman as the Comic Book Guy in the Simpsons or even Glenn Hoddle as Jesus.
It’s a simple idea: get guardian.co.uk readers to draw/photoshop famous footballers for laughs, but it
works brilliantly. Just imagine Gary Neville as Che Guevara, David Seaman as the Comic Book Guy in the Simpsons or even Glenn Hoddle as Jesus.

Upmarket, high-earning males

Source:
Forrester UK Internet User Monitor November 2007
Forrester UK Internet User Monitor November 2007



