Showing posts with label CHAMPIONS LEAGUE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHAMPIONS LEAGUE. Show all posts

Monday, March 16, 2020

Coronavirus: Spanish football coach Francisco Garcia passes away aged 21


Atletico Portada Alta released an official statement on Instagram about the passing away of Garcia.


Spanish football trainer Francisco Garcia has died matured 21 in the wake of contracting coronavirus.

Garcia was filling in as the supervisor of Atletico Portada Alta's childhood group since 2016. He has become the most youthful casualty of the sickness in the district, goal.com revealed.

Atletico Portada Alta discharged an official explanation on Instagram about the dying of Garcia.

"We need to communicate our most profound sympathies to the family, companions and dear companions of our mentor Francisco Garcia who has left us, tragically, today," the announcement said.

"Presently what do we manage without you, Francis? You were consistently there with us at Portada or any place you were required, assisting. How might we continue covering each one of those kilometers in the group? We don't have the foggiest idea how, yet we will unquestionably do it for you. We won't overlook you, find happiness in the hereafter, marvel. Until always," it included.

He spent away on Sunday subsequent to testing positive for COVID-19 a week ago, having been sent to the Regional Hospital of Malaga for treatment. At the point when the administrator showed up at the office, it was likewise discovered that he was additionally experiencing leukemia.

Spanish football's significant classes have been closed down inconclusively to contain the spread of coronavirus. Something very similar has been followed in UK, France, and Italy.
All significant football rivalries like La Liga, Premier League, Champions League, and Serie A have been suspended due to the coronavirus flare-up.

The World Health Organization (WHO) on Friday announced that the focal point of the coronavirus pandemic has moved from China, where new cases revealed have radically diminished, to Europe, where most nations are seeing a move in diseases and fatalities.

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

After losing Ronaldo, Spanish football sets eye on global reach and riches


La Liga has been trying to promote itself overseas by opening marketing offices in the Far East and hiring a former Netflix executive as its new head of communications.


The Spanish soccer league, whose clubs reign supreme in Europe's biggest competitions, is staging a counter-attack in the clash for global reach and riches off the field.
La Liga has been trying to promote itself overseas by opening marketing offices in the Far East and hiring a former Netflix executive as its new head of communications. After losing two of its biggest stars in consecutive seasons -- first Neymar to France and now Cristiano Ronaldo to Italy -- President Javier Tebas is considering taking matches to another country in the way the NFL and NBA play in London. The U.S. is a likely destination.

We would like to do it once or twice a season,” Tebas said in an interview at his office in Madrid last week. “I’m convinced that over the next few seasons we will play outside Spain. It’s not easy because we have fans in Spain, but I hope we can do it in the next year or two.”

For all the supremacy of its top clubs -- Spanish teams have won the Champions League and Europa League nine times out of 10 competitions over the past five years -- the country plays second fiddle to the English Premier League when it comes to generating money. Revenue from broadcasting rights was 1.5 billion euros ($1.8 billion) in the latest annual report by consulting firm Deloitte, less than half that of the English league.

But Spanish revenue is catching up. When Tebas took over in 2013, broadcast rights were negotiated by individual clubs. Now television deals are done centrally by the league. Spain has overtaken Germany’s Bundesliga as the highest revenue generator after the Premier League.

In the latest round of bidding, Telefonica SA trumped its main rival Mediapro in June for the lion’s share of broadcast rights, paying 2.9 billion euros for three seasons. The price dropped in the most recent Premier League deal. “We are bridging the gap,” Tebas said.
Now to build on the rapid growth in global rights sales, which Tebas said have quadrupled to 800 million euros compared with 2013.

The next phase is to become a larger entertainment brand with a loyal fan base watching soccer rather than shows on Netflix. That would also help make it less vulnerable to players defecting to other leagues, Tebas said. Ronaldo, 33, left Real Madrid for Juventus, though his perennial rival for the position of La Liga’s biggest star, Lionel Messi, remains at Barcelona.

It would be irresponsible if we didn’t prepare ourselves for when a player isn’t in the league,” he said. “We are about entertainment. Our competition isn’t only other soccer leagues, its other sports, like motorbike racing, and things such as Netflix. Our biggest rival is the remote control, because people can change channels.”

Tebas might also face challenges with his goal of taking league games abroad. His Premier League counterpart, the departing Richard Scudamore, couldn’t pull it off. He proposed a similar idea 10 years ago, but withdrew the plan after a backlash from local fans. European clubs play pre-season tournaments in the U.S. and Asia instead.

In the meantime, La Liga’s workforce of about 400 is working on branding, social media and advertising in offices worldwide, including South Africa, Singapore and China.

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