How former Galaxy player Eddie Lewis became a soccer training tech innovator


by Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times— Eddie Lewis played his final soccer game at the age of 36, old for a midfielder but young for just about everybody else. So with more than half a lifetime ahead of him, he had plenty of time to build a new career. Yet like many former players, all he really knew was soccer. “A lot of players retire with quite a bit of soccer experience. It almost becomes somewhat of a detriment in the sense that they haven't gained a lot of other experiences along the way,” he said. Lewis had a lot of soccer...

men—Former Manchester United player David de Gea training at non-league stadium as free agent. David de Gea left Man Utd upon the expiry of his contract last summer and the 'keeper has gone the season without a club.

The Guardian—How the NWSL became the world’s most innovative league. League commissioner Jessica Berman talks ballooning franchise values, the merits of expansion and reducing injuriesNo soccer league in the world is experiencing a boom comparative to the NWSL in 2024. Last month, the world’s first purpose-built stadium for a women’s sports franchise opened in Kansas City, marking the new home of the Current. San Diego Wave broke its NWSL home opener attendance record with over 32,000 fans, while the NWSL was listed at No 5 on the World’s 50 Most Innovative...

UK Tech News—Are you the UK’s next exciting tech innovator?. Paid partnership with KPMG UK With the power to unlock huge benefits for the wider economy, UK tech innovators are our hope for the future. As KPMG opens applications for the firm’s annual Tech Innovator in the UK competition, Nicole Lowe, head of KPMG’s Emerging Giants practice talks to Dr Elliot Street, CEO of Inovus […]