Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Armchair fans paid to watch football

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 27 November 2008
IT IS the dream job for millions, but now getting paid to watch football has become a reality.
Thanks to researchers at the University of Glasgow, football fans will be able to earn money while staying in the comfort of their own home.

Academics are looking for 15 lucky fans to help develop a new technology that could change match day
s as we know them.

Having received £400,000 in funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, Glasgow University researchers, along with colleagues from the University of California and Microsoft are developing systems where fans can use mobile phones to debate the day's action.

Pictures, blogs, and comments will be sent to each other's mobiles, as groups of fans catalogue their match-day experience and share their opinions on everything from the standard of the pies to the quality of play.

The idea is that fans up and down the country can debate key decisions, such as disputed penalties, goals, free-kicks and sendings-off as they happen, even if they are not there.

Stuart Reeves, a research assistant with the Department of Computer Science at Glasgow, said: "We want to find out what fans talk about and their reactions to events at a game.

"The idea is to give some power back to sports fans, so they can share information and make their own record and analysis of matches and get more out of the experience. We will then use this information to design data-sharing applications which enable photo-sharing and blogging in real time, using wi-fi, GPS and 3G technology.

"Sports fans are very insightful and are skilled at knowing what is going on in a game," he said. "They are often highly critical, but that is part of supporting a team, so we want to design a system that will support their debate and their commitment."

Fans will receive £5 each for being filmed in groups as they watch a game, and £10 for an hour-long interview.

Dr Matthew Chalmers said: "Football has a great social atmosphere, and this experiment is about creating a framework where people going to a game and those staying at home can share their experiences."

The researchers experimented earlier this year at T in the Park where festival-goers sent back pictures and messages throughout their weekend. "We really just got pictures of alcohol and mud," Dr Chalmers said.

"But, because football creates such a social environment, we hope this will be a great success bringing fans together."


CASE STUDY

STEVE Morris is just the kind of football enthusiast the job advert is aimed at, but he prefers the real thing. Steve, 47, from Mid Calder is a member of the Tartan Army Tap Shop and has spent his life following Scotland all over Europe.

He said: "Earlier this year a group of friends and I wanted to go and see Scotland play Macedonia and Iceland as a double header. The only way we could do this was go to was to fly to Pula in Croatia where we stayed for six days before travelling via trains, busses and more planes through Slovenia, Romania, and then into Macedonia. We saw Scotland lose 0-1, then flew to Copenhagen, and then on to Iceland to see Scotland win 2-1.

Mr Morris welcomed the idea of using mobiles to keep fans at home involved.

He said: "It is a good idea but there is no substitute for the real thing. "This scheme could work for a lot of people who can't make it to matches or simply prefer to watch football at home. But you can't reproduce the atmosphere of a match on a mobile phone."



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 26 November 2008 9:13 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

I-Mac,

27/11/2008 00:08:44
Should Celtic pay their fans to watch them play away in the Champions League? ;0)
2

Bzzzz,

Edinburgh 27/11/2008 01:46:31
Should Rangers pay their fans to watch everyone else play away in the Champions League? ;0)
3

drunken proffet,

Tassy 27/11/2008 06:13:02
If it is relevant, I am sure they will declare their income to the bru. :~) As a matter of interest I reckon that is a Glaswegian smiley, hence the broken nose.
4

donald,

glasgow 27/11/2008 06:32:26
Why not pay all Old Firm fans to stay indoors.
5

Lianachan,

Highlands 27/11/2008 08:32:23
In a sporting TV world where I can't even watch (infrequent) Scotland matches unless I pay a monthly subscription for English league matches I'm not remotely interested in, plus all kind of other sports I am even less interested in, it's hard for me to muster much enthusiasm.
6

Paul R,

27/11/2008 10:56:50
#5 - Likewise. Football has really lost its appeal.
7

Brian the Barbarian.,

the slums 27/11/2008 11:31:09

£400,000.00 of taxpayers money when I can't get any assistance for my dad who is 86, a decorated war vetran and suffering from dementia.

The same amount the SNP gave recently to an Islamic Study group in Glasgow.

People in this country must be nuts for putting up with this horse sh17 every day ,every week every month every year.
8

Lianachan,

Highlands 27/11/2008 11:33:06
#6 Indeed. I grew up watching Scotland games on the TV, which has helped nurture my support for the national side and interest in the game in general. It's going to be difficult for my own children to muster much interest in something they can't see. It's bad for the future of the game in Scotland. The SFA should hang their money grabbing heads in shame.

(By the way, geography makes it very difficult and expensive for me to actually go to any games, even home ones).
9

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 27/11/2008 12:39:48
Oh, great.

Another brilliant scheme - supposedly scientific - to get lardar*ed blowhards to stay home and get fatter and fatter.

One hopes they screen out the overweight so they cannot be subsequently sued for contributing to heart attack, stroke, diabetes, death, etc.

As for "the standard of the pies", will they be shipping crates of those artery-clogging muck to the lucky 15 and further contribute to their ill-health.

Some of these "academics" need a reality check and a REAL job and I agree with poster #7 Brian the Barbarian that this is a ludicrous waste of taxpayers' money.

Sickening.
10

TuringTestDave,

Edinburgh 27/11/2008 21:51:51
As a researcher in the area of AI and Computer Science which this article is reporting about, this just smacks of lazy reporting and commenting. Of course you are all going to have a go at the waste of time you think this project is likely to be. Why not think for a while about the great things which Scotland has produced in this area. Edinburgh and Glasgow are two of the top 15 places in the world for this sort of research. Similar places in the States spawned Google, Yahoo, YouTube. This is a really interesting project about the transition from talking about things in a normal pub or livingroom environment to talking about something like football or cooking or maybe the latest article in the Scotsman in an online, mobile, computer mediated manner and thinking about how we may have to change to accommodate technology and how technology should be moulded to accommodate us. And then think that the amount of money spent on this project in three years is about half that of a banker's annual salary, those guys who have helped plunge us into debt recently. And think about what contribution their salary, which you also pay in bank charges, has really contributed to anything worthwhile.
11

Lianachan,

Highlands 27/11/2008 21:52:09
#10 It is yet worse than that! I also pay that, and don't get any reception. I have to pay the BBC for stuff I can only access via Sky.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.