This article contains promotional content. (October 2024) |
Sofascore is an application for following sports statistics and results. The app is owned and developed by SofaIT from Zagreb, Croatia. In 2020, the app had 20 million users. It covers 20 different sports and around 11,000 different leagues and tournaments, and is available in more than 30 different languages.
The app founders are Ivan Bešlić and Zlatko Hrkać, who previously worked on other Internet projects during the era of "blogs and forums". They started the app for collecting sports results in 2010. After noticing large traffic on their site, Google invited them to Dublin in 2011. That year they formed a small office for programme developers. In 2012, just before the UEFA Euro 2012, they changed the app's name to Sofascore in order to develop a brand.[1]
They developed a system of assessment of athletes' performances which differentiated them from other similar existing apps and gave them leverage in the market. The system also enables the tracking and assessment of young players from lower-tier leagues, that otherwise wouldn't get attention.[1]
Most users are from footballing countries like Germany, Italy, France, and the United Kingdom. The app is also much used in South America and Africa. In Africa, a special version of the app is available for low internet connectivity.[1][2]
As of 2023, Luka Modrić is a brand ambassador of Sofascore.[3]
Footnotes
edit- ^ a b c Index.hr 2020.
- ^ Pavić 2020.
- ^ "Sofascore – Leading Provider of Advanced Sports Insights". Sofascore Corporate. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
References
edit- "Kako je nastao SofaScore, jedna od najpopularnijih aplikacija za praćenje sporta na svijetu" [How SofaScore came to be, one of the most popular apps in the world for tracking sports]. Index.hr (in Croatian). Zagreb. 5 April 2020. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
- Pavić, Filip (15 March 2020). "'Sve je počelo kao hobi. Sada naše statistike i rezultate prati 20 milijuna ljudi'" ['All begun as a hobby, and now our statistics and results are followed by 20 million people']. Jutarnji list (in Croatian). Zagreb. Retrieved 10 March 2023.