Sport in Europe

Sport in Europe tends to be highly organized with many sports having professional leagues. The origins of many of the world's most popular sports today lie in the codification of many traditional games, especially in the United Kingdom. However, a paradoxical feature of European sport is the extent to which local, regional and national variations continue to exist, and even in some instances to predominate.[1]

Main events

Region events

Team sports

Association football

Association football is the most popular sport in almost all countries of Europe. European national teams have won 12 of 22 editions of the FIFA World Cup. Italy and Germany have won four titles each, followed by France with two titles and England and Spain, which each won the World Cup once. UEFA, the governing body for European football, has hosted the UEFA European Championship since 1960, and the UEFA Women's Championship since 1984.

The most popular and successful football leagues are the Big Five: the English Premier League; the Spanish La Liga; the German Bundesliga; the Italian Serie A; and the French Ligue 1.[2][3] Other main football leagues on the continent include the Portuguese Primeira Liga, the Dutch Eredivisie, the Russian Premier League and the Turkish Süper Lig. The top clubs in each league play the UEFA Champions League, while lower-ranked clubs compete in UEFA Europa League and the UEFA Conference League.

Followers

As of 2024, the top 10 most popular sports clubs on social media are all football clubs from Europe:[4]

# Club Country Followers
1 Real Madrid Spain 360.5 million
2 FC Barcelona Spain 318.8 million
3 Manchester United United Kingdom 207 million
4 Arsenal United Kingdom 165.2 million

|- | style="text-align:center;"| _row_count || Juventus || Italy || 147.4 million |- | style="text-align:center;"| _row_count || Manchester City || United Kingdom || 139.7 million |- | style="text-align:center;"| _row_count || Chelsea || United Kingdom || 134.4 million |- | style="text-align:center;"| _row_count || Liverpool FC || United Kingdom || 131.6 million |- | style="text-align:center;"| _row_count || Bayern München || Germany || 126.5 million |- | style="text-align:center;"| _row_count || Paris Saint-Germain || France || 99.2 million |-

Attendances

The UEFA clubs with an average home league attendance of at least 20,000 in the 2024-25 and 2025 seasons:

# Club Country Average
1 Borussia Dortmund Germany 81,365
2 Bayern München Germany 75,000
3 Manchester United England 73,747
4 Real Madrid Spain 72,701
5 AC Milan Italy 71,544
6 Internazionale Italy 70,129
7 Olympique de Marseille France 63,553
8 West Ham United England 62,464
9 AS Roma Italy 62,435
10 Schalke Germany 61,639
11 Tottenham Hotspur England 61,127
12 Atlético de Madrid Spain 60,883
13 Liverpool FC England 60,330
14 Arsenal England 60,251
15 VfB Stuttgart Germany 59,265
16 Celtic Scotland 58,903
17 Benfica Portugal 58,746
18 Eintracht Frankfurt Germany 57,600
19 HSV Germany 56,324
20 Ajax Netherlands 54,263
21 Hertha Germany 53,191
22 Borussia Mönchengladbach Germany 53,078
23 Manchester City England 52,591
24 Newcastle United England 52,187
25 Real Betis Spain 51,542
26 Olympique lyonnais France 50,994
27 SSC Napoli Italy 50,989
28 1. FC Köln Germany 49,929
29 Athletic Club Spain 48,401
30 Rangers Scotland 48,255
31 Paris Saint-Germain France 47,603
32 Feyenoord Netherlands 47,235
33 1. FC Kaiserslautern Germany 46,348
34 FC Barcelona Spain 46,005
35 RB Leipzig Germany 45,045
36 Lazio Italy 44,786
37 Valencia CF Spain 43,042
38 Galatasaray Turkey 43,039
39 Sporting Portugal 42,529
40 LOSC France 42,417
41 Aston Villa England 42,079
42 Fortuna 95 Germany 41,488
43 Werder Bremen Germany 41,403
44 FC Porto Portugal 40,609
45 Sunderland AFC England 40,425
46 Juventus Italy 40,237
47 Chelsea England 39,611
48 Everton England 39,173
49 Hannover 96 Germany 38,300
50 RC Lens France 37,936
51 1. FC Nürnberg Germany 37,408
52 Leeds United England 36,134
53 Zenit Russia 35,691
54 Sevilla FC Spain 35,574
55 PSV Netherlands 34,338
56 SC Freiburg Germany 34,188
57 Fenerbahçe Turkey 33,571
58 Mainz 05 Germany 32,390
59 Brighton & Hove Albion England 31,482
60 Leicester City England 31,448
61 Southampton FC England 30,865
62 Wolverhampton Wanderers England 30,660
63 AS Saint-Étienne France 30,288
64 FC Nantes France 30,269
65 Nottingham Forest England 30,059
66 Bayer Leverkusen Germany 29,961
67 Genoa CFC Italy 29,898
68 Real Sociedad Spain 29,877
69 FC Augsburg Germany 29,820
70 Ipswich Town England 29,742
71 Twente Netherlands 29,662
72 St. Pauli Germany 29,506
73 Karlsruher SC Germany 29,492
74 Derby County England 29,018
75 Dynamo Dresden Germany 28,991
76 Lech Poznań Poland 28,947
77 AIK Sweden 28,589
78 Young Boys Switzerland 28,482
79 Beşiktaş Turkey 28,393
80 FC København Denmark 28,205
81 Sheffield United England 28,087
82 Bologna FC Italy 28,007
83 Coventry City England 27,816
84 FC Krasnodar Russia 27,561
85 Stade rennais France 27,375
86 Olympiacos Greece 26,969
87 Fulham England 26,826
88 Sheffield Wednesday England 26,636
89 Norwich City England 26,316
90 Birmingham City England 26,283
91 FC Basel Switzerland 26,150
92 US Lecce Italy 26,007
93 Alemannia Germany 25,861
94 Espanyol Spain 25,640
95 Toulouse FC France 25,566
96 VfL Bochum Germany 25,546
97 Middlesbrough FC England 25,416
98 1899 Hoffenheim Germany 25,309
99 1. FC Magdeburg Germany 25,300
100 Crystal Palace England 25,064
101 West Bromwich Albion England 25,057
102 Hellas Verona Italy 24,882
103 Legia Warszawa Poland 24,867
104 Málaga CF Spain 24,857
105 VfL Wolfsburg Germany 24,596
106 OGC Nice France 24,299
107 Hansa Rostock Germany 24,269
108 AEK Greece 23,943
109 Hammarby Sweden 23,579
110 sc Heerenveen Netherlands 23,389
111 UD Las Palmas Spain 23,010
112 Maccabi Haifa Israel 22,953
113 Torino FC Italy 22,947
114 Stoke City England 22,804
115 Atalanta Italy 22,700
116 Club Brugge Belgium 22,496
117 Bristol City England 22,423
118 FC Groningen Netherlands 22,231
119 Sampdoria Italy 22,077
120 Hajduk Split Croatia 22,028
121 1. FC Union Germany 21,953
122 Udinese Italy 21,834
123 Brøndby IF Denmark 21,659
124 Deportivo de La Coruña Spain 21,571
125 Celta de Vigo Spain 21,504
126 Bolton Wanderers England 21,325
127 Hull City England 21,323
128 Arminia Bielefeld Germany 21,245
129 Real Sporting Spain 21,131
130 BTSV Eintracht Germany 21,080
131 Palermo FC Italy 20,730
132 Real Oviedo Spain 20,673
133 FC Utrecht Netherlands 20,658
134 Osasuna Spain 20,476
135 Maccabi Tel Aviv Israel 20,442
136 Fiorentina Italy 20,390
137 Malmö FF Sweden 20,273
138 Portsmouth FC England 20,263
139 Le Havre AC France 20,218
140 Real Racing Club Spain 20,212

Source:[5]

Basketball

Basketball originated in America. It was invented in 1891 by Canadian James Naismith in Massachusetts. In Europe, basketball is the second most popular team sport in many countries, including Greece, Serbia, Turkey and Spain. In Lithuania, it is the national sport. It is also very popular in Italy, France, Germany, Belgium and all the ex-Yugoslavia countries.

The EuroBasket is the main European basketball competition for men's national teams, first held in 1935. The Soviet Union and Yugoslavia have won the most titles, with Spain claiming three championships since the late 2000s.

The EuroLeague is the most prestigious club basketball competition in Europe. It was founded as the FIBA European Champions Cup in 1958, but is organised by the Euroleague Basketball association since 2000. It is the second most popular basketball club competition in the world after the NBA.

Attendances

In the 2024–25 European basketball season, the following clubs recorded an average home league attendance of at least 15,000:

# Club Country Average
1 Partizan Mozzart Bet Serbia 18,486
2 Crvena zvezda Meridianbet Serbia 18,239
3 Panathinaikos AKTOR Greece 17,111

Source:[6]

Cricket

Cricket is a popular summer sport in the United Kingdom and has been exported to other parts of the former British Empire. Cricket has its origins in south east Britain. It is popular throughout England and Wales, and parts of the Netherlands, Scotland and Ireland. Cricket is also popular in other areas and also played in Northwest Europe.

The England cricket team and Ireland cricket team are the only European teams with Test status. England's main rival is Australia, and they play each other in The Ashes series. England won the Cricket World Cup in 2019 and the ICC World Twenty20 in 2010 and 2022.

Ireland has recently received Test status in 2017. Ireland traditionally rivalled Scotland, and thereafter the Netherlands before Ireland gained full test status, while more latterly have added ongoing rivalries with Afghanistan who rose to test status with them, Zimbabwe, Pakistan (who they first hosted for test cricket) and the West Indies.

Field hockey

Field hockey is from England and is one of the most popular sports in Western Europe, The Netherlands and Germany have been champions in both world cups, Belgium has also been champion in the men's tournament, Germany is the most recent champion in Men's Hockey World Cup and The Netherlands is the most recent champion in Women's Hockey World Cup.

In the Olympics, Great Britain, The Netherlands and Germany have been champions in both tournaments, Spain has been the winner in the 1992 Women's tournament, Belgium is the most recent winner in the Men's tournament and The Netherlands is the most recent winner in the Women's tournament.

Handball

Handball is played professionally in many European countries. The European Handball Federation organizes continental competitions for men's and women's. European teams have dominated the IHF World Men's Handball Championship and have won all medals except one silver medal, and have also won most editions of the IHF World Women's Handball Championship. The top men's teams include France, Sweden, Denmark, Spain, Croatia and Germany. The top women's teams include Norway, Denmark and France.

The EHF Champions League and the EHF Women's Champions League is the most important handball club competitions for men's and women's teams in Europe and involves the leading teams from the top European nations. In the 21/22 season, the men's competition experienced a record viewership of 1.1 billion people across all streaming platforms around the world. While the 2024 European Championship saw more than 1 million people buying tickets to the competition.

Ice hockey

Ice hockey is the most popular or one of the most popular sports in many European nations, including Czechia, Switzerland, Russia, Sweden, Finland, Slovakia, Latvia, Belarus, and northern and central Europe, where it rivals association football in popularity. It is also popular at a professional level in Germany, Norway, Austria, most of Western Europe and isolated parts of the former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia.

The Kontinental Hockey League originated from Russia but currently features teams from eight other countries. The Austrian Hockey League, Czech Extraliga, Deutsche Eishockey Liga, SM-Liiga, National League A and Swedish Hockey League are other professional leagues, whose top teams meet at the Champions Hockey League.

The Ice Hockey European Championships for national teams was played from 1910 to 1932. National teams currently play the Ice Hockey World Championships, where Russia / Soviet Union have claimed a combined 27 titles, the Czech Republic / Czechoslovakia 12 and Sweden 11.

Attendances

In the 2024–25 European ice hockey season, the following clubs recorded an average home league attendance of at least 15,000:

# Club Country Average
1 Kölner Haie Germany 17,829
2 SKA Russia 17,648
3 SC Bern Switzerland 15,821

Source:[7]

Rugby union

Rugby union is popular in France (especially the south), England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, Italy and Georgia. The game is also relatively popular in Portugal, Spain, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Russia, Poland, Moldova, Andorra and Romania, as it is at a professional level in these countries. Rugby is regarded as the national sport of Wales and Georgia, and is the strongest professional team sport in Ireland.

Europe's main competition for national teams is the Six Nations Championship, first held in 1883 as the Home Nations Championship. The other European national teams play at the Rugby Europe International Championships. The England national team is the only European team to have won the Rugby World Cup, whereas France was runner-up three times and Wales and Scotland reached the semifinals once.

The three main domestic rugby union competitions are the fully professional Premiership (England), Top 14 (France) and United Rugby Championship (URC)(Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Italy and South Africa). The European Rugby Champions Cup is the premier continental championship, with clubs qualifying from the three professional competitions. South African teams fully compete 'domestically' in Europe since 2022 when their teams, already part of the cross border URC, were given access to European competition, but compete in Southern Hemisphere competition the Rugby Championship at international level.

Attendances

In the 2024–25 European rugby union season, the following clubs recorded an average home league attendance of at least 20,000:

# Club Country Average
1 Union Bordeaux Bègles France 32,864
2 Leinster Ireland 26,930
3 Harlequin England 23,837
4 Stade toulousain France 21,746

Sources:[8][9]

Rugby league

Rugby league is popular in northern England, where the sport formed in 1895.

The Great Britain national team first played in 1908, and entered the World Cup until 1992 and the Tri-Nations until 2006. Great Britain has won the World Cup three times, whereas France has been runner-up twice.

Clubs from England compete in the only fully professional league, the Super League, as well as the Challenge Cup competition.

Attendances

In the 2025 European rugby league season, the following clubs recorded an average home league attendance of at least 10,000:

# Club Country Average
1 Wigan Warriors England 17,088
2 Leeds Rhinos England 14,999
3 Hull FC England 12,159
4 St. Helens RFC England 11,623
5 Hull KR England 11,271
6 Warrington Wolves England 10,404

Source:[10]

Volleyball

European teams have won most editions of the FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship, led by Italy with three wins. In the FIVB Volleyball Women's World Championship, the Soviet Union has won five editions, Russia two, and Italy and Serbia one each. The Soviet Union has won three men's gold medals and four women's gold medals at the Olympics.

The European Volleyball Confederation was founded in 1963, but the Men's European Volleyball Championship was first held in 1948 and the Women's European Volleyball Championship was first held in 1949, with the Soviet Union and Russia leading both in titles.

The CEV Champions League is held annually since the 1959-60 edition. Russian clubs VC CSKA Moscow and VC Zenit-Kazan won 13 and six editions respectively, while Italian clubs Modena Volley and Volley Treviso won four each. The CEV Women's Champions League is held since 1960–61. WVC Dynamo Moscow won 11 editions, Uralochka Ekaterinburg won eight, and Volley Bergamo won seven.

Water polo

Water polo is played professionally in several European countries. LEN organises continental competitions for men's and women's. European teams have dominated the World Aquatics Championships and have also won several editions of the Women's Championship.

The LEN Champions League is the most important water polo club competition for teams in Europe and involves the leading teams from the top European nations.

Other sports

Other team sports like futsal, beach Soccer, roller hockey, and American football are also popular in some European countries.

Some sport competitions features a European team gathering athletes from different European countries. These teams uses the European flag as an emblem. The most famous of these competitions are the Ryder Cup for men, and Solheim Cup for women, in golf, in both of which Europe challenge the United States. Other examples are the Laver Cup in tennis, where Europe face a World team, the Mosconi Cup in pool, the Weber Cup in bowling, the IAAF Continental Cup in athletics, and the Continental Cup of Curling.

American football

In the 2025 American football season of Europe, the following clubs recorded an average home league attendance of at least 5,000:

# Club Country Average
1 Rhein Fire Germany 10,205
2 Frankfurt Galaxy Germany 7,098
3 Vienna Vikings Austria 5,366
4 Munich Ravens Germany 5,036

Source:[11]

Baseball

Baseball is also gaining popularity in some countries, like in the United Kingdom, where the sport is reputed to have started in the 1800s before exploding in the United States.[12][13][14] In Spain, due to Latin American immigrants bringing the sport, particularly from countries like Cuba, Dominican Republic, and Venezuela.[15][16] In countries like Italy, Ireland, and Germany, growth in the sport is partly due to influence from Italian Americans, Irish Americans, and German Americans.[17] Other countries include France, Netherlands, and Greece, among others.[18]

Reigning European champions

National teams

Sport Men Women
Competition Team Year Competition Team Year
American Football European Championship of American Football Austria 2025 (next in 2027) European Championship of American Football Spain 2023 (next in 2025)
Association Football Euros Spain 2024(next in 2028) Euros England 2025 (next in 2029)
Baseball / Softball European Baseball Championship Netherlands 2025 (next in 2027) European Softball Championship Italy 2025 (next in 2027)
Basketball EuroBasket Germany 2025 (next in 2029) EuroBasket Belgium 2025 (next in 2027)
Beach Soccer Euro Beach Soccer League Italy 2025 (next in 2026) Euro Beach Soccer League Portugal 2025 (next in 2026)
Field Hockey EuroHockey Championship Germany 2025 (next in 2027) EuroHockey Championship Netherlands 2025 (next in 2027)
Futsal Futsal Euro Spain 2026 (next in 2030) Futsal Euro Spain 2023 (next in 2027)
Handball European Handball Championship Denmark 2026 (next in 2028) European Handball Championship Norway 2024 (next in 2026)
Roller Hockey Rink Hockey European Championship Portugal 2025 (next in 2027) Rink Hockey European Championship Spain 2025 (next in 2027)
Rugby League Rugby League European Championship France 2018 (next in TBD) Rugby League European Championship Wales 2022 (next in TBD)
Rugby Union Six Nations  France 2025 (next in 2026) Six Nations England 2025 (next in 2026)
Underwater Hockey UWH Euro Championships Turkey 2019 (next in TBD) UWH Euro Championships France 2019 (next in TBD)
Volleyball EuroVolley Poland 2023 (next in 2026) EuroVolley Turkey 2023 (next in 2026)
Water Polo European Water Polo Championship Serbia 2026 (next in 2028) European Water Polo Championship Netherlands 2026 (next in 2028)

Clubs

Sport Men Women
Competition Team Season Competition Team Season
Association Football UEFA Champions League Paris Saint-Germain 2024–25 UEFA Women's Champions League Arsenal 2024–25
Basketball EuroLeague Fenerbahçe 2024–25 EuroLeague Women USK Praha 2024–25
Ice Hockey Champions Hockey League ZSC Lions 2024–25 No Competition
Rugby Union European Rugby Champions Cup Bordeaux Bègles 2024–25 No Competition
Volleyball CEV Champions League Umbria Volley Perugia 2024–25 CEV Women's Champions League Imoco Volley 2024–25
American Football European League of Football Stuttgart Surge 2025 No Competition
Baseball European Champions Cup Heidenheim 2025 No Competition
Floorball Champions Cup Storvreta IBK 2025–26 Champions Cup Thorengruppen 2025–26
Water Polo European Aquatics Champions League FTC-Telekom 2024–25 European Aquatics Women's Champions League Sant Andreu 2024–25
Handball EHF Champions League Magdeburg 2024–25 Women's EHF Champions League Győri ETO KC 2024–25
Field Hockey Euro Hockey League Gantoise 2024–25 Women's Euro Hockey League Den Bosch 2025
Roller Hockey WSE Champions League OC Barcelos 2024–25 WSE Women's Champions League Palau de Plegamans 2024–25
Sport Mixed
Competition Team Season
Wheelchair rugby league European Club Challenge Catalans Dragons 2024

European eSports

Since the early beginnings of Esports, Europe has had a role in the sport's advancement in world recognition. In the early 1990s, France's Electronic Sports World Cup and Germany's Gamers Gathering together both garnered more than 2,000 participants, being just a popular as other sports competitions in the United States and South Korea.[19] Just recently, Esports has recently become more recognized as a legitimate sporting event in Europe, marked by the formation of the European Esports Federation in 2019.[20] Since its formation, it has grown in size to 44 member nations and is currently headed by its president, Thiago Fernandes.[21] Today, nations like Sweden, Denmark, France, and Germany are all in the top highest earning nations in the world, each earning around $50 million.

Individual sports

The European Championships is a new multi-sport event which brings together the existing European Championships of some of the continent's leading sports, including Golf, Cycling, Athletics, Aquatics, and Gymnastics, every four years. The inaugural edition in 2018 will be staged by the host cities of Glasgow, Scotland and Berlin, Germany between 2 and 12 August.

Cycling

Road cycling is especially popular in France, Germany, Spain, Denmark, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands. Nearly every UCI World Tour race is held in Europe, including the three Grands Tours: Tour de France, Vuelta a España and Giro d'Italia, as well as the five Monuments: Milan–San Remo, Tour of Flanders, Paris–Roubaix, Liège–Bastogne–Liège and Giro di Lombardia.

Notable road cyclists include Jacques Anquetil, Louison Bobet, Bernard Hinault, Alberto Contador, Miguel Indurain, Eddy Merckx, Gino Bartali, Alfredo Binda, Fausto Coppi, and Felice Gimondi.

Golf

The Open Championship, also known as the British Open, is one of the four major golf tournaments. Other notable golf tournaments in Europe include the BMW PGA Championship, Scottish Open, Irish Open, French Open and Italian Open, which are part of the European Tour.

Europe competes as a single team in the Ryder Cup and Solheim Cup versus the United States, and the Royal Trophy and EurAsia Cup versus Asia. Also, the Seve Trophy was played between the Great Britain and Ireland and the Continental Europe team.

Notable male golfers include Nick Faldo, Colin Montgomerie, Rory McIlroy, Pádraig Harrington, Ian Woosnam, Lee Westwood, Henrik Stenson, Bernhard Langer, Martin Kaymer, Seve Ballesteros, José María Olazábal and Miguel Ángel Jiménez. Notable female golfers include Annika Sörenstam, Laura Davies and Suzann Pettersen.

Motorsport

Motorsports are popular across nearly all of Europe. The Formula One, FIA World Endurance Championship, World Touring Car Championship, World Rally Championship and World Rallycross Championship are mainly held in Europe, and are traditionally dominated by European drivers and teams. Notable automobile races include the Monaco Grand Prix, Monte Carlo Rally, 24 Hours of Le Mans, 24 Hours Nürburgring and 24 Hours Spa.

Notable racecar drivers include Jackie Stewart, Alain Prost, Michael Schumacher, Sebastian Vettel, Lewis Hamilton, Jacky Ickx, Derek Bell, Tom Kristensen and Sébastien Loeb.

Motorcycle road racing is very popular in Europe, especially in the United Kingdom, Spain and Italy. Most of the Motorcycle Grand Prix are held in Europe. Italian riders Giacomo Agostini and Valentino Rossi are the two most successful of all time, with eight and seven 500cc / MotoGP World Championships respectively.[22] On the Isle of Man, the Isle of Man TT and other road races held in closed public roads are very popular.

Motorcycle speedway is also popular in Poland, Scandinavia, the Czech Republic and the United Kingdom.

Tennis

Tennis is popular in most of Europe. Two of the four Grand Slam events are held in Europe: the Roland Garros in France and the Wimbledon Championships in the United Kingdom. The Rome Masters, Madrid Open, Italian Open and Paris Masters have ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events, whereas the Madrid Open and Italian Open are also WTA Tour Tier I events.

Notable male tennis players include Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Andy Murray, Stefan Edberg, Boris Becker, Ivan Lendl and Björn Borg. Notable female tennis players include Steffi Graf, Maria Sharapova, Monica Seles, Justine Henin, Martina Hingis, Simona Halep, Ana Ivanovic, Victoria Azarenka, Caroline Wozniacki, Conchita Martínez, Angelique Kerber, Garbiñe Muguruza, Petra Kvitová, Arantxa Sánchez Vicario, and Iga Świątek.

Other sports

The most prestigious and lucrative athletics and aquatics meets are in Europe. The most prestigious sporting event related to athletics is the European Athletics Championships, wherein Mo Farah is the most successful individual athlete.[23]

For those areas with the proper climate, winter sports are also an important. In Scandinavian and Alpine countries, various forms of skiing and snowboarding are popular. European competitors have traditionally dominated at the Winter Olympics and the International Ski Federation World Championships.[24]

Horse racing is very popular in the United Kingdom and France. Major events are the Royal Ascot, Cheltenham Festival, Epsom Derby, Grand National and Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.

Other popular individual sports include badminton, boxing, darts and snooker.

Traditional sports

Some regions have games that are particular to their home, for example Gaelic games in Ireland, Calcio storico in Italy, shinty in Scotland, pétanque in southern France, bandy in Russia and Scandinavia, Basque Pelota in Basque Country, or bullfighting in Spain.

Olympic Games

Europe was the birthplace of the Olympic Movement that has become so central to modern individual sport, with the International Olympic Committee founded in Switzerland in 1894 and Greece being the first country to hold the First Olympic Games. Europe has hosted a total of 30 Olympic Games (16 Summer and 14 Winter), more than any other region in the world.

During the Cold War, the Soviet Union, East Germany and other communist countries had a fierce rivalry in the Olympic Games with Western Europe and the United States. Notable events include the Blood in the Water match in 1956, the 1972 Olympic Men's Basketball Final, the Miracle on Ice in the 1980 Winter Olympics, and the 1980 and 1984 boycotts.

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ Dine, Philip; Crosson, Seán (2010). Sport, Representation and Evolving Identities in Europe. Bern: Peter Lang. p. 2. ISBN 9783039119776.
  2. ^ Samso, R. (19 December 2019). "Main football leagues in Europe in 2018-2019, ranked by average attendance of games". Statista. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Bundesliga still top of the league for attendances". Reuters. 15 January 2018. Archived from the original on 25 November 2018. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  4. ^ "The Top 10 Most Supported Football Clubs in the World".
  5. ^ "Historical attendances". www.european-football-statistics.co.uk.
  6. ^ "EuroLeague sets a new record with over 10,500 spectators per game". Eurohoops. 22 April 2025.
  7. ^ "Euro Attendance | Euro Hockey Clubs". www.eurohockeyclubs.com.
  8. ^ Watterson, Johnny. "In another staggered season, rugby's URC has lurched along - all the while breaking attendance records". The Irish Times.
  9. ^ "Nouveau record d'affluence dans les stades de TOP 14 2024/2025 | Top 14 - Site Officiel". Ligue Nationale de Rugby.
  10. ^ https://www.loverugbyleague.com/post/every-super-league-clubs-average-attendance-in-2025
  11. ^ https://elfpedia.eu/ELF_Attendance_Stats
  12. ^ Block (2005), pp. 86, 87, 111–113, 118–121, 135–138, 144, 160; Rader (2008), p. 7.
  13. ^ "Rounders (English Game)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  14. ^ Cohen, Claire (2 February 2015). "Save rounders! It's the only sport for people who hate sport". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  15. ^ Baseball in Cuba
  16. ^ Cuban baseball's historical influence in Spain
  17. ^ Josh Chetwynd, op. cit. , p. 40
  18. ^ "Schaerlaeckens: European baseball is providing prospects and gaining popularity". 9 September 2011.
  19. ^ "eSports History: How it all began". www.ispo.com. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  20. ^ "European Esports Federation to Form With 12 National Members – ARCHIVE - The Esports Observer". 18 April 2019. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  21. ^ "About Esports Europe - The Official Website Of Esports Europe". 13 August 2022. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  22. ^ "Valentino Rossi career". Movistar Yamaha MotoGP Official Website. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  23. ^ "European Championships: Farah & Rutherford help GB top table". BBC. 17 August 2014. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  24. ^ "A history of winter olympic medals". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 23 October 2015.