Football and space. At first glance, there is a chasm between them. One is a game of millions on green grass. The other is the silent infinity. But it's not that simple. Astronauts play football in orbit, and footballs float in weightlessness. Technologies created for space help footballers, and football brands inspire space missions. On Russia Day, a country that opened the way to space and has always loved football, we will link these two passions.
Imagine: you are flying to the ISS. You are sad, you miss Earth. Then you turn on a projector, inflate a soft ball, and have a match in the "Zvezda" module. Yes, astronauts play football in zero gravity. Not like on the field: the ball doesn't fall, it floats. The rules change: you can push off from the walls, headbutt the ball stuck under the ceiling. The goalkeeper is replaced by a hatch. The real football in space was played on the "Mir" station: astronauts played with the Mission Control Center (via telemetry). Today, on the ISS, there is a mini-ball and gates made of duct tape. When tourists arrive, they also play football.
The modern football is space. The materials used (carbon, microfibers) come from the aerospace industry. The Telstar 18 World Cup ball of 2018 had an NFC chip, and the Al Rihla ball of 2022 had an inertial sensor. The next ball may have nano-sensors for tracking hits, like sensors on spacesuits. The shape of the panels is optimized with the help of aerodynamic modeling, like rockets.
Shoes with carbon soles, breathable jerseys with moisture-wicking — all this came from space suits. Materials that wick sweat were created for astronauts who cannot change their underwear often. Cooling systems in jerseys are from technologies for extravehicular activity. Even the shaving gel that footballers use before games has a space version. So space affects the game.
There are many clubs with "space" names in the world: "Galaktika" (Los Angeles), "Zvezda" (various cities), "Sputnik", "Raketa", "Astronaut". In Russia, there is "Zvezda" (Perm) and "Kosmos" (Dolgoprudny). Names reflect the dream of space. Sometimes clubs play in forms with star patterns. In 2018, the Moscow "Spartak" released a "Kosmos" kit in honor of Gagarin.
Is there a football episode in the movie "2001: A Space Odyssey"? No, but in "Space Between Us" (2017), a character from Mars plays football. In "Salyut-7" (2017), astronauts play football in zero gravity. In Adidas' "Space football" advertisement, the ball flies into space. Cinema loves to link football and stars.
Russian cosmonauts Alexander Misurkin, Sergey Prokopiev, Americans, Europeans. A well-known football fan is cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev, who wore a "Spartak" jersey on the ISS. NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman (a fan of "Manchester United") brought the club scarf. Transmissions of world championships are often shown on the ISS. In 2018, Russian cosmonauts watched matches in orbit.
When people fly to Mars, they will want to play football. On the Moon, gravity is 1/6 of Earth's. The ball will fly far, and running will be jumping. Maybe you will have to come up with new rules: there will be no offside, the goalkeeper can take the ball anywhere on the field. On Mars, gravity is 1/3 of Earth's. There, you can already build bases with football fields under domes. Elon Musk promised to deliver a ball to Mars. Football will not be abandoned.
Artificial intelligence and player tracking systems developed for space are already used in football (VAR, player tracking). In the future, the ball with AI will determine goals itself. Video surveillance systems created for spacecraft docking will help referees. Football will become even more technological, like space.
Football and space are two sides of the human dream: about flight, about movement, about going beyond. On Earth, we kick the ball to forget; in space — to not forget who we are. And while we play, the stars don't seem so far away.
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