Look to the future Robot leagues, chips in brains and players in their 50s - a vision of sport in 2050
The Guardian|January 06, 2025
Back in 1997, artificial intelligence and robotics experts in Japan came up with an intriguing challenge. Could anyone, they asked, build a humanoid football team capable of beating the World Cup winners by the middle of the 21st century? It sounded more than a little out there. In truth, it still does.
Sean Ingle
Look to the future Robot leagues, chips in brains and players in their 50s - a vision of sport in 2050

Yet when it comes to forecasting the future of sport, it serves as a useful lodestar. Before we know it, the outlandish will become the new normal.

Why am I so confident? Well, over the past few days I've been speaking to experts about how sport may look in 2050. And given that I recently wrote about how accurate - or not - predictions made at the dawn of the millennium turned out to be, I felt it was only fair to put my money where my mouth is too.

So what can we expect when we wake up in the first week of January 2050? "Predicting 25 years into the future is a fool's game," says Lewis Wiltshire, senior vice-president of digital at IMG. "But by the middle part of the century, our bodies will interact with tech in ways that are still quite space age to us today."

This includes having chips in our brains to directly interact with sports technology. "Neural implants, or so-called brain computer interfaces, will be pretty common by 2050," says Wiltshire. "And one consequence will be the greater detection of potential injuries to athletes before they happen."

So don't be surprised if Tom Brady and Jimmy Anderson, who played high-level sport into their 40s, are no longer outliers. In fact, Wiltshire believes we might even see more professionals playing into their 50s.

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