Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Outdoors
  4. News

How IBM’s cutting-edge A.I. put a losing soccer team on a winning streak

Add as a preferred source on Google
How One English Football Club Scores Points with AI

If you’ve seen the 2011 movie Moneyball, or read the brilliant Michael Lewis book it’s based on, you will be familiar with the way that data and more than a pinch of clever math can be used to create a winning sports team out of seemingly non-promising components. But what if you were to go one step further and apply the computing power of IBM’s Watson artificial intelligence? As it turns out, the A.I., which once beat human players at Jeopardy, is equally at home improving the odds of an underdog sports team.

Recommended Videos

In a recent demonstration, the managers of the U.K.’s seventh-tier Leatherhead Football Club soccer team started working with IBM, which used Watson to provide pre- and post-match analysis, in addition to opposition scouting. While top teams have dedicated scouts to do things like review opposition match footage and create comprehensive reports, this luxury isn’t feasible for the likes of Leatherhead — whose semi-pro players are composed of delivery drivers, car salesmen, and shop assistants instead of multi-millionaire full-time athletes. The IBM system made this an option for the first time.

“Firstly, Watson was used for scouting upcoming opposition,” Joe Pavitt, IBM’s “Master Inventor,” told Digital Trends. “Watson was trained to have an understanding of football terminology and would read Twitter timelines during matches and post-match reports to assess key players, tactics, and other points of interest for a particular team. Secondly, Watson’s ability to understand natural language meant that the manager, coaching staff, and players could ask Watson questions about their performances. Watson would return analysis and customized video playlists for review.”

Pavitt stressed that Watson wasn’t used to pick the team or choose which formations to play. What it did, however, was to make these human decisions more data-driven and less reliant on gut instinct. It seems to have paid off, too. Throughout this season, which concluded on Tuesday, April 30, the team ascended 12 places up in the league, a turnaround which, understandably, was greeted well by fans.

“IBM came in after five games when they were in 20th place,” Pavitt said. “Leatherhead also achieved this with one of the lowest budgets in the league.”

Although the team still suffered problems due to injuries and other non-controllable events, examples like this show just what a valuable role artificial intelligence has to play in every domain — sports very much included.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
Google wants Gemini to help build the next big scientific breakthrough
Gemini for Science pushes agentic AI deeper into real research workflows
gemini for science

Google is building Gemini deeper into the research workflow, starting with ideas, tests, and scientific literature.

At Google I/O 2026, the company announced Gemini for Science, an experimental suite built around agentic AI science. It targets the manual work behind discovery, including hypothesis building, computational testing, and literature review.

Read more
You can now walk through AI versions of real places with Google’s Project Genie
Text, Logo

Google is pushing its experimental AI world-building project into surprisingly realistic territory. The company announced that Project Genie can now use real-world imagery from Google Street View to generate interactive virtual environments, blending real locations with imaginative AI-generated styles.

At its core, Genie is what Google calls a “world model” — an AI system capable of creating explorable digital environments where AI agents, robots, or even users can interact naturally. Until now, those worlds were mostly synthetic. But with this new update, Genie can anchor itself to real places pulled directly from Street View imagery. This is actually where things start feeling like a glimpse into the future of simulation.

Read more
Google wants to reinvent your TV remote with Gemini and pointer controls
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Google is making a bigger play for the living room, and this time, it is not just about what you watch — it is also about how you interact with your TV. At Google I/O 2026, the company revealed a fresh batch of updates for Google TV and Android TV developers, all centered around one idea: TVs are no longer passive screens sitting in the corner of your house. With more than 300 million monthly active devices across Google TV and Android TV, Google clearly sees the television as its next major AI battleground. And Gemini is now at the center of that strategy.

The company says Gemini is already helping users discover content through natural voice interactions. But Google now wants the experience to feel more dynamic and conversational, almost like searching the web — except on your couch. Instead of only surfacing static results, Gemini on Google TV can now respond with a combination of visuals, videos, and text snippets to answer queries. So if someone asks for a thriller with a strong female lead or a documentary about space exploration, Gemini pulls contextual recommendations directly from streaming apps and their metadata.

Read more