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Why Reaching Real Football Fans Takes More Than Interest Targeting

As betting and gaming brands prepare for the world’s biggest football stage, the opportunity is not just to show up in sport, but to show up with relevance, consistency, and a real understanding of fandom.

As the 2026 World Cup approaches, brands are planning how to activate around one of the biggest sports marketing events of the decade. For some, that means sponsorship activation. For others, it means digital storytelling, contextual media, or full-funnel campaigns built around football passion and national attention.

Regardless of the strategy, one question matters more than ever: how do you reach real football fans and bettors in a meaningful way?

For years, many campaigns have relied on broad sports audiences built from general interest signals. On paper, that sounds good enough. In reality, it often isn’t. Someone who occasionally reads a football headline is not the same as someone who follows qualifiers, tracks squad announcements, watches highlights, and lives the tournament in real time. Yet many audience strategies still treat them as the same.

Why generic sports audiences are no longer enough

The issue is not a lack of ambition. It is a lack of precision. Brands invest heavily in sponsorships, campaign development, and media planning, but the audience strategy behind those investments is often too generic, fragmented, or disconnected from actual fan behavior.

That matters because major sporting events are not just media moments. They are emotional moments. Attention rises. Behaviors intensify. Fans become more engaged with teams, players, and tournament storylines. For brands, that creates huge potential, but only if targeting is built around real fan signals rather than assumptions.

Fan targeting should reflect different levels of fandom

The next wave of football marketing is not about simply finding “people interested in football.” It is about understanding different layers of fandom and activating each one with purpose.

At Sportradar ad:s, that means moving beyond generic audience definitions to a three-layer fan-targeting framework built specifically for sports marketing.

1. Verified Fan

Authenticated fans sourced directly from rightsholder data and activated via a privacy-first clean room. This is the highest-authority fan signal, built for sponsorship activation, premium brand storytelling, and campaigns where fan authenticity matters most.

2. Associated Fan

Users segmented based on consistent sports content engagement over time, defined by Sportradar and built from our proprietary data. This gives advertisers a credible and scalable audience of real football fans across multiple markets.

3. Connected Fan

Broader sports interest audiences enriched with selected third-party data. This layer helps extend reach when brands need more scale, while still staying anchored in a sports-relevant targeting strategy.

A better way to plan for this Football Summer

Together, these three layers give brands a more precise and flexible way to build campaigns ahead of the football highlight of 2026. A sponsorship-led strategy may start with Verified Fans. A multi-market acquisition campaign may scale through Associated Fans. A broader awareness push may extend through Connected Fans.

Instead of forcing advertisers to choose between scale and precision, this model allows them to use both, depending on campaign goals.

Better audience signals also improve creative

This approach also improves creative relevance. In football marketing, the same message will not resonate equally with every audience at every moment.

A message built for Verified Fans during a high-attention live moment should feel different from broader brand creative aimed at Connected Fans earlier in the campaign. Associated Fans can provide the middle ground: strong football relevance with the scale needed for broader activation. Better audience understanding leads to better creative alignment and smarter media use.

Built for football – and beyond

This approach is not limited to football. Through Sportradar’s marketing platform, advertisers can already activate dozens of sports audience layers across global markets, including American football, baseball, golf, hockey, motorsports, rugby, soccer, tennis, water sports, winter sports, and more.

That gives brands a consistent way to plan around fandom across the global sports calendar and across virtually every geo.

The takeaway

The future of World Cup advertising is not just football-themed advertising. It is fan-informed advertising.

Brands that build around real fandom will be better positioned to create relevance, strengthen sponsorship value, and connect more naturally to the moments fans care about most. Because in football, especially at the World Cup, relevance is what makes marketing feel like it belongs.

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