France Football is a French monthly magazine containingfootball news from all over the world. It is considered to be one of the most reputable sports publications in Europe, mostly because of itsphotographic reports, in-depth and exclusive interviews and accurate statistics of theUEFA Champions League matches, and extensive coverage of the European leagues. The magazine was first published in 1946 and is headquartered inParis.[1] For more than six decades it has presented theBallon d'Or award to the best football player of the year.[2]
France Football originated from the magazine Football, which was published from 1927 to 1944 and was for a time the semi-official print organ of the FFF.[5] Initially, FF was published on plain newsprint and only in black and white; Since February 1977 (introduction of the color front page), the magazine has increasingly become an illustrated magazine with numerous large-format color photographs. Its circulation increased in parallel from 120,000 (1975) to 213,000 copies (2004).
From 1974 to 1982 and from 1997 to 2013 there were two weekly issues[6] (Tuesdays and Fridays), with the Friday issue from 1978 to 1982 being called France Foot 2,[7][8][9] and since April 2013 only the Tuesday issue has been produced. In Issue No. 3587 of January 21, 2015, the publication date was changed to Wednesday.
France's contribution to soccer and its training of top-level players is well known. Exceptional talents like Mbappe, Katoto, Diani, Griezmann and many others hail from this country.[10] This is why the magazine itself and the awards it bestows are so highly regarded and considered authoritative. From November 3, 2008, on the website of Francefootball magazine. fr publishes a daily newsletter.
In 2020, instead of the traditional awarding of the Ballon d'Or, the magazine organized a vote among 177 journalists from the world's leading media outlets (140 of them foreign) to determine the "dream team" - a symbolic team made up of the best players in football history.[11] In December, France Football published three "dream teams" at once.[12]
^Garin, Erik; Pierrend, José Luis (18 January 2018)."France – Footballer of the Year". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved7 December 2018.