Jordan Jarrett Bryan is a sports reporter for Channel 4 News.
The thing I love about sport is what it does to people. Not only the athletes themselves, but the supporters and followers of it. Sport can make athletes grow as people, but can also destroy them and turn them into someone they never wanted to be. But it also can make fans say and do things they never thought they'd think or do.
Sport reflects life and is a microcosm of it. Sport can make you laugh or cry, sport can make you laugh till your belly hurts, it can make you rage with anger. Sport can make you see things you never thought you would see. But importantly sport makes you think. Why do we support the team we support, follow the athlete we follow and devote our lives to the sport we do? Surely it’s more than just a geographical, national, gender or technical reason. We invest time in that sport/athlete because we identify with them or that team/person we aspire to be.
Reporting on a fabulous goal, a world class forehand or a great burst of sprinting is what turns me on. But what I live for, just as much as those moments is the sporting moments that make the everyday man go gaga.
Britain’s sporting calendar has been destroyed by the coronavirus – with the majority of national and international events now cancelled or postponed.
They arrived in the UK as children – alone and with no one to care for them – leaving their family and friends behind in search of safety.
A new scholarship programme has been launched to encourage young people from Britain’s Caribbean community back into the game.
His homophobic comments got him banned from playing rugby in Australia, but after nearly year away from the sport, Israel Folau is now playing for the French Club Catalan Dragons.
Manchester City have been banned from the Champions League for the next two seasons and fined more than 25 millions pounds.
A ban on children heading the ball in Scotland could be in place in a matter of weeks, due to fears over the links with dementia.
China’s state television has pulled Sunday’s Arsenal match against Manchester City after Arsenal star Mesut Özil’s comments on China’s treatment of Uighur Muslims.
Alice Dearing is one of Great Britain’s top female swimmers – and is hoping to become the first ethnic minority woman to compete for Team GB at the Olympics.
We’ve been meeting a rising star of the country’s cricketing scene. At just 24, pace bowler Jofra Archer was instrumental in the run out that led to England’s stunning World Cup win this summer. He’s now playing in The Hundred – a new format of Cricket which he hopes will excite the next generation of…
An English league football club faces an end to its history of 134 years.
A 15-year-old from Essex is almost a million pounds richer today after coming second in an event at the first World Cup for the online game Fortnite.
the challenge of trying to get there is even more unfeasible for fans with disabilities.
For generations, some black fathers say they’ve been stereotyped as absent, promiscuous and poor role models for their children.
18 women drivers have been taking part in the inaugural W Series in Hockenheim today – a groundbreaking event in a sport that remains stubbornly male.
Professional footballers have been taking part in a 24 hour social media strike. The #Enough campaign is in protest at the way they say Twitter are dealing with racism on its platform.