You can stay on top of all your team's news, transfers, injuries, and scores without opening a single sports app. Set up an automated tracker and let the updates come to you.
If you support a football club, follow the NBA, or care about any sport at all, you know how it feels. You check an app, see nothing new, close it, open it again ten minutes later. Repeat this thirty times before lunch. It eats your time and honestly, it stops being fun.
There is a better way.
Why Sports News Is So Hard to Follow
The problem is that sports news is scattered. Transfers get reported on club websites, injuries pop up in press conferences, scores live on one app, commentary lives on another. Your favorite player's loan deal might be buried in a local newspaper in a different country.
You end up either missing things or spending way too much time trying not to miss them.
What You Actually Want to Track
Before you set up any kind of tracker, get specific about what matters to you. A few examples:
- Match results and upcoming fixtures for your club
- Transfer rumours and confirmed signings
- Player injury updates
- League standings after each round of games
- Manager news and press conference quotes
- Rival team results (so you can gloat, or panic)
The more specific you are, the more useful your updates will be. "Football news" is too broad. "Arsenal injury updates and transfer news" is much better.
Setting Up AIDular to Track It For You
AIDular is a research assistant that searches the web on a schedule and emails you a sourced report. You just tell it what to track in plain English, pick how often you want updates, and it handles the rest.
Here is an example prompt you could copy and paste straight in:
Track the latest news for Arsenal FC, including confirmed transfers, injury updates, match results, and any manager statements. Focus on reliable sources like BBC Sport, Sky Sports, and the official club website.
That's it. You pick daily or weekly, and AIDular sends you a clean email with the highlights and links to sources. No app, no notifications, no scrolling.
Weekly vs Daily: Which Should You Pick?
- Daily works well during the season, especially if your team plays midweek. Transfers move fast and injuries can change a lineup overnight.
- Weekly is fine in the off-season, or if you follow a sport casually and just want a Sunday summary before the next round of games.
You can change the schedule any time, so start with daily during a busy transfer window and switch to weekly when things slow down.
You Can Track More Than One Team or Sport
A lot of people follow more than one team, or more than one sport entirely. Maybe you follow your local club but also watch the NBA. You can set up separate trackers for each one.
Some ideas:
- One tracker for your main club, daily
- One tracker for Formula 1 race weekends and driver standings, weekly
- One tracker for your fantasy sports league, on match days
Each report lands in your inbox separately, clearly labelled. You read what you want, skip what you don't.
It Actually Makes Sports More Enjoyable
When you stop hunting for news, you stop feeling anxious about missing something. The information comes to you. You read it over breakfast or on the bus. Then you close it and get on with your day.
You stay just as informed. You spend a fraction of the time.
Try it free at aidular.com. The Lite plan costs nothing, and you can have your first sports tracker running in about two minutes.