Covestro Showcases ‘The Material Effect Behind the Game’

Leverkusen, Germany , June 8 : Football may look simple: a ball, two teams, one pitch. In reality, the modern game is a high-performance system shaped by talent, tactics and training, and enabled by advanced materials.

Across modern football, materials play a role in helping enable speed, control, comfort, durability and reliable performance, from equipment and apparel to infrastructure and digital connectivity.

Covestro is highlighting this “material effect” behind football: the often unseen contribution of material science to the way the sport is played, experienced and connected around the world.

The athletes enabled by materials

Modern football has become faster, more precise and more connected. Players sprint more, press harder, change direction faster and perform under intense physical and mental pressure. Behind this evolution are better training methods and data analytics, but also materials that help make high performance more reliable.

The football itself is a good example. Modern balls use advanced materials, carefully engineered surfaces and precise construction methods to support consistent weight, shape, rebound and flight behavior, even under demanding weather conditions. Compared with traditional leather balls, today’s footballs are designed for greater reliability and more predictable performance.

Footwear has also changed fundamentally. Modern football boots combine lightweight uppers, flexible structures and high-performance sole plates to support grip, acceleration, agility and ball control. The contact between player, pitch and ball has become a highly engineered interface.

Sportswear plays its part as well. Lightweight, breathable and durable textiles can help manage moisture and comfort during high-intensity performance. Covestro’s INSQIN® waterborne polyurethane technology enables high-performance textile coatings that can provide softness, water resistance and long-lasting performance while supporting more sustainable manufacturing approaches.

Materials beyond the pitch

The material effect extends beyond players and equipment. Stadiums, training facilities and broadcast infrastructure also depend on advanced materials.

Lightweight and durable polycarbonate solutions have been used in large-scale roofing applications. They can help create weather-resistant structures that protect spectators while reducing weight and maintenance requirements.

At the same time, football is becoming increasingly digital. From connected match technologies and live analytics to broadcast systems, streaming platforms and fan experiences, every match depends on the reliable flow of data. Advanced polymer materials help protect cables, connectors and electronic components and support the infrastructure that brings the game to fans around the world.

As sport becomes more connected, the infrastructure behind it becomes more demanding. Data centers, communication networks and electronic systems require materials that can support reliability, protection and performance at scale.

Innovation is a team sport

 The evolution of football shows how performance is rarely the result of a single factor. It comes from the interaction of talent, preparation, technology and the right materials.

The same applies in business. As customer challenges become more complex and markets move faster, innovation increasingly depends on collaboration across disciplines, industries and value chains.

“Innovation today needs to be fast, focused and collaborative,” said Monique Buch, Chief Commercial Officer at Covestro. “Co-creation with customers works much like collaboration in a football team: different strengths come together around one shared goal, focusing their preparation to secure the win, and trust and speed making the difference.”

From the pitch to the stadium and from equipment to digital infrastructure, football shows how advanced materials can help shape performance where it matters most.