UPDATED 13:00 EST / JUNE 11 2010

World Cup 2010 on the Web, Cake Walk.

Stephen Colbert may have reminded us Americans how much we loath soccer, but the world wide web has brought the World Cup 2010 to every corner of the world. That includes the United States. Thanks to search engines, social networks and mobile apps, it’s increasingly difficult to avoid the World Cup hoopla. So why bother? It’s just sports, and it’s an easy enough game that even we nerds can follow along. Look how simple it is.

Search engines

Microsoft and Google have both created semi-custom portals for keeping up with the World Cup. Google will promptly deliver up-to-date scores after a basic search, and Bing’s social search page is filled with trends on game plays and related tweets. Microsoft Bing has even set up individual visual search pages for World Cup team info. Google switched up its homepage to honor the series, from its logo to its “Goooooooooogle” links that now read “Gooooooooooal!”

Yahoo has been very proactive on the World Cup front as well, with a new series of shortcuts for related search results, offering quick and dirty access to game schedules, scores, stats, team info and news. It’s all paying off for Yahoo, as Hitwise reports high numbers for Yahoo’s World Cup search traffic.

Social media

While the search engine bandwagon seems like a given, social media has been a little slower to adopt such trends in the past. That’s all changed this year, with several social media initiatives looking to get individuals involved. Connecting users from around the world, social media is getting increasingly better at creating community outlets for real, live events.

Of course, Twitter is one of the front-runners for this, with many soccer players, broadcasters and spectators chiming in on the real-time conversations. Beyond other normal occurrences such as groups on Facebook, many brands are taking advantage the web’s multimedia capabilities for World Cup coverage. ESPN, for instance, has launched a massive campaign across television and the web in order to provide analysis and news for the entirety of the World Cup.

Mobile apps

Which brings us to our last category, mobile apps. If things seemed dismal under the social media header, you’re more likely to get excited about the cool things that are available for your phone. Several major brands have gotten in on the fun, particularly for the iPhone. CNN has teamed up with FourSquare to create World Badges, while Sony Ericsson (an official sponsor of the World Cup) has revealed an entire line of apps and services to get you involved with the festivities.

You may have noticed…

that search engines have been able to provide more real-time results because of social media incorporation. Along those same lines, social media has been enhanced by becoming a portable and individualized experience. Microsoft Bing has taken a dedicated social approach to its World Cup search results, and FourSquare and Twitter are social mobile applications.

As much as we’d like to harp on the revolutionary way in which social media and the web has been looped into our experience of the World Cup, the fact is that these three categories have become irreversibly overlapped. It’s for the better, and it’s this cross conjunction that makes the World Cup 2010 so web relevant this year.

We’ve gotten plenty of practice with presidential debates, natural disasters and the Winter Olympics. Now it’s time for the world to really show off–this World Cup stuff is a cake walk. Except for that whole ITV thing (and probably Twitter, at some point). But hey. Party on!


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