Global Institute of Sport Master’s Scholarships available for January 2024 study

GIS Master's Scholarships

The Global Institute of Sport (GIS) is offering master’s scholarships to support outstanding students as they embark on their postgraduate study.

The scholarship will enhance the prospects of future athletes and leaders in the diverse sporting industry.

Benefits include:

  • Generous financial awards
  • Mentorships with Industry leaders
  • Placements and internships with industry partners
  • GIS Professional Education Courses
  • GIS Global Sports Summits

The deadline to apply for a scholarship for January 2024 entry is November 30 and to be eligible you must be a current applicant to a GIS Masters course. Interest can be registered on the GIS website here.

Applications will be assessed against eligibility criteria by a panel of university staff and external staff (where relevant), and applicants will be notified of the outcome by the end of December.

GIS are holding Master’s open evenings in London and Manchester on the 14th and 21st of November. These evenings will provide prospective students with the opportunity to learn more about our unique degrees, the chance to meet staff and explore our state-of-the-art facilities.

The Global Institute of Sport (GIS) is the leading destination for master’s degrees, executive education and professional qualifications in sport around the world.

The GIS offer study programs that are solely based around sport and gives current and aspiring sports professionals the chance to excel in the industry. They do this through a number of graduate and specialist program spanning leadership, business, and coaching delivered by some of the most experienced and respected practitioners in world sport.

The purpose of GIS, as stated on their website, is: To unite, inspire and equip the current and future leaders of the global sports industry with the skills, knowledge and network to take the world of sport to continually new heights.

GIS hold Global summit events at their six campus hubs across the world with a focus on networking with industry professionals and enjoying a fantastic experience of travelling. These are in London, Manchester, Toronto, Melbourne, Miami and New York.

This scholarship opportunity is a huge one for any students wanting to launch their career in sport and escape their comfort zone with the many events and opportunities that arise because of it.

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Football NSW releases $600,000 towards Grassroots Grants to meet Participation Pressure

The Victorian State Government has announced new grants and funding for 11 new community infrastructure projects for local football clubs, totalling $3.8 million.

Sixty-five football clubs across New South Wales have secured a combined total of nearly $600,000 in funding through the NSW Office of Sport’s Local Sports Grant Program. It follows as a result of Football NSW’s scale of demand for community sport support and the growing pressure on clubs struggling to keep pace with surging participation.

The grants, covering 69 individual projects across the Football NSW footprint, will fund facility upgrades, equipment purchases, participation programs and accessibility improvements: the unglamorous but essential infrastructure that determines whether community clubs can function at the level their members require.

The Local Sports Grant Program made up to $4.65 million available statewide in 2025, with $50,000 allocated to each electoral district and individual grants capped at $20,000. Football’s share of nearly $600,000 reflects the sport’s status as the largest participation code in NSW, and the degree to which that status has not always been matched by corresponding investment in the facilities and resources required to sustain it.

Volunteers carrying an unsustainable load

The announcement arrives against a backdrop of mounting pressure on the volunteer workforce that keeps community football operational. Across NSW, thousands of volunteers dedicate significant unpaid time each week to administration, ground preparation, canteen operation and the logistical demands of running competitive junior and senior programs. As participation numbers climb, driven in part by the sustained visibility of the AFC Women’s Asian Cup and the legacy of the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup, those demands have intensified without a corresponding increase in the resources available to meet them.

“As the largest participation sport in NSW it is pleasing to see almost $600,000 will be reinvested back into supporting our players, coaches, referees and volunteers to improve the football experience across our community clubs,” said Helen Armson, Football NSW’s Group Head of Strategic Partnerships and Corporate Affairs.

The equity dimension

The distribution of the grants across 65 clubs and 69 projects also speaks to the geographic breadth of football’s footprint in NSW, and to the uneven distribution of resources that has historically characterised community sport in this country. Clubs in outer metropolitan and regional areas tend to operate with smaller budgets, older facilities and thinner volunteer bases than their inner-city counterparts. Grant programs structured around electoral allocation, rather than club size or existing resource base, provide a degree of equity that market-driven funding cannot.

The kinds of projects funded under this program disproportionately benefit clubs serving communities where the barriers to participation are highest. A club that cannot offer adequate facilities or equipment is a club that turns players away, often without intending to.

Football NSW has used the announcement to call on the NSW Government to maintain and extend its investment in the sport. “We urge the government to continue to invest in football,” Armson said, in the midst for a nation-wide push for a $343 million decade-long infrastructure fund to address the facilities gap across the state.

The nearly $600,000 secured through this round is meaningful. Against the scale of what is needed, it is also a measure of how far the investment still has to go.

Inside GIS’ New Executive Edge Program Driving Sport’s Future Leaders

A new executive education program designed to shape the next generation of sports industry leaders is set to launch in June 2026, offering participants a rare blend of academic insight and real-world application at the highest level of global sport.

The Executive Edge in Sport, delivered by Global Institute of Sport (GIS) in partnership with Rotman School of Management Executive Programs, will provide current and aspiring leaders with the tools needed to navigate an increasingly complex and fast-evolving sports landscape.

The seven-week program, Sports Leadership Essentials, is delivered primarily online, offering a flexible and immersive learning experience for professionals worldwide. It is tailored for individuals seeking to strengthen their leadership capabilities within sport, as well as those aiming to transition into senior roles. This includes athletes navigating their post-playing careers.

Led by Sharona Friedman, President and CEO of GIS, and Walid Hejazi, Professor of Economic Analysis and Policy at Rotman, the course combines academic rigour with industry relevance. Participants will engage with key topics shaping modern sport, including leadership and strategy, governance and ethics, finance and revenue models, marketing and fan engagement, event operations, and the growing influence of AI and emerging technologies.

The program also features exclusive masterclasses with senior figures from across the global sports industry, alongside sessions led by leading academics and practitioners from the Rotman School.

For those seeking a more hands-on experience, participants can opt into the Sports Leadership Lab. This is a four-day, in-person summit held at BMO Field in Toronto. Delivered in collaboration with Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, the lab provides behind-the-scenes access to elite sport operations, bridging theory with practice in a live stadium environment.

As the global sports industry continues to expand and evolve, The Executive Edge in Sport positions itself as a critical pathway for leaders looking to stay ahead. It provides students with the knowledge, network, and perspective required to lead with impact.

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