Latest news with #I'mForeverBlowingBubbles


Scottish Sun
23-04-2025
- Health
- Scottish Sun
West Ham are training aces to breathe better with innovative machine which boosts lung function
Read on to find out how the device enhances the aces' endurance AIR CARE West Ham are training aces to breathe better with innovative machine which boosts lung function Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) WEST Ham are training star players how to breathe better through an innovative machine which boosts lung function. Hammers aces like Jarrod Bowen and Lucas Paqueta are enhancing their endurance by using the gadget WellO2. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 This device, developed by Finnish entrepreneur Aulis Kärkkäinen, is sold online in the UK for £239 by Well Pharmacy It helps them in Prem matches by combining resistance breathing with warm steam to strengthen muscles and moisten airways. A hi-tech mouthpiece which connects to a phone allows analysts to track performance to ensure athletes complete up to 60 breaths a minute. Richard Collinge, Director of Performance at West Ham United – whose fans sing I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles - said: 'This has been a valuable addition to our performance toolkit. 'The WellO2 breathing device has become a go-to adjunct for players, helping clear airways and supporting their recovery.' The device, developed by Finnish entrepreneur Aulis Kärkkäinen, is sold online in the UK for £239 by Well Pharmacy. Jamal Butt, of WellO2, said: 'Our simple yet powerful device is designed to support better breathing for everyone. 'We are excited that it is now available to more people in the UK than ever before.' 'Give Fullkrug the manager's job' - West Ham star launches expletive-laden rant at team-mates for 'not playing football'


The Sun
23-04-2025
- Health
- The Sun
West Ham are training aces to breathe better with innovative machine which boosts lung function
WEST Ham are training star players how to breathe better through an innovative machine which boosts lung function. Hammers aces like Jarrod Bowen and Lucas Paqueta are enhancing their endurance by using the gadget WellO2. It helps them in Prem matches by combining resistance breathing with warm steam to strengthen muscles and moisten airways. A hi- tech mouthpiece which connects to a phone allows analysts to track performance to ensure athletes complete up to 60 breaths a minute. Richard Collinge, Director of Performance at West Ham United – whose fans sing I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles - said: 'This has been a valuable addition to our performance toolkit. 'The WellO2 breathing device has become a go-to adjunct for players, helping clear airways and supporting their recovery.' The device, developed by Finnish entrepreneur Aulis Kärkkäinen, is sold online in the UK for £239 by Well Pharmacy. Jamal Butt, of WellO2, said: 'Our simple yet powerful device is designed to support better breathing for everyone. 'We are excited that it is now available to more people in the UK than ever before.' 'Give Fullkrug the manager's job' - West Ham star launches expletive-laden rant at team-mates for 'not playing football' 2


The Irish Sun
23-04-2025
- Health
- The Irish Sun
West Ham are training aces to breathe better with innovative machine which boosts lung function
WEST Ham are training star players how to breathe better through an innovative machine which boosts lung function. 2 This device, developed by Finnish entrepreneur Aulis Kärkkäinen, is sold online in the UK for £239 by Well Pharmacy It helps them in Prem matches by combining resistance breathing with warm steam to strengthen muscles and moisten airways. A hi-tech mouthpiece which connects to a phone allows analysts to track performance to ensure athletes complete up to 60 breaths a minute. Richard Collinge, Director of Performance at West Ham United – whose fans sing I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles - said: 'This has been a valuable addition to our performance toolkit. 'The WellO2 breathing device has become a go-to adjunct for players, helping clear airways and supporting their recovery.' READ MORE ON FOOTBALL The device, developed by Finnish entrepreneur Aulis Kärkkäinen, is sold online in the UK for £239 by Well Pharmacy. Jamal Butt, of WellO2, said: 'Our simple yet powerful device is designed to support better breathing for everyone. 'We are excited that it is now available to more people in the UK than ever before.' 'Give Fullkrug the manager's job' - West Ham star launches expletive-laden rant at team-mates for 'not playing football' 2 West Ham are training players how to breathe better through an innovative gadget called the Well02, which boosts lung function


BBC News
21-02-2025
- Entertainment
- BBC News
How Coventry City adopted The Enemy's 2007 song as their anthem
Liverpool has You'll Never Walk Alone, West Ham has I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles and now Coventry City has its own Enemy's We'll Live and Die in These Towns is sung loud and proud at every home game, timed to reach the crescendo of the chorus seconds before kick helps to generate a powerful pre-match atmosphere - manager Frank Lampard described the tradition as "amazing" after his first game in the home dugout this how did a song about a flat above a bookmakers in Coventry's Far Gosford Street come to be adopted by the Sky Blue Army? The song was first introduced to the matchday experience by DJ Stuart Court in 2020 – when the club was playing home matches in Birmingham as a result of a long-running dispute with then stadium owners said: "It was all about reconnecting, keeping connectivity with the city we weren't playing football games in."But it was last season the anthem really took hold, the highlight being when it was sung in the run up to kick off during Coventry City's Wembley FA Cup semi-final appearance against Manchester United. Videos of a sea of thousands of Sky Blue clad fans in England's most famous stadium, preparing to face off against one of the biggest clubs in the world, flooded social cemented the song as part of the identity of both the football club and the Enemy vocalist Tom Clarke, who wrote the song, said of its impact: "The fans, really, they've made it what it is and the song's bigger than us now. We just appreciate it."Such is the resonance of the song, countless Coventry City fans have had the words We'll Live and Die in These Towns tattooed onto themselves. Asked why he thought the song meant so much to people from the city, Clarke told the BBC: "This is an accurate picture of what I know life is like in Cov"."It's become bigger than us and bigger than the band and it means something different to everyone. "Every one of those tattoos means something different to the person who got it."It's a really special song and that's not down to us. It's down to those people with those tattoos and the fans who have sung it over the years."The song, and other football anthems, are being celebrated during a special exhibition at Coventry Music Museum, on Walsgrave Road, which opens at 10:00 GMT on Friday. Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.