The social transformations induced by the Covid-19 pandemic and the acceleration of digital transitions in
the contemporary society have affected, among others, sport communities. New behaviors, places, times and
ways of interacting are emerging, changing structures and processes of groups. In everyday life, routines,
consumption, the living situation, the way of conceiving well-being and physical activity - both at home and
outside - are changing. Applying a multidisciplinary approach to the concept of network and the value of
social networks might open, in a diachronic perspective, potential future lines of research in the sociology
of sport. At the same time, a multidisciplinary approach seems to be required by the new epistemological
developments not only in the field of human and social sciences, but also in their implementation of everyday
life. In this contribution, the concept of health is interpreted in the WHO’s broadest sense of health promotion,
following the 1986 Ottawa Charter and the Sustainable Development Goals of the 2030 UN Agenda.