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Why Americans needs to embrace soccer (football)
19/08/12 | Phil.K

Posted on 08/19/2012 10:47:26 AM PDT by Jakarta ex-pat

I have just finished watching an absolute scorcher of a game between Manchester City and Southampton (the current league champions won 3-2) and would like to state my case why America needs to embrace this game ASAP.

1) Football (soccer) is THE premier spectator sport in the world.

This doesn't mean baseball, basketball, Ice Hockey, cricket, American football, rugby, Australian rules etc don't have a place at the table. But week in and week out, the thought that David can and does beat Goliath makes it genuine.

2) It can be played anywhere.

Unlike most team sports, no equipment is required to play except a ball. And I don't necessarily mean a football. The kids at my school use "paper" balls, and when I was a kid, we used sweaters for goal posts.

3) It is an international language.

With the chances of our children traveling internationally becoming far more frequent, to be able to communicate with others is a huge asset. Yes learning languages is important, but that's no good if you have nothing to talk about. The EPL is represented by almost half the world. Moreover it is the most watched league in the world. Having some knowledge of its stars and traditions does no harm.

Once again, I'm NOT saying other spectator sports are boring ( well ok basketball and baseball). But in this shrinking world, if you don't know Rooney from Drogba, Pele form Maradonna, or Juventus from AC Milan...you are left with talking about ....


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Sports
KEYWORDS: yougottabekidding
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
I don't care for a sport where the danger to spectators is greater than it is for the players.

Egyptian soccer game turns violent, at least 74 dead and 1000 injured

43 dead in soccer stadium stampede (Zimbabwe)

Deadly Soccer Stampede in Ghana - ABC News

81 posted on 08/19/2012 11:52:43 AM PDT by loboinok (Gun control is hitting what you aim at!)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
This is the perfect time for me to re-introduce my sniper position proposal, as it applies to the game of soccer.

Each sniper will be recruited and play under the same rules and regulations that apply to any other player as to draft, free agency and agent representation and endorsement arrangements. No undue consideration will be given to imprisoned snipers.

The sniper is allowed only one shot a season, including the playoff season. It cannot be a head or heart shot. Shots can be made at anytime during the game. Tne sniper will draw only one round per game.

Sniper can only shoot on the command of the head coach

Shooting the ball draws a caution. A fatal shot draws a send off.

The League commissioner and officials may be included as targets per season, upon the simple majority vote of the League sniper committee.
A team using the police or other civil or military law enforcement personnel to prevent the shot will have it's head coach suspended for two games.

Football hooligans are free option targets, and the team sniper may draw up to an additional 500 rounds for the purpose of shooting at such hooligans.

Now the benefits are obvious. Spread the concept to other games, and even our highly skilled American sports can now open up to players of any size, sex or physical condition.

But as it applies to soccer, unless you include my proposed new position, count me out for a game that anyone including Brits and Venezuelans can play.
82 posted on 08/19/2012 11:53:08 AM PDT by righttackle44 (I may not be much, but I raised a United States Marine.)
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To: Chipper

I went to a prep school. Gym class was at the end of the school day. The whole school participated. We had a choice,,,, football or soccer. I was really skinny, so of course, I chose soccer. I chose to be a goalie, as I just didn’t feel like running around like a maniac! Playing goalie was fun. But watching a game from the sidelines was incredibly boring!


83 posted on 08/19/2012 11:53:32 AM PDT by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra ( Ya can't pick up a turd by the clean end!)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
In the UK we we might look at it as a rich/poor divide (though this is a fallacy).

I've heard it said that Rugby is a thug's game played by gemtlemen, and soccer is a gentlemen's game played by thugs...

84 posted on 08/19/2012 11:54:11 AM PDT by JimRed (Excise the cancer before it kills us; feed &water the Tree of Liberty! TERM LIMITS, NOW & FOREVER!)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

I watched Tottenham vs Newcastle yesterday with my son. He and his friends are huge fans of the Premier League and soccer in general. His cousin is mad for Arsenal, while my boy is a Spurs fan, so there are some lively discussions around the time of the North London derbies.

He still watches the NFL but there is not nearly the enthusiasm for it that there used to be among boys his age. I hear that the MLS team in Seattle is now drawing more attendance than the Seahawks.

The sport looks every bit as fun for spectators, maybe even more so with all the singing and chanting. The English and Spanish games in particular seem to be just drenched in tradition.

And as for boring, well, how many people can truly appreciate a 1-0 pitcher’s duel in baseball? It’s like anything else, once you learn the players, the rules, and the subtleties of the game, it is very entertaining and even absorbing.


85 posted on 08/19/2012 11:55:23 AM PDT by ccmay (Too much Law; not enough Order.)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
3-2 is a SCORCHER??? a goal on average of every 18mins, please...
86 posted on 08/19/2012 11:56:05 AM PDT by Chode (American Hedonist - *DTOM* -ww- NO Pity for the LAZY)
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To: dfwgator

MLB baseball actually is my favorite sport. I completely understand why others find it boring, populated by players from the Third World, etc. I just do not see many FR threads about MLB containing many comments about the same.


87 posted on 08/19/2012 11:58:03 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: ccmay

Today’s Man City/Southampton match was a cracker!

And tomorrow my Everton boys go up against United. Hopefully Howard can repeat his performance against Mexico.

Once you adopt a team, watching their games is as absorbing as watching any other sport.


88 posted on 08/19/2012 11:58:29 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator
Indeed, you make a good point. Two of my favorite sports are golf and cycling. They are hard for those who don't, or haven't participate d to watch.Recently I got caught up watching a darts tournament final round. I thought it was great because I used to toss a bit myself.

I think soccer has a lot going for it because it is so universal. I think I was turned off by the way American wussies got a hold of it and turned it into a pansy game with boys and girls playing together, sometimes even with no keeping of the score.

89 posted on 08/19/2012 11:58:49 AM PDT by Baynative (A man's admiration for absolute government is proportionate to the contempt he feels for others)
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To: 1rudeboy

And as I always point out, what would NFL scores be if a touchdown were only worth 1 point instead of 6/7/8?


90 posted on 08/19/2012 11:59:41 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Baynative

And what I like about the EPL, is, if you suck, you’re gone....no revenue sharing BS, like the NFL. I love relegation/promotion.

In fact the richest game in all of sport is the playoff to determine which team gets promoted to the EPL to following season, in terms of revenues, it’s huge.


91 posted on 08/19/2012 12:01:32 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
The English invented soccer (it may be more complicated than that but they codified the rules and spread the sport around the world), but in most English-speaking countries it's not the number one sport.

We have American football, baseball, and basketball. Canada has ice hockey, baseball and Canadian football. The West Indies and the Indian subcontinent have cricket (also field hockey in South Asia). The Irish have hurling and Celtic football. New Zealand has rugby. Australia has Australian football, rugby and cricket. South Africa also went in big for rugby (though recently soccer has come into its own there). East Africa, apparently, has running.

So all the countries where there's any genius at creating sports and games (except Britain) itself, have more or less rejected soccer or subordinated it to other sports. So sure, let's all learn about soccer, but don't be surprised if it's always a second-tier sport over here.

Of course, you could adapt the game to make scoring more likely -- a smaller field, a larger goal, no offsides rules. Cricket did that to stay competitive. But I wouldn't count on soccer making the changes or America casting aside other games to embrace soccer even if it did change.

92 posted on 08/19/2012 12:01:43 PM PDT by x
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To: JimRed
I've heard it said that Rugby is a thug's game played by gemtlemen, and soccer is a gentlemen's game played by thugs...

They say that because rugby's a rough game that started at private schools, but it works the other way around as well.

Rugby's the posher sport that allows (or demands) more thuggishness and barbarism on the field.

Soccer's the popular game of the masses, that (at least in theory) requires a little more restraint on the field (if not in the stands).

93 posted on 08/19/2012 12:11:25 PM PDT by x
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To: dfwgator
You obviously never have been to an Oakland Raiders game.

I have, and there was NO violence. I was in the Black Hole, and a few seats away, there were a couple of Denver Broncos fans. They only took a few verbal jeers. This is me at the game. I think it was in '03.

Photobucket

Oh, and soccer is the yawniest of the yawners of sports. I think I would rather watch golf. Ugh.

94 posted on 08/19/2012 12:12:47 PM PDT by America_Right (Remember, Republicans have a lot more in common with Democrats than they do with Tea Partiers.)
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To: 1rudeboy
At the elite level, you would have a bunch of specialists standing around in front of the goal, waiting for a long pass to arrive.

That's the answer I get from the knowledgeable soccer dads on the team, and I'm inclined to credit it. But still: if a team parked a couple of position specialists around the goal, it would be sacrificing field players, possession, and chances. I wonder where the balance would sort out.

My other random amateur thought is that soccer perhaps needs another official or two on the field. It's a game where ball position shifts frequently, the field reverses, and with a long kick or two, the ball is one the other side of the field and 40 yards the other direction. I don't know how a referee can be expected to keep good position. It is also next to impossible for a referee to see much happening off the ball. The head stomp on Carli Lloyd in the Olympics is a good example. Given that so many of the fouls in soccer involve inherently tough calls on bumping and tripping, it has to be a brutally hard game to call at the distance that is commonly required of a soccer ref.

Basketball puts three officials on a short court to watch 10 players, and it still has controversies. Football also has 22 players on a comparably sized field, and it has a referee, umpire, head linesman, line judge, field judge, back judge, and side judge. That's in a stop motion game where most of the contact is concentrated on the line of scrimmage. It still takes a perimeter of officials stationed around the play to watch everything.

I've never played the game, so my opinion is isn't worth much. But from limited experience, soccer officiating seems to be a weak spot.

95 posted on 08/19/2012 12:15:22 PM PDT by sphinx
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

I love soccer. I was brought up playing it. I also wish more Americans played it so that one day they could win the World Cup and shove it up the Europeans.

Having said all that there is much to be said about playing sports that you grew up with and supporting local teams. In my opinion sport is about building communities and sharing values, achievements and losses and sport is at it’s best when it does this well!

Mel


96 posted on 08/19/2012 12:22:40 PM PDT by melsec (Once a Jolly Swagman camped by a Billabong....)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat; MestaMachine

I don’t like soccer (football), because it is too much like Socialism: Too many people standing around doing nothing.

Mesta: Hope you’re doing great.


97 posted on 08/19/2012 12:23:38 PM PDT by ROTB (Live holy, forgive all & pray in Jesus' name. Trust He is willing & able & eager to ANSWER BIG!)
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To: Repulican Donkey
1) It can end in a tie;

So can American football, at least in the NFL. It doesn't happen often now, but before they added the 15 minute sudden death overtime period in 1974, it happened all the time. Multiple overtime periods only exist in the playoffs. Even some NFL players, most famously Donovan McNabb, have been unaware of this.

2)there are more fake injuries in soccer than in pro wrestling;

Yes, almost as many flops as in the NBA. It's not really different than drawing a charge.

By the way, it's interesting how diving seems to track national origins more than anything else. German, Dutch and English players are not at all like the drama queens of the Latin world.

3)waching a game in person is more dangerous in the stands than on the field since there is no “hooligan list” of American football, baseball or basketball fans.

There are still the Millwall types out there, but the hooliganism in soccer has been greatly cleaned up since your opinion of it was formed thirty years ago. I'd a lot sooner take my kid to a Premier League game than to see the Raiders play the Eagles.

98 posted on 08/19/2012 12:23:45 PM PDT by ccmay (Too much Law; not enough Order.)
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To: RightField

Why American football became popular:

http://townhall.com/columnists/terryjeffrey/2010/09/08/how_american_football_became_the_worlds_greatest_game/page/full/


99 posted on 08/19/2012 12:27:47 PM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

Here’s 6 reasons why I don’t like soccor: B-O-R-I-N-G!

Low scoring baseball games can be boring as well, but with one big difference. In soccer, a team that is behind 4-0 is getting stomped. In baseball, a team may be trailing 4-0, but still be one swing away from tying up the game.


100 posted on 08/19/2012 12:28:15 PM PDT by libertylover (The problem with Obama is not that his skin is too black, it's that his ideas are too RED.)
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