1. Country Allegiance--Your country needs you. I don’t care if your country is Algeria, Cameroon, or the United States. These tournaments end up becoming a show of strength in the world. If an underdog country like North Korea (the lowest ranked team in the World Cup) surprises everyone by winning, it’s something that their citizens and supporters will be talking about for the rest of their lives. Also, it’s a matter of national pride. With that said, Go USA!
2. The Vuvuzelas— Much criticism has already been levied at the vuvuzelas in this World Cup. If nothing else, you want something to talk about with other people, right? Between Sad Keanu, the BP Oil Spill, and the vuvuzelas, the internet can’t seem to get its collective head around anything else. I, for one, enjoy the intensity that the vuvuzelas add to each fixture, but that’s an opinion in the scant minority.
3. The Players’ Names— I get a fair bit of enjoyment out of hearing the announcers stumble over some of these ridiculous names. Case in point? Sokratis Papastathpoulos, a defender for Greece. By the time anyone says his name, his involvement with the play is long over. Another name oddity is North Korea having two players named Pak Nam-Chol. One of the announcers commented that it was the moment he had been dreading when both players named Pak Nam-Chol were on the field. Nearly half of the players on the Brazil team go by a one-word name as if they were some sort of deity. I guess soccer has just reached the same importance as religion there.
4. The Suddenness— A lot of people complain about soccer being a boring spot considering scores often end up 1-0. However, the game can shift momentum in a split second. If a player gets a red card, instant game-changer. This isn’t some five-yard holding penalty or two-minute power play. A red card means the player has to leave the field, his team can’t replace him in that match, and the player also serves a two-game suspension. This is the type of punishment that completely redirects a team’s direction in the tournament. A red card also has a great influence in more goals being scored, which the fans always clamor for during the World Cup.
5. Once Every Four Years— Heck, I’ll watch any sporting event that only happens every four years, because the build-up and anticipation is like none other. It’s also a global experience just like the Olympics. Billions of people all over the globe watching one singular sporting event. If that doesn’t make you feel like a global citizen, nothing will.
There you have it. Now watch some soccer!
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Showing posts with label Soccer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soccer. Show all posts
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Friday, January 15, 2010
Track 18: The Soccer Goal
So I played soccer with some friends of mine and some random people today after my one class was over. I had a good time playing and getting a little exercise, but it made me realize something: soccer is one of the hardest sports to play.
The difficulty level is extremely hard if you didn't grow up playing the sport. The guys I was playing with today did some ridiculous things. They made pinpoint passes, impossible shots, and skilled challenges. I could do none of this. To make matters worse, the goal we were using was one of the practice goals, so it was the size of a small child.
All I could do was defend people as they approached our goal. However, this did give me some inspiration to improve my soccer skills. I feel my main focus should be on my passing and ball control, because I feel I'm an adequate defender. I can at least move with attackers and get in the way. It's kind of like being a movable door, because no one respects you until you're closed (i.e. block a pass or goal).
I do have a lot more respect for soccer players now though. The combination of skills needed to succeed is amazing. A player has to be able to run fast for extended periods of time, maintain ball control, always scan the field for passes, and defend when the other team has the ball. Quite frankly, it's astounding. I wish I could do it. (That's why I had the pun in the title. Think about it. I hope you found it funny like I did.)
The difficulty level is extremely hard if you didn't grow up playing the sport. The guys I was playing with today did some ridiculous things. They made pinpoint passes, impossible shots, and skilled challenges. I could do none of this. To make matters worse, the goal we were using was one of the practice goals, so it was the size of a small child.
All I could do was defend people as they approached our goal. However, this did give me some inspiration to improve my soccer skills. I feel my main focus should be on my passing and ball control, because I feel I'm an adequate defender. I can at least move with attackers and get in the way. It's kind of like being a movable door, because no one respects you until you're closed (i.e. block a pass or goal).
I do have a lot more respect for soccer players now though. The combination of skills needed to succeed is amazing. A player has to be able to run fast for extended periods of time, maintain ball control, always scan the field for passes, and defend when the other team has the ball. Quite frankly, it's astounding. I wish I could do it. (That's why I had the pun in the title. Think about it. I hope you found it funny like I did.)
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