dali said:
stop calling football soccer and certainly dont call it futbol or some shit.
I honestly dont understand why you even call "american football" football anyways.
The real football is older.
Besides the only time you really touch the "football" with your foot is at kick offs and field goals.
That term in connection to that sport is fuckin nonsense.
I do like "american football" too, but i think it can be as boring as football can be sometimes, i just really cant stand the frequent interruptions after every offence.
We call it football because we're in America and in America football is fucking football. We call "futbol" soccer. When we go to another country, then we'll start differentiating. But don't get pissed off about what we call our sport in our own country, thank you very much.
For the record - i think Soccer developed in other countries in such a way that people started gradually learning the rules and loving the game in such a way that it evolved into the world's sport.
Kind of like what happened with football in America. Foreigners don't like football as much because its hard for them to pick up on all the rules. 22 positions plus special teams with all kinds of rules, plus you have to run and pass, all different coverages, knowing when to go for it on 4th down, all that shit.
Our understanding of games like football (and basketball) are what makes watching the game so exciting. I'll be the first to admit that when I watch a soccer game I don't understand the rules that well, which probably takes away from the excitement.
But I think football is (A) the true thinking man's game and (B) offers something for everybody of every size and athletic ability. Its the only sport where the big fat kid and the tall athletic skinny kid can be on the same field and both play an important role. Its also the only game where the dumb jock and the genius defensive coordinator can be on the same field and have just as important rules. Not to mention that there's something about the physicality of the game that makes it a right of passage in many families.
My opinion, if it were on a level playing field, and no country had ever seen football or soccer, and were forced to learn the rules of both games simultaneously, they would find football supremely interesting, but again that's my American bias. And having my dad be a football coach doesn't help the situation any.
But in a fast paced society, I'd much rather see a multiple touchdown, this two-point-conversion could make our break the game, maybe we should kick a field goal, is there enough time left on the clock, how is the match up between the quarterback and the receivers, blah blah blah that makes the game supremely interesting to anything I've ever seen if YOU UNDERSTAND EVERYTHING. Why would a society that has been programmed to watch 70+ point football games and 200+ point basketball games with highlight catches and slamdunks want to watch a bunch of skinny guys on a huge field run around for a couple hours back and forth to win a game 1-0?