Anonymous wrote:It’s their loss, OP. We are massive fans and know a player on the team from our hometown. We are taking off work the whole week and watching as many games as we can (and lamenting Berhalter’s inability to make a moderately sensible second half adjustment). We have friends from all over the country flying in to watch games and eat Thanksgiving leftovers with us.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you are a 7 year old girl soccer is not a sport
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then why do I see so many yellow or blank bubbles on Teams right now?
I literally had to text two colleagues to flag time sensitive items because I know they are watching soccer all day.
Because it's Thanksgiving week?
Anonymous wrote:Ugh. I had a call that started at 4 today. We were in the 8th minute of the 9 minutes of extra time. No one on the call had a clue the game was on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. It's fascinating to me to read about people's differing opinions about sports. I love soccer--there's 45+ straight minutes of action before a break, and then another 45+. It has completely ruined me for American football, where play stops seemingly every few seconds, and there are so many ads that sometimes I wonder if I am watching an ad reel, with a few moments of football sprinkled in.
But there’s a difference in the action that’s taking place during play. Soccer moves more slowly than football overall. Each play in football lasts like 1 minute and there’s a lot happening during the play.
And anyway, there’s plenty of stopping during soccer for all of the flopping and dramatic overreactions to “fouls.”
Each play in football doesn’t last one minute. More like about 6 or 7 seconds from snap to tackle.
Anonymous wrote:It’s terrible to watch - and not what Americans like to watch. Soccer is now dominated by grown men pretending to be hurt. Americans like toughness- hockey fights, football tackles, etc. Nothing masculine about pretending to be hurt. I just can’t watch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is sad at all. I don't know anyone who watches soccer as an adult.
America does come to a halt on Superbowl Sunday. And have you heard of March Madness?
America population = 330 million
World population = BILLIONS
It's no use, PP. I am French, so of course ***football*** is important in my country. But the average American barely acknowledges the existence of terrain and peoples outside of their national border, except as convenient targets during political campaigns against immigrants. Obviously they will all fail to grasp that hardly anyone outside the US cares at all about their little American version of football, their baseball, their basketball (we do have a French basketball prodigy, but not a lot of people have heard about him). Typical chauvinism.
LOL, I occasionally forget how tedious and smug the French can be. Thanks for the reminder! And with utterly no basis whatsoever—you’ve never won a real war, your contributions to Western culture (pre- and post-Renaissance) are de minimis—way underwhelming on a pro rata basis. Your GDP is less than
Connecticut’s. Your food is mostly garbage other than adding butter and cream to stuff everyone has. You stink. Like in terms of odor, you smell bad. You smoke and your teeth are gross.
Saying this as an American who just took the afternoon off to watch a super mediocre performance by USMNT. The pub was pretty full for a Monday afternoon. So while I agree the U.S. doesn’t shut down I think OP is exaggerating. But also yeah, who cares whether we as a nation are taking the WC seriously enough? Like, why do you care about this as an issue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. It's fascinating to me to read about people's differing opinions about sports. I love soccer--there's 45+ straight minutes of action before a break, and then another 45+. It has completely ruined me for American football, where play stops seemingly every few seconds, and there are so many ads that sometimes I wonder if I am watching an ad reel, with a few moments of football sprinkled in.
But there’s a difference in the action that’s taking place during play. Soccer moves more slowly than football overall. Each play in football lasts like 1 minute and there’s a lot happening during the play.
And anyway, there’s plenty of stopping during soccer for all of the flopping and dramatic overreactions to “fouls.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is sad at all. I don't know anyone who watches soccer as an adult.
America does come to a halt on Superbowl Sunday. And have you heard of March Madness?
America population = 330 million
World population = BILLIONS
It's no use, PP. I am French, so of course ***football*** is important in my country. But the average American barely acknowledges the existence of terrain and peoples outside of their national border, except as convenient targets during political campaigns against immigrants. Obviously they will all fail to grasp that hardly anyone outside the US cares at all about their little American version of football, their baseball, their basketball (we do have a French basketball prodigy, but not a lot of people have heard about him). Typical chauvinism.