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World Cup - Flying the Flag
Message
From
23/06/2006 05:52:55
 
General information
Forum:
Sports
Category:
Soccer
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01130455
Message ID:
01131063
Views:
16
>>>I'm sure you're all broken up about it ;-) Anong others here. Metin is probably in his back yard turning handsprings [lol].
>>
>>Not at all. One always likes to see the underdog get on. USA did well to even qualify for the tournament (just think how such footballing nations like Scotland didn't). As for Metin, after what he said to me today, oh will he get his eye wiped when Beckham holds aloft that golden cup!
>>
>>>
>>>What's a by-line? I know it only as a reporter's name on a news story. I just pulled "Laws of the Game" out of my ref bag and don't see it mentioned there. Goal line? Touch line?
>>
>>I understand you do reff'ing yourself. Not that I've ever read the rules of the gamne, but I've heard the term from match commentators. The goal line I understand to be that part of the by line that's between the posts. Maybe it's an antiquated expression, but I mean the line at the ends of the pitch AOT that at the sides (the touch line). Maybe I've only heard rugby commentators refer to it?
>>
>
>Did well to even qualify for the tournament? It doesn't seem like a great miracle to me that the fifth ranked team in the world makes a field of 32. In retrospect that #5 ranking may have been a bit high but that was where the U.S. team was ranked when the World Cup field was announced.

Didn't mean to ruffle feathers but I meant that a country not known for its footy should do so well, even to get ranked. Look at how ell Oz is doing, and their game is "Aussie Rules" football (where they wear skimpy shorts and pick the ball up".

>
>The end lines run behind the goals for the full length, from one corner circle to the other. You're right, the touch lines are the ones that run the long way. Maybe by-line is a rugby term or an English colloquialism.

If you listen to an English match commentator it's far different from their US counterparts. They use expressions like "Cole has made a big mistake ... oh but has attoned for it", "Rooney dispossesses him [of the ball]". AND it's the defence and attack - not Offence :-)

Running with the WC at the mo' are Budweisser ads where "dumn" US presenters are lampooned, describing the match in gridiron fashion. The thrust of the campaign is "You do the football - leave the beer to us"
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.
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