[Vision2020] Hostility to soccer
deaconjames at verizon.net
deaconjames at verizon.net
Sun Jun 11 16:06:37 PDT 2006
Sunil,
My biggest complaint with kickball is that is doesn't involve much. There's running, and there's kicking, and there's... um... a clock? I'm not sure. Now I readily admit that kickball players are really, really good at their little game, but I'm not so sure that is a good in itself.
Beisbol is so much more multi-faceted. Every at-bat is a head-to-head battle between the teams' representatives, there is intrigue built with every pitch, and it truly is America's sport. There is batting, pitching, stealing bases, sign stealing, pick-off moves, homeruns, double plays, and strike outs. How could you truly love anything else?
Admittedly mocking what I don't understand,
Deacon
From: Sunil Ramalingam <sunilramalingam at hotmail.com>
Date: Sun Jun 11 10:07:19 CDT 2006
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Hostility to soccer
What I don't get is the hostility to soccer by some American sports writers
and radio talk show hosts. It's as if love of sports is a zero-sum game,
and somehow to admire soccer is to take something away from football,
baseball, or basketball.
I grew up with soccer, and love watching it. If my knee felt better I'd try
to play. When I returned to the U.S. at seventeen, I started watching
football and love watching it or playing sandlot football. I started
playing rugby in college, and would watch it more often if I could justify
the cost of adding the expensive cable box. (If someone will let me come to
their house to watch, I'll bring the beer and try to leave behind my kids.)
Last week I heard the idiot sitting in for Tony Bruno claim that if he were
on the field for a World Cup game, no one would be able to tell he was a
useless athlete. I had to change the station, because I was screaming at
him that we'd all watch him drop with a heart attack after five minutes of
every attack by the other team being funnelled through the space he was
occupying. (Also, long, run-on sentences make me light-headed.) The other
side of his argument was that his ineptitude would be obvious in any of the
'American sports.'
I see that some people don't appreciate 'strange' games because they don't
understand them. My dad thinks gridiron football is dumb, because he
doesn't understand it; my explanations to explain it to him fall on deaf
ears, because he's not interested in learning about it either. He's happy
to tell me it's dumb. But the repetition doesn't make him any more correct
than the idiots on the radio when it comes to soccer.
Sunil
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