He's been known to give the old jazz hands on the field from time to time.
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He's been known to give the old jazz hands on the field from time to time.
Robbie Rogers will ride him anytime. (To score goals.)
Sorry Stu.
My favourite parts are when he states "no wonder you play de-fence." Then, when squaring up to Rodriguez he revisits his roots and goes "you want it?". Brilliant.
Why do Americans (and now apparently Tallafornians) pronounce defence that way? It makes it sound like you're disentangling something from a set of railings: "The handlebars of my bike needed shimmying around a little bit before I could get them free, but eventually I de-fenced the thing without too much bother"
If you are not sitting on the fence you are off fence
Even the word "winningest"?
The winningest roster in all of sports entertainment.
The most annoying thing that i think is universal in sport -i heard it this weekend at the Irish open- that makes me press mute during golf events is "GET IN THE HOLE!!!!!" STFU get in the hole guy. You have like Darren Clarke teeing off on a 540 yard par 5 and get in the hole guy is screaming. I can't stand it! Shut up! It's not getting in the hole!
That just highlights what a god awful sport golf is. Eugh.
You have to understand that a lot of sports fans in the US tend to have accumulated a lot more high-impact trauma injuries to the head over the course of their lives. It's unfair to compare them to spectators anywhere else.
The most annoying thing for me is hearing Irish commentators using English ways of saying Irish names.
Kay-hill, Kil-bane, More-ran, Carrigger, Galligger, McGraTH, Kins-Ella
I've never heard Irish commentators use any of those, except Cahill. From what I can gather, Tim Cahill's name is pronounced Kay-hill while Gary probably pronounces it the Irish way.
Really? I've heard them all, except for maybe Mc-GraTH.
During Setanta coverage of Ireland V England, the commentator said Kay-hill for Gary Cahill.
Perhaps you hear the odd Carriger, as that actually is how he pronounces his name, but I haven't heard the rest of them. Certainly I've never heard an Irish commentator get Kinsella or Kilbane wrong.
I heard Kin-SELL-a all the time. And Gary Dockerty. And Kevin Mor-AN. Although that works both ways. When I worked in the nuclear industry, there was a company called "Strachan and Henshaw", of which one of the founders, Mr. Strachan, was Irish, and pronounced it "Strawn". Drove any Scottish people they did business with up the wall!
I suppose the Scots have a good guffaw at the weird way we pronounce McGeady :)
Do soccer fans in general tend to leave before the end of a game they are at in person or stick it out if their team is losing? I laughed at the Miami Heat fans. Terrible terrible sports town.
There are a few Sasanachs commentating on Setanta though. Carrigger I think I have heard but like I said it is how he pronounces it. Is McEddy not how they pronounce his name in Glasgow? I always assumed that's where Brady got it from.
So how do they pronounce it? McGedy?
Also get annoyed when people complain about pronunciation but hen don't say how it should be pronounced,
even if they do what they write is often open to interpretation.
Needs to be clearer with an example ie McGedy as in "ready" even then read can be reed or red!!!
Why is a needed is a full phonetic spelling, but then nobody would understand that either.
Few versions of Cahill.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCjlL5dCRBw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbPJnyubNKk
Let's not forget how we've detracted from Packie Bonner's considerable manhood all these years by phonetically watering down his hard earned genetic entitlement.
What's weird is i always heard "Packie" is short for "Packing." Why would his folks do that to him?
Does it really matter how the name's pronounced?
Most commentators/pundits are often eejits these days, anyway...
Growing up in Dublin I had a pal whose surname was Heneghan. He pronounced his family name / surname differently to his father who grew up in Galway (Hennigan versus Heenehan). Ridiculous but true.
Heneghan would be more associated with Mayo.
I thought that was Hamagain.