I've read Danny Kelly's article about Keane in today's Indo twice, and I still can't decide if he likes Keane or not: http://www.independent.ie/sport/socc...-29554327.html
I've read Danny Kelly's article about Keane in today's Indo twice, and I still can't decide if he likes Keane or not: http://www.independent.ie/sport/socc...-29554327.html
Because soccer and football are interchangeable terms in Britain and a lot of other places, and as OMTY explained the alliteration in Soccer Saturday is lovely.
I call soccer both soccer and football and I call Gaelic football gaaaah or Gaelic. A lot of people would be the same around here.
I thought most people knew that one
Why would that information p´iss off GAA folk? it just demonstrates the origins of the word soccer.
If anybody gets píssed off, it usually is soccer fans (bizarrely) reacting against against the use of the word 'soccer' to describe assoc football.
And this is bizarre in the extreme, in an Irish context.
I find it funny when English-speakers criticise Americanisms when many of them are actually rooted far more in English-English than the currently used in England. The words 'garbage' and 'trash' are in Shakespeare, for god's sake.
Before it was called Soccer is was called Assoccer apparently, I always wondered why it was called Soccer as the S is the third
letter of association.
It should really be called sew-ch-er or as the c in soccer is a lot hard than the one in association.
Lots more here
http://www.todayifoundout.com/index....e-word-soccer/
In my experience, GAA people are much more precious about "protecting" the term football for their use than football supporters, correcting you if you dare to use it for association football. Association Football, Rugby Football, GAA Football - they're all fecking football. No one bloody owns the term. There's a patheticness in Ireland about insisting it's the GAA version that gets sole use of the term - it's insecurity about competing with World games.
If you attack me with stupidity, I'll be forced to defend myself with sarcasm.
What a bizarre discussion.
In every country the native/popular code generally gets called football.
I call gaelic football, football. I call association football, soccer. Generally for clarity's sake.
Sometimes I call soccer, football , sometimes I don't. And sometimes I call throw-in, kick-off.
Who gives a rats.
COYBIG!
DID YOU NOTICE A SIGN OUTSIDE MY HOUSE...?
Liar...
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Its no coincidence that Robbie is always the guy poaching all these goals for us. A true Irish sporting legend. I hope he continues for another campaign. For those who use the 'he never scores in big matches', last night was yet another thorn in that argument.
I believe last night was only the second game we have ever lost in which Robbie has also scored.
Wow. 3-2 v Russia was the other?
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