That's your opinion though. To the rest of the world, it could be met with the kind of staunch opposition that the Vuvuzela has been met by from other countries of the world excluding South Africa.
^^ Provided that the whole stadium was doing it like the South Africans are doing with the Vuvuzelas, it was an accepted cultural sporting instrument and was given the backing for its use by FIFA during the tournament.
No I can't say it does. To me it just blends in to the entire spectacle. I just concentrate on the football as I do usually and there's no difference. Granted though, the first time I head them during a Confederations Cup game last year I think it was, it was a little bit different as an...
I just don't see eye to eye on this with you Scotty.
Maybe in England. Mainland Europe is different. It's the same thing in my eyes. Ultras groups sing and create exceptional noise for 90 minutes. What's the difference with the horns in South Africa? That's their culture. I just see it not...
They're most certainly not idiots. They're football fans, but just from a different fan culture to Australia's. In Europe for example, not so much England, but mainland Europe, singing for the full 90 minutes is standard fan culture. These fans pay good money to be at the games, so why not have...
Points noted lads, but the mised handball penalty in the box was atrocious and unacceptable. It was blatant. It was a turning point. We didn't play well and were outplayed, but it does raise the issue of politics in world football.
Surely the officials couldn't have allowed Germany to lose last...