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World Cup Begins — Why Now?
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World Cup Begins

World Cup logo

Thirty days of football [soccer to most Americans] begins to today in South Africa, but I’ll try to keep it down.

If you have never been involved with the Cup, there are 32 teams chosen after three years of games placed in 8 groups of 4. The initial round involves playing the other three teams in your group, with the top two teams in each group advancing to the final round that is a single knockout competition.

2010 World Cup draw

  • Group A: South Africa, Mexico, Uruguay, France
  • Group B: Argentina, South Korea, Nigeria, Greece
  • Group C: England, USA, Algeria, Slovenia
  • Group D: Germany, Australia, Ghana, Serbia
  • Group E: Netherlands, Japan, Cameroon, Denmark
  • Group F: Italy, New Zealand, Paraguay, Slovakia
  • Group G: Brazil, North Korea, Ivory Coast, Portugal
  • Group H: Spain, Honduras, Chile, Switzerland

[OK, so sled dog racing, the Tour de France, and the World Cup is a weird mixture, but you have to remember I was a military brat and veteran at the time when sports were even marginally important. These were the “big deals” when I was growing up.]

2 comments

1 Steve Bates { 06.11.10 at 10:29 am }

Don’t you love the graphic! What a sense of motion in that image!

Soccer became popular here in about my high school years. Shortly after that, knock-down fights among soccer parents became popular. It was never established whether people came to the games to watch their kids play or to watch the parents get involved in anything from fisticuffs to murder. Personally I felt it detracted from the game… what do they think this is, anyway? MLB? the NHL? the NFL?

Houston finally has enough broadcast TV channels to offer us cable-less folk perhaps a dozen Spanish-language channels and hence a lot more soccer on the air. I enjoy soccer for some of the same reasons I enjoy watching college or pro basketball: constant action and motion in which I don’t have to participate personally. 😆

2 Bryan { 06.11.10 at 5:16 pm }

I started playing in a village league in Germany, essentially the members of different age groups in one village would play other villages. It was a no pressure good time and cheap. Most US sports cost a lot of money for equipment, while all you really need is a ball for “fussball”.

I had a neighbor locally who was a youth league referee and he talked about being threatened over calls by parents. He moved up to college games as it was safer.

If I went to a World Cup I would spend all of my time watching the fans, as they are totally bizarre.