I Don’t Care About Soccer, But The World Cup Is Fucking Awesome
I don’t watch Major League Soccer. I’m pretty sure my hometown team (or club, or whatever you soccer freaks call it), the Houston Dynamo, has won two championships, and that’s great, but I don’t really care.
I’m not a bandwagon fan of Manchester United or Arsenal, and don’t understand Americans who pretend to obsess over European soccer. How can you be truly emotionally invested in a team that doesn’t represent you in any way? That you share no history with? That’s like some wanker in London being a diehard fan of Notre Dame football. It’s wrong, and I won’t stand for it.
So no, I don’t normally care about professional soccer, but man do I love the World Cup.
It makes almost no sense that the coach of America’s national soccer team is a German dude named Jürgen Klinsmann, but I would take a Mike Tyson haymaker to the face for the Jürgmeister right now, and probably let him take my mother out for a nice seafood dinner, even if he never calls her again.
When our most recent match (look at me, using soccer words) ended in a tie because Portugal scored in the final seconds of stoppage time — which is a totally illogical facet of the game — I had the sudden urge to commit a moderately serious misdemeanor, but I still can’t wait for Thursday’s game against Germany.
We don’t even believe in ties here in America. You can call it a “draw” if you want, but it’s a fucking tie, and it’s immoral. Bear Bryant once said, “A tie is like kissing your sister.” Well, that tie with Portugal was like tongue-kissing your sister while feeling her up on a pile of hay in your Uncle Leroy’s barn. And yet, somehow, I might actually end up actively rooting for a tie on Thursday.
This is what the World Cup does to us. It makes us abandon all reason, displace all competitive morality. If an NBA player is even moderately flamboyant in looking for a foul, I call for him to be drawn and quartered like William Wallace in “Braveheart.” There is nothing worse than a flopper. But, inexplicably, when watching the World Cup, I’m highly entertained by a good flop. It’s like going to see a ridiculous Michael Bay movie that you know is going to be stupid, but you go in with the right mindset, and the movie ends up being extremely enjoyable as a result. Somehow, that’s how I feel about flopping, the silly clock counting up instead of down, stoppage time, the fact that I’ve yet to watch a single match where the referees didn’t blow at least one big call, and all the other weird shit that makes soccer, soccer.
You have to admit, seeing an Italian guy screaming in agony as he goes flying through the air, and then flailing around on the ground like he’s just been clubbed with an aluminum bat, all because he barely brushed ankles with a Costa Rican guy, is hilarious. Almost as hilarious as watching Luis Suarez bite an Italian guy, which he literally did as I was typing this column.
Most importantly, though, I love the World Cup because it’s the only situation I’m aware of where America is the underdog. We’re not supposed to be good, nobody takes us seriously, and we get no respect. It’s us against the world for 90 minutes (or 95 minutes, fuck me). We don’t care if we’re playing Ghana, a country that 98 percent of Americans can’t even find on a map, or Portugal, home of the most expensive and metrosexual soccer player of all-time, we’re coming for that ass. Best brace yourself.
That’s what makes the World Cup so special. We dress like overly-patriotic lunatics, pound beers at weird hours on weekdays, scream, cry, hug strangers, and make babies over a sport that we wouldn’t normally watch and barely understand. It’s beautiful.
Makes me wish there was a platform that could convince us to care about soccer for more than one month every four years. But if we cared more often, maybe caring wouldn’t be so much fun.
Thursday can’t come soon enough.
I haven’t had as much fun watching events in a bar since football away games last fall. The world cup is the tits and so is America.
10 years ago at 2:38 pmThose opinions look like my opinions.
10 years ago at 2:44 pmIn terms of tradition and spirit of the fans soccer is very similar to college football
10 years ago at 2:48 pmSay what you will about soccer, but if you don’t enjoy getting absolutely tanked at a bar with hundreds of Americans wearing their Sunday patriotic best while attempting to understand a sport they maybe played for a few years as a kid, then you are not someone I want to call American.
10 years ago at 2:49 pmThe truth is, we absolutely dominate every single other important sport. So cheering for USA and actually not being the overwhelming favorite is something we are never used to, and we remember how exciting it can be. America has literally gotten too dominant for its own good. Hopefully that spills over into soccer in the coming years too, as it appears it is. Go USA.
10 years ago at 3:01 pmOther than basketball and American Football (which is barely played outside of America), what other sports is America absolutely dominating?
10 years ago at 3:15 pmWell, I’m not sure any other country has won a WORLD Series now, have they?
10 years ago at 3:20 pmFuck… The Blue Jays. God dammit. I’ll “sit the next one out.”
10 years ago at 3:22 pmWe dominate both summer and winter olympics, or at least compete for top 3 medal count every single year. No other country dominates both seasons’ olympics like we do. I don’t really know what else you want me to say. NHL, NBA, MLB, and NFL are obviously all the dominant leagues for each of their respective sports.
10 years ago at 3:56 pmAlthough America is usually at or near the top of the medal count, most of the sports that comprise the summer or winter games aren’t what most people would consider to be “important” (who could even name 25% of them?). As for the NHL and MLB, America (and Canada) is undoubtedly the home to the best leagues in those respective sports. However, at the international level America definitely isn’t dominant at hockey and any claim to being dominant at baseball would be tenuous at best.
10 years ago at 4:31 pmI honestly hope you lose a body part somehow in the next few weeks.
10 years ago at 5:23 pmSolid counterargument.
10 years ago at 5:42 pmYour argument against America, while looking good on your communist toilet shitpaper, is actually just pretentious bullshit inspired by some liberal agenda.This is the wrong venue for your pinko commy crap
10 years ago at 5:29 amSlow down silver. If you try any harder we might start to believe that you’re serious.
10 years ago at 6:35 amWe’ve dominated the Summer Olympics for decades, we own the most gold medals of any country. Also, a Canadian team hasn’t won the Stanley Cup in a long time.
10 years ago at 6:25 pmYou’re fucking irrelevent, its where the players are from not where they reside.
10 years ago at 12:07 amstop calling it american football you fucking commie
10 years ago at 9:38 pmIf you define important sport as ‘important to us.’ Cricket is played by almost 3 billion people and is only second to soccer in worldwide popularity, but you’d be hard pressed to find a single American with even the slightest idea of how the game works.
Rugby is also immensely popular in many countries and most Americans could probably only tell you “it’s kind of like football.”
Tennis is in the top 5 in popularity and the US hasn’t won a men’s grand slam in over a decade. We were ridiculously good back in the 90’s with Sampras and Agassi but you could definitely argue that we’re back to underdog status in mens tennis.
10 years ago at 10:31 amCricket is irrelevant because we have baseball, the greatest goddamn sport on Earth. Football, arguably the second greatest goddamn sport on Earth, is also uniquely American in that no other country is fit to hold our jock strap (looking at you Canada).
I am a huge fan of tennis, but it is a fading sport in terms of US interest. Our USTA and junior system doesn’t prepare American tennis players for grass and clay courts which 2 out of the 4 majors are played on. It makes a big difference when you grow up playing on asphalt instead of clay or grass.
10 years ago at 11:50 pm… and people wonder why europeans think Americans are ignorant self absorbed idiots.
10 years ago at 3:11 pmIt is a great excuse to drink and make bad decisions in the middle of the week. As a foreigners, it makes he happy that Americans get so into the World Cup every 4 years. I can’t wait to drink with my American friends and cheer on the American team on Thursday.
10 years ago at 3:08 pmWell, how many foreigners are you?
10 years ago at 3:46 pmAt least two, apparently.
10 years ago at 5:57 pmI will occasionaly partake in a good English Premier League game, but am not fanatical about it.
But when the Olympics or the World Cup rolls around i might as well have been born with an American flag in one hand wearing a Clint Dempsey jersey.
All of a sudden i realize why fucking Somalia fans will massacre Malawi fans after a “match”
10 years ago at 3:11 pmI believe
10 years ago at 3:25 pmI believe that
10 years ago at 4:44 pmI believe that we will win! I believe that we will win!
10 years ago at 6:01 pmThe only thing I got from that is that there is apparently a “weird time to pound beers”, which I don’t understand.
10 years ago at 4:12 pmValid.
10 years ago at 4:41 pmIt may be because I’m on Vyvanse right now, but I enjoyed the article and share your sentiment Bolen, keep it up.
10 years ago at 4:41 pm