True, but it must have been a novelty for their players to be playing in front of actual football fans
― Aw naw, no' Annoni oan an' aw noo (Tom D.), Thursday, 27 August 2009 11:03 (sixteen years ago)
was probably a new experience for most celtic fans being in a library too though.
:p
― Amateur Darraghmatics (darraghmac), Thursday, 27 August 2009 11:13 (sixteen years ago)
celtic has triumphed over barcelona in a competition which is more than what arsenal had managed..
― ken "save-a-finn" c (ken c), Thursday, 27 August 2009 11:53 (sixteen years ago)
hearing alan hanson say 'non chalant' was a great MotD moment
― Great Scott! It's Molecular Man. (Ste), Thursday, 27 August 2009 12:00 (sixteen years ago)
ken c is killing it all over the football threads atm.
― b hoy hoy (a hoy hoy), Thursday, 27 August 2009 16:03 (sixteen years ago)
Jonathan Pearce: "... and [insert name here] wins the game for [insert name here]"
This guy. See also: inane observation, followed by same observation in portentous voice. Everton fan sitting among Liverpool fans, no-one batting an eyelid - "You don't want to be sitting there, son. [pause] YOU. DO NOT. WANT. TO SIT THERE."
― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 27 August 2009 17:06 (sixteen years ago)
"We all do things in the heat of the moment"
― Daniel Giraffe, Monday, 14 September 2009 13:39 (sixteen years ago)
word for word what was in my mind when i saw the thread in new answers
― Amateur Darraghmatics (darraghmac), Monday, 14 September 2009 13:50 (sixteen years ago)
"You'd bet your mortgage on Rooney scoring from there."
― Terminator Eggs (Billy Dods), Monday, 14 September 2009 14:35 (sixteen years ago)
"he's left his leg in there" when, in fact, what's he's left is the opponent's leg. severed.
― Amateur Darraghmatics (darraghmac), Monday, 14 September 2009 14:40 (sixteen years ago)
the goalkeeper is NEVER the hero after a won penalty shoot-out. NEVER. STFU everyone who says this, seriously.
the 'heroes' are the people who score their penalties and even then they are not heroic; penalty shoot-outs are barbaric imo and should be replaced with a golden-goal system whereby every 2 minutes a player is withdrawn from each side
― a. cole, u thic (acoleuthic), Thursday, 3 December 2009 23:58 (sixteen years ago)
would you take the goalkeepers off first? would you?
― mdskltr (blueski), Friday, 4 December 2009 00:00 (sixteen years ago)
well obv it becomes VERY important not to get sent off because the numerical disadvantage becomes exaggerated
i think that it is 2 minutes for every withdrawal until one or both teams have 2 men and then it is played indefinitely but someone will surely have scored by then
i would not take off the goalkeepers. assuming 11 vs 11 i would take off my most tired players in order of tiredness.
― a. cole, u thic (acoleuthic), Friday, 4 December 2009 00:03 (sixteen years ago)
i am thinking eventually this will replace extra time completely, but let's just have it instead of penalties for now
― a. cole, u thic (acoleuthic), Friday, 4 December 2009 00:08 (sixteen years ago)
you, sir, are a madman. and you must be stopped.
I agree with you about penalties creating only villains and not heroes tho.
― DRUNK SWEDISH CHINTZ (Upt0eleven), Friday, 4 December 2009 00:09 (sixteen years ago)
while watching the bbc post-draw nonsense i told joel it wouldn't be surprising if we got the "if you'd told capello this morning that he'd get blah blah in the draw he'd have bitten your hand off". 10 seconds later, thank you alan shearer. although he's now 16 i believe joel thinks i still have mystical powers with football punditry.
― do you want to be happier? (whatever), Friday, 4 December 2009 23:19 (sixteen years ago)
"...and long may that continue". primarily by terry or lampard in every post-match interview when they've won eg. "yeah didier's been unplayable recently and long may that continue", "we haven't been conceding many just now and long may that continue", "peter cech is still rocking the headgear and long may that continue". seems to have been picked up by players from other teams who've been in the england squad now too. it's odd.
― or something, Saturday, 5 December 2009 15:00 (sixteen years ago)
Shearer just uttered one re Lampard: "it's not a great penalty to be honest but it's a great save from Given". It's the same fucking penalty as Lampard hits every other week, you prick, Shay just dived the right way this time.
― Ismael Klata, Saturday, 5 December 2009 22:54 (sixteen years ago)
i'm already sick of people "booking their seat on the plane". 6 more months of this bullshit to go.
― zappi, Saturday, 5 December 2009 23:15 (sixteen years ago)
Motty following up with the same peanlty cliche about Fabregas ten minutes later
― Ismael Klata, Saturday, 5 December 2009 23:18 (sixteen years ago)
One beloved of lower division/non-League players: describing particularly talented colleagues/opponents as "different class".
One beloved of (at least my) local newspaper reports: managers never just signed a new player, they always "swooped to sign" said player.
One beloved of managers/programme note writers following an unexpected home defeat: "it was a bad day at the office".
― Phil Will, Saturday, 5 December 2009 23:34 (sixteen years ago)
Could get a 'poor penalty to be honest' hat-trick in a minute if they bother to do any punditry on the Pompey game. To be fair, that one was a shocker
― Ismael Klata, Saturday, 5 December 2009 23:36 (sixteen years ago)
Kudos to the fivelive commentator who described some harsh Sunderland double-team tackling as creating 'a Zamora sandwich' earlier. First time I've ever heard that the right way round - normally they talk about being 'caught in a Sunderland sandwich', 'tucking into a bread sandwich', etc.
― Ismael Klata, Sunday, 6 December 2009 17:45 (sixteen years ago)
"he had to get there"
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Sunday, 6 December 2009 23:57 (sixteen years ago)
"THAT... is a goal worthy of.....*insert superlative**"
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Sunday, 6 December 2009 23:58 (sixteen years ago)
My current bugbear is commentators' seeing inside players' heads, e.g. "...and Chelsea are fuming; they believe they should've had a penalty..."
If there's one thing worse than the "biting your hand off" cliche, it's the misuse of that cliche. Surely it's about taking something being offered to you with huge relish. So it sounds well weird when pundits say "if you'd said to us at the beginning of the season we'd be Xth in the table on X points in December, we'd have bitten your hand off". That sounds illogical and frankly barbaric to me.
― Daniel Giraffe, Monday, 7 December 2009 10:46 (sixteen years ago)
"he's enjoying himself on the field now"
― I sb'ed your mum (ken c), Monday, 7 December 2009 11:11 (sixteen years ago)
also bad is the corruption of 'bread and butter' and 'meat and drink'
and the latter's occasional transformation into 'food and drink' what?? next: 'that kind of pass should be fruit and veg for a player of his quality'
― I sb'ed your mum (ken c), Monday, 7 December 2009 11:16 (sixteen years ago)
that should have been a gin and tonic catch for the keeper and he's made a complete hash of it.
― I sb'ed your mum (ken c), Monday, 7 December 2009 11:19 (sixteen years ago)
I quite like "food & drink", it conjures the image of the centre backs like lions in a cage, devouring high balls tossed into their enclosure. I've been hearing it used on it's own recently though, and it just sounds weird. Lazy-ass pundits.
― Ismael Klata, Monday, 7 December 2009 12:35 (sixteen years ago)
using metaphors correctly really ought to be cheese and ham for a sports pundit
― I sb'ed your mum (ken c), Monday, 7 December 2009 13:27 (sixteen years ago)
Keane still struggling at Ipswich - this will be like prawns in a sandwich for the man
― mdskltr (blueski), Monday, 7 December 2009 13:29 (sixteen years ago)
whereas in fact they make a "Chicken Liver Parfait, Oak Moss and Truffle Toast" of the whole thing
― Daniel Giraffe, Monday, 7 December 2009 13:47 (sixteen years ago)
should be careful here, this might turn into a roots shoots and leaves affair
― do you want to be happier? (whatever), Monday, 7 December 2009 23:03 (sixteen years ago)
"he can't hit it any better than that" when a keeper quite easily saves it/it goes wide/the player just doesn't score. he can hit it better- he can score.
― dumb mack maine follows (a hoy hoy), Saturday, 23 January 2010 17:50 (sixteen years ago)
spurs central defenders being a fucking disaster, how's that for a cliché that will send me to an early grave
― dumb mick name follows (darraghmac), Saturday, 23 January 2010 22:43 (sixteen years ago)
x-post I dunno, if a player hits the post or something I kind of think "yeah he's done well, unlucky."
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:04 (sixteen years ago)
like it's just an inch or two away, he's done so little differently from what he would have had to do to score
which reminds me, "just an inch away!" or "only millimetres from scoring!" when the ball whistles past the post = idiocy, once ball clips post it's still got a good 7 or 8 inches' leeway before it's hitting post and going in
― your favorite toy dinosaur ruined my asshole (acoleuthic), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:06 (sixteen years ago)
yeah but is pretty close...surely a post isn't 7 or 8 inches wide?
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:11 (sixteen years ago)
yeah but it's kinda like saying 'oh that was close' when you get 5 out of 6 letters needed in a wordsearch.
― dumb mick name follows (darraghmac), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:11 (sixteen years ago)
cliche- jermaine defoe missing a penalty. that's 4 in a row.
― dumb mick name follows (darraghmac), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:12 (sixteen years ago)
edge of ball clips outside edge of post to centre of ball hitting centre of post is about 4 inches...2 more inches and it's inside of post and out...3 more inches and it's in. at a rough guess.
― your favorite toy dinosaur ruined my asshole (acoleuthic), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:13 (sixteen years ago)
it's not...missing by 10 feet, missing by a lot, like I said, hitting the post is so close to scoring. putting ball straight at the keeper or something, that's worthy of disdain.
― I see what this is (Local Garda), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:14 (sixteen years ago)
yeah, no i take and agree with your point, i was just arguing that when a ball MISSES the post and a commentator makes out a breath of wind could have taken the ball in, then i am in disagreement. a bit like
"it was in all the way! then it just curled away at the last moment!"
shut up.
― your favorite toy dinosaur ruined my asshole (acoleuthic), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:16 (sixteen years ago)
"i've seen them given"
― open your shart to me (jim in glasgow), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:28 (sixteen years ago)
"the back of the net...'
Did a quick scan so not sure if it's been mentioned but....
The place every striker tries to put the ball, and every goalkeeper dejectedly retrieves the ball from after he's been scored against, is in fact the FRONT of the net FFS!!!! The BACK of the net is the area BEHIND the net, ie between the net and the perimeter fence!
― Fred Nerk, Sunday, 24 January 2010 08:14 (sixteen years ago)
"The Germans are very clinical and precise on the pitch..."
― more like Goldblapp (King Boy Pato), Sunday, 24 January 2010 08:15 (sixteen years ago)
We can take a lot of positives away, despite the result.
You never hear athletics commentators say an ageing sprinter has an extra yard of pace in his his head, do you?
― ithappens, Sunday, 24 January 2010 20:06 (sixteen years ago)
― dumb mick name follows (darraghmac), Sunday, 24 January 2010 00:12 (20 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
No wonder he isn't in Capello's 11.
― dumb mack maine follows (a hoy hoy), Sunday, 24 January 2010 20:56 (sixteen years ago)