American Reacts to European Football Explained for Americans

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  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2024
  • Hello! I'm an American on a quest to learn more about history, geography and the universe in general. In this video I get my first taste of how European football works, with some American sports analogies to help pave the way. If you enjoyed this video, please like and subscribe!
    00:00 - Intro
    01:46 - Reaction
    29:00 - Outro
    Link to original video: • (European) Soccer Expl...
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    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
    #EuropeanFootball #Soccer #FootballReaction
  • Sport

Komentáře • 2,9K

  • @SoGal_YT
    @SoGal_YT  Před 2 lety +72

    Thanks for watching! Like and subscribe if you enjoyed this video 👍🏻 Follow me on social media and join my Discord:
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    • @johnnyjoestar5193
      @johnnyjoestar5193 Před 2 lety +2

      I still recommend you watch this video it makes it more simple, you dont have to make a video on it but just watch it atleast (only goes over club teams not international)
      czcams.com/video/FZ4i3KX2CW4/video.html

    • @donovanwray5974
      @donovanwray5974 Před 2 lety +1

      Hey Sogal, Christian Erikssen, a Danish player suffered a cardiac arrest in the match against Finland so, the stretcher comment was a tad unfortunate.

    • @williebauld1007
      @williebauld1007 Před 2 lety +2

      You should also learn and react to rugby, the British and Irish Lions are touring South Africa next month. It’s a team of the best players from Scotland, England, Wales and Ireland
      It’s a very big deal

    • @neilgayleard3842
      @neilgayleard3842 Před 2 lety +1

      He got the youth development stuff wrong. Kids are not being paid at that young of a age. It's just training to start with a few hours a week. Then we they get older they start playing games and training most days. They don't become full time professionals until they are 17.

    • @joescarecrow
      @joescarecrow Před 2 lety +1

      yeah check out the video Johnny Joestar recommended. then look at Leicester 2014/2015 premier league title win. Loved this reaction and as always how in depth you go. Would be cool to see you react to the current Euro highlights too, maybe just before the final. The copa America is going on at the moment too. USA involved too.. as well as north south and mid american countries too.

  • @gantorisdurran710
    @gantorisdurran710 Před 2 lety +3317

    "Are Manchester United and Manchester City the same thing"... comments like that could start a riot.

    • @nickachief
      @nickachief Před 2 lety +60

      FIGHT !!! 😂

    • @Dementat
      @Dementat Před 2 lety +138

      Yeah they're both shite

    • @danesorensen1775
      @danesorensen1775 Před 2 lety +12

      Rachel Riley is one of the downvotes.

    • @rogoth01themasterwizard11
      @rogoth01themasterwizard11 Před 2 lety +16

      i mean technically if you look back at the history they were (kinda).

    • @barrycharlessearle5253
      @barrycharlessearle5253 Před 2 lety +33

      Manchester United and Manchester City are 2 separate different teams United play in Red and play at the stadium named Old Trafford and City play in Blue and there Home Stadium is named Etihad Stadium. For More Info JUST GOOGLE...

  • @hernanmercado2389
    @hernanmercado2389 Před 2 lety +1964

    She: * drinks water from a CocaCola glass *
    CR7: * visible confusion *

  • @SimonSaysSimon
    @SimonSaysSimon Před 2 lety +558

    Fun fact: There are about 220.000 Football Clubs in Europe and each of them can have multiple teams.
    About 1,5 million matches are played each year in Germany alone.

    • @aledcrowlands1619
      @aledcrowlands1619 Před 2 lety +9

      Cant believe that 1.5 matches are played in Germany alone I mean that's mad it's probably youth and Sunday league games tho aswell innit but still must be like 40million matches in all of Europe which gets played that's just and tho innit

    • @florianbusse8383
      @florianbusse8383 Před 2 lety +17

      @@aledcrowlands1619 The german football association has about eight million members. Of course this includes men and women "too old" to play but still being members of their respective clubs. Multiple leagues exist in every Landkreis, which roughly compares to a county. Theoretically, a club could work its way up from the lowest level to the highest league. Sad but true, even among these amateur clubs, money is often important, either in cash, expensive football shoes or sponsors who provide a job in their company.
      What I would like to know is if there are no organized sports for adults in the USA? As far as tv series go, of course that is not reality, there seem to be only friends meeting casually to play basketball etc.

    • @GeneralPet
      @GeneralPet Před 2 lety +1

      Unless there are about 1370 football stadiums that host 3 games a day, everyday for a year, then I don't believe you.

    • @florianbusse8383
      @florianbusse8383 Před 2 lety +18

      @@GeneralPet Football is not only played in stadiums. Every little club has at least one pitch and yes multiple games are often played in one day. There are different leagues for men and women, children and adults etc.

    • @bjoerkbjoerk4688
      @bjoerkbjoerk4688 Před 2 lety +15

      @@GeneralPet Why do you assume that they are played in stadiums? I think what you are failing to account for is that these top teams are not playing in any different series than the smallest neighbourhood club. Theoretically your neighbourhood club of the most basic amateurs could rise to play in the top league given they win their league every year. Ofcourse these small clubs dont play in stadiums they play on the pitch closest tho where they live. There are thousands upon thousands of football pitches. In sweden alone there are about 1 million players (Population of 10 million). There is the main football league pyramid, but there is also youth series and kids leagues and pure amateur tournaments as well.

  • @tximinoman
    @tximinoman Před 2 lety +375

    16:21: "How many teams you guys have?"
    Well... How many cities and towns are in Europe? Because about that many.

    • @bentels5340
      @bentels5340 Před 2 lety +94

      No, no, no. Each city and town has several teams, for different ages, leagues, male/female and specialized (different types of disabilities).

    • @senja_official_
      @senja_official_ Před 2 lety +34

      @@bentels5340 many cities have even 2-3 teams for every category you listed,like turin has torino and juventus, manchester has city and united and many more.

    • @peterkelly1515
      @peterkelly1515 Před 2 lety +8

      London has several teams there's about 7 lonodn teams in the premier league alone

    • @dhirajsriram1100
      @dhirajsriram1100 Před 2 lety

      @@peterkelly1515 well not 7 but like 5

    • @peterkelly1515
      @peterkelly1515 Před 2 lety +13

      @@dhirajsriram1100 arsenal, Chelsea, spurs, Watford, Brentford, palace, West ham

  • @danielc7657
    @danielc7657 Před 2 lety +2230

    This isn't European Football, it's just Football.

    • @gonimysh
      @gonimysh Před 2 lety +265

      Exactly. There is Football and american football.

    • @irishpatronimo5875
      @irishpatronimo5875 Před 2 lety +49

      This is the very reason I clicked on this video.

    • @vineetpandey6787
      @vineetpandey6787 Před 2 lety +93

      @@gonimysh Nope. There is football and then there is the pansy game of elliptical ball

    • @Wontar
      @Wontar Před 2 lety +15

      It's European football. This is from the point of view of an American. Americans have football already, so that's how Americans make the distinction. If you are outside of the US, you call it football vs. American football. It's a frame of reference.

    • @irishpatronimo5875
      @irishpatronimo5875 Před 2 lety +130

      @@Wontar It's not just European though, people play it on all 6 habitable continents whereas American football is only played in the US. (As far as I know, correct me if I'm wrong.)

  • @cambs0181
    @cambs0181 Před 2 lety +948

    European football, which is exactly the same as African football, South American football, Asian football, Central American football and basically most of the world outside the US.

    • @baekdutiger631
      @baekdutiger631 Před 2 lety +37

      Only reason why it's not popular here is because USA men's team never won the WC!!! Women' wins don't count....

    • @xboxheavy
      @xboxheavy Před 2 lety +7

      ​@@baekdutiger631 The US were close to win the first world cup in 1930, I think the national team got third place.

    • @baekdutiger631
      @baekdutiger631 Před 2 lety +3

      @@xboxheavy Yep that's why US national team don't get enough support since it's been that long ago...

    • @GarkKahn
      @GarkKahn Před 2 lety +1

      And half of those times(like the last one) they didn't qualified

    • @JL-so2eu
      @JL-so2eu Před 2 lety +7

      You forgot northamerican football (México).. 3 countries in northamerica, Canadá (hockey 🏒), USA (Baseball ⚾, Rugby gringo,🏈 Basketball🏀) and México (football ⚽)

  • @franciscojosedasilvapereir27

    "Does Morocco not play? Were they banned or something??"
    *pointing at the desert*

    • @Darbskj
      @Darbskj Před 2 lety +10

      Laughed so hard

    • @galier2
      @galier2 Před 2 lety +9

      Mauritania. That's the name of the country in that part of the desert.

    • @jakobsmith4046
      @jakobsmith4046 Před 2 lety +73

      @@galier2 Its western Sahara

    • @flswttr
      @flswttr Před 2 lety +20

      my girl thinking she's smart by pointing out western sahara instead of morocco. it is part of morocco, but yeah, politics.

    • @TheSyscall
      @TheSyscall Před 2 lety +12

      @@flswttr Well as you said politics... But officially Western Sahara is not part of Morocco. The locals are at war with Morocco because they claim to be an independant state (since Spanish colonisation ended). NATO remains silent regarding the situation there because USA recognised Western Sahara as part of Morocco. So for the locals, Morocco is seen as new colonizers and try to fight for their independance with the help of Algeria.

  • @karllaoun8106
    @karllaoun8106 Před 2 lety +190

    “This LITTLE thing called the Euros” she says 🤣

    • @James_McScott97
      @James_McScott97 Před 2 lety +1

      I feel like the Euros comes 2nd in the Uefa scandal with the champion's league coming 1st

    • @holmbjerg
      @holmbjerg Před 2 lety

      Compared to the World Cup it is 😅

    • @filmtherapybw
      @filmtherapybw Před 2 lety

      Lol

    • @karllaoun8106
      @karllaoun8106 Před 2 lety +3

      @Haniff Azman Chill bro

    • @yellowcactustvz4929
      @yellowcactustvz4929 Před 2 lety +1

      @@James_McScott97 The euros are way more important than the champions league, come on. Even non football fans always watch the euros, for the champions league it's different. As an italian just comparing the celebrations in the streets after the win and the silence before the games there is no comparing

  • @kietZe
    @kietZe Před 2 lety +668

    Fun fact: during World Cup in Germany the water supply in Berlin broke down during half time because everybody was going to the toilet

    • @Fabii2000
      @Fabii2000 Před 2 lety +17

      Well its Berlin... XD

    • @uteriel282
      @uteriel282 Před 2 lety +11

      thats just sunday realy

    • @amyw6808
      @amyw6808 Před 2 lety +16

      I lived in Berlin at the time. That must have only happened near the stadium. I lived in Lichterfelde (also west) and we didn’t have any issues.

    • @BeneAkaGlyon
      @BeneAkaGlyon Před 2 lety +34

      Its a true story but on a wrong assumption: There was plenty of Water available but the workers that manage the watersupply were so busy watching the game that they forgoot to turn on the pumps to increase the amount of water in the systems. Thats als the reason wehy not all parts of Berlin were affected but just the ones getting there water from that station. Greetings form Berlin

    • @davidcarcamo5010
      @davidcarcamo5010 Před 2 lety +1

      Just dont drink beer lawl

  • @sinisterem
    @sinisterem Před 2 lety +852

    "How many teams do you guys have?" A lot! Pretty much every city, town, village of hamlet, any place where there's more than 11 people that have a pulse will have a football club! :)

    • @NeoMicy
      @NeoMicy Před 2 lety +49

      Even with less than 11 people there would be a football team (speaking from epirence) xD

    • @timothymartin5538
      @timothymartin5538 Před 2 lety +40

      Yeah, then there's the five-a-side stuff, which tends to be quite entertaining, we all remember shirts v skins from school, obviously it's not necessarily league based, but it demonstrates the cultural importance.

    • @hope29croatia
      @hope29croatia Před 2 lety +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @jamesmarchant7369
      @jamesmarchant7369 Před 2 lety +4

      Back in the 80s my dad played sunday league for a pub in his hamlet. There were two football clubs in the hamlet, that hamlet probs had a population of like 200 people! All the people who were in those 2 clubs also played for the hamlet's cricket team, sport is more of a community here in the UK and it is common for some towns and villages to have more than one football club and for those clubs to have more than one team! My hometown there are 3 clubs - A junior club, and 2 town clubs with different names, plus all the villages in the local area radius around 5 miles each have a club which is like 5-6 other clubs!

    • @timothymartin5538
      @timothymartin5538 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jamesmarchant7369 mate that's sounds awesome, but it does call into question the validity of the term hamlet, I swear that's like 5 houses/households, if we're talking a couple of Hundred people then it's a village, but if you meant that it still has that hamlet vibe, then I get ya.

  • @Heithel
    @Heithel Před 2 lety +83

    "How many teams do you guys have?"
    "Yes."

    • @elatetunic-wd9ig
      @elatetunic-wd9ig Před 2 lety +1

      If you count all of them will go to the hundreds of thousands

  • @Mirkuzz
    @Mirkuzz Před 2 lety +263

    The Portuguese where Jose Morinho is from pronounce J as J, whereas the Spanish pronounce J as H.

    • @carlosrementeria2692
      @carlosrementeria2692 Před 2 lety +1

      Emmmm no, Spanish pronounce j not h...

    • @cessare2467
      @cessare2467 Před 2 lety +27

      @@carlosrementeria2692 "J" in spanish isn't pronounced like "j" in english. For example, in *jalapeño* you pronounce it like the "h" sound in *halloween*. Meanwhile the "j" in english in *jelly* sounds like the "y" or "ll" in spanish (see for example *yo* and *lluvia*). Of course this letters do not sound EXACTLY THE SAME. There are differences, mostly subtle.
      That's what the first comment is saying

    • @cessare2467
      @cessare2467 Před 2 lety +4

      *Mourinho

    • @chetahthegod5824
      @chetahthegod5824 Před 2 lety +7

      @@carlosrementeria2692 he means the J in Spanish is pronounced similarly to the h in English not that the h in Spanish is pronounced

    • @schipp3525
      @schipp3525 Před 2 lety

      I think in Spurs till I die he said it was pronounced hosé

  • @davidwood2671
    @davidwood2671 Před 2 lety +1036

    Essentially every town has a team and the larger cities have multiple teams

    • @RodolfoGaming
      @RodolfoGaming Před 2 lety +72

      In england every local town has at least 2 clubs

    • @rbarnett3200
      @rbarnett3200 Před 2 lety +85

      Some villages also have two teams...pubs have their own teams....there are a lot of pubs....

    • @georgesamuels4511
      @georgesamuels4511 Před 2 lety +20

      I live in a village that has a non league club 🤣
      Culture in England is different gravy innit

    • @joematthews4952
      @joematthews4952 Před 2 lety +1

      Not necessarily, Leeds are a one club city.

    • @callumlucas4444
      @callumlucas4444 Před 2 lety +2

      @@joematthews4952 that’s not true

  • @noniLaus
    @noniLaus Před 2 lety +379

    "You can't really get up and go to the bathroom" - the other day my dad was watching the Portugal vs Germany game and briefly switched to the news only to realize that he'd missed 3 goals when he switched back lmao

    • @yodef6828
      @yodef6828 Před 2 lety +12

      *Relatable*

    • @nicolasrodriguesdossantos1881
      @nicolasrodriguesdossantos1881 Před 2 lety +47

      I remember the infamous Brazil vs Germany where my mom was cleaning the room while the match was happening and me and my sister were screaming GOOOLLLL and she would pop her head off the room and ask: Are you celebrating the replay?
      Me and my sister: No, it's another goal from Germany!!!!
      After the third goal she gave up cleaning and came to the living room to wacth and set off fireworks to piss off our neighborhood

    • @GarkKahn
      @GarkKahn Před 2 lety +19

      I remember during the brazil 1-7 germany my dad left at the beggining of the match and after coming back the game was already 5-0 and i ask him "how are you?" like saying "you missed an historical moment"

    • @mobolajiade-aina8643
      @mobolajiade-aina8643 Před 2 lety +8

      Like the time when Lewandowski came on as a sub and scored five in ten minutes.

    • @jorgbecker5028
      @jorgbecker5028 Před 2 lety

      @@nicolasrodriguesdossantos1881 Shoutout to your mom ❤️ Anyway... Brazil will take revenge in 2022. Greetings from Germany

  • @parodyclip36
    @parodyclip36 Před 2 lety +27

    "You can't go to the bathroom 2 minutes because you will miss a goal" During the Euro I have missed 5 goals by simply going in an other room for like 10 seconds

    • @roryslaine7896
      @roryslaine7896 Před 2 lety +5

      I was at the United vs City game when Rooney scored that bicycle kick. My friend left the stand to go take a call from his girlfriend who had been blowing up his phone, and he missed it 😂 He was only gone for like 50 seconds. The reason his girlfriend was phoning him? To ask if they had any batteries in the flat and where they were hahaha. He was so gutted and we took the piss out of him for the rest of the weekend.

  • @MattheusCruzYT
    @MattheusCruzYT Před 2 lety +318

    Important: He talked about club football, he did not talked about international team football, the competition that is going now is NOT the Champion League (club football), the competition you mentioned is the UEFA Euro 2020, that competition involved national teams affiliated with UEFA (England, Germany, Turkey, Portugal, France), not team from the Premier League, Bundesliga etc...
    I loved your channel. You are really smart and cool. Also the only American who knows well the world map lol (no offense to America). I am now ready to watch your other videos.

  • @Glund117
    @Glund117 Před 2 lety +613

    The Champions League isn't happening right now, that happened weeks ago, thats the club competition. The Euros are happening now which is all Europe's national teams

    • @charleskett6438
      @charleskett6438 Před 2 lety +6

      Didn't chelsea just win the champions league? She just watched them win that tournament

    • @shoutinghorse
      @shoutinghorse Před 2 lety +20

      Think of it as a world cup just for European nations.

    • @ayeready6050
      @ayeready6050 Před 2 lety +28

      @@charleskett6438 Chelsea won the Champions League last month. Club football usually starts around August and ends around May which is referred to as a 'season'. Competitions like the Champions League are played every season. Therefore, Chelsea won the Champions League for the season 2020-21. The season starting this August will be called season 2021-22.
      International tournaments are played in the Summer every 4 years (like the Olympics), although its 2 years between when the World Cup and the European Championship (Euros for short) are held. The last World Cup was in 2018 (won by France) and the previous Euros was in 2016 (won by Portugal). The Euros that is being played now was meant to be played last Summer but it was delayed a year due to covid.
      Club football is played amongst private clubs. International football is played amongst countries, whose teams will consist of players from many different clubs so long as they share the same nationality. The term 'club' usually refers to a private team. If you wanted to talk about a international team then would usually say the "Scotland national team" for example. Lots of the information in the video was related to club football, particularly the bit about contracts and transfers.
      Hope this helps. Don't hesitate to ask any more questions you have 😊

    • @bobbybingle1662
      @bobbybingle1662 Před 2 lety +1

      Like she is interested. 🙄

    • @ayeready6050
      @ayeready6050 Před 2 lety +10

      @@bobbybingle1662 She does seem interested to learn. I don't know why you would say that.

  • @arfallaennzu1853
    @arfallaennzu1853 Před 2 lety +973

    "700 teams is insane"
    Coupe de France: 8,506 teams
    just sayin'

    • @vraelatao2264
      @vraelatao2264 Před 2 lety +80

      Yeah I laughed my ass off, 700 is not that much compared to other european countries.

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Před 2 lety +85

      Germany has over 25.000 teams competing in hundreds of leagues

    • @vraelatao2264
      @vraelatao2264 Před 2 lety +88

      @@mats7492 Well the number of clubs in the country is not what's being discussed, but the number of clubs allowed/qualified for the cup is. France for instance has around 18000 clubs, and 8500 are qualified for the cup. England has 42000 clubs, more than twice the number of France. Knowing that only 700 English clubs are qualified for the Cup is mad.

    • @pebbleyt1357
      @pebbleyt1357 Před 2 lety +2

      @@vraelatao2264 but yet the uk is tiny compared to germany, france, spain, just sayin

    • @vraelatao2264
      @vraelatao2264 Před 2 lety +3

      @@pebbleyt1357 Indeed but why would that be a problem ?

  • @MemerMaestro
    @MemerMaestro Před 2 lety +137

    "If you went full press for the entire game you would become exhausted"
    Leeds Players: "You guys get tired?"

  • @alt1f4
    @alt1f4 Před 2 lety +173

    This is not "european football" this is football for the whole world

    • @theabba1758
      @theabba1758 Před 2 lety +16

      It’s Football for everybody

    • @theabba1758
      @theabba1758 Před 2 lety +6

      @@StokesburyUSA its Football

    • @theabba1758
      @theabba1758 Před 2 lety +10

      @@StokesburyUSA Its a ball and people use their foot to play it. Simple Football.. da

    • @fran-yv1xc
      @fran-yv1xc Před 2 lety +3

      @@theabba1758 stop crying, its soccer for americans

    • @paspax
      @paspax Před 2 lety

      @@theabba1758 ..
      It's a type of football (played on foot).
      It has a proper name. That name is soccer.

  • @simonread8713
    @simonread8713 Před 2 lety +327

    If a club like Barcelona sign an 8 year old, they'll fly them into the city where they essentially have a boarding school (La Masia - owned by the club). They get full school education, football training, and whatever else. They'll even re-locate the family of the child, if need be. Other clubs work a little different, but this is an extreme example.

    • @mrpk188
      @mrpk188 Před 2 lety +43

      Like Messi he came to Barca when he was 13.

    • @simonread8713
      @simonread8713 Před 2 lety +40

      @@mrpk188 Yes, exactly. My mother works in a school (Cardiff, Wales) and one of their 8 year olds has been taken to Barcelona. They have superb scouting.

    • @mrpk188
      @mrpk188 Před 2 lety +22

      @@simonread8713 hope he became a pro La masia have given someone of the all the greats like Inesta, Xavi and Messi.

    • @stevebardella_farm-nature7bis
      @stevebardella_farm-nature7bis Před 2 lety +7

      @@mrpk188 Messi joined Barcelona after passing through Italy from Como Calcio, he was 10 years old. He was discarded despite costing little or nothing, 2002/2003 season, he was 15 years old, but he had already passed 5 years before from Brescia Calcio, also in northern Italy, he was 10 years old at the time. Discarded because physically unsuitable (Flea)

    • @stevebardella_farm-nature7bis
      @stevebardella_farm-nature7bis Před 2 lety +5

      This happens throughout Europe, or almost, in Italy there are football schools both of the Federation and of the most important clubs that have a sector called "the chicks" aged between 8 and 11 years, Francesco Totti Roma grew up in Rome, his the first football team, from one of the districts of Rome, was Fortitudo, in which he started playing football at the age of 7. Later he moved first to Smit Trastevere, another central district of Rome, where he played his first amateur championship playing two years under age in the beginners' championship and then, in 1986, he joined Lodigiani. [78] [79]
      Lodigiani (Rome) in 1986, Serie B rookie team
      In 1988 Ariedo Braida (tried to bring Totti to Milan but without success.
      In 1989, at the age of 12, Lodigiani reached an agreement for his sale to Lazio, but a blitz at the player's home by the then head of the Roma youth sector, Gildo Giannini, convinced his parents to choose the Giallorossi. Italian Federal Football Regulations: First year chicks, matches 5 vs. 5
      Second year chicks, matches 7 vs. 7
      Third year chicks, matches 7 vs. 7
      Mixed chicks, matches 6 vs. 6

  • @michael_177
    @michael_177 Před 2 lety +334

    The Euros is not for european teams. The Euros is for the european NATIONS, big difference

    • @Hunter27771
      @Hunter27771 Před 2 lety +6

      And Scotland, Wales, North Ireland and England. So not only nations^^

    • @skjold9121
      @skjold9121 Před 2 lety +61

      @@Hunter27771 but... those are nations.

    • @migitman07
      @migitman07 Před 2 lety +1

      @@skjold9121 they are countries but not nations

    • @merlin4084
      @merlin4084 Před 2 lety +7

      @@migitman07 To be fair, Northern Ireland isn't a country....legally speaking anyway. More of a province at this point. Only reason it is allowed in the international game is because the IFA (Irish Football Association) was the original one for Ireland before Partition in 1921 and as such has a right to play internationally. The Republic of Ireland set up the FAI (Football Association of Ireland) in 1923 which is why there are two Irish teams.

    • @Hunter27771
      @Hunter27771 Před 2 lety +1

      @@skjold9121 The nation here would be the United Kingdome.

  • @charybdisfgl2048
    @charybdisfgl2048 Před 2 lety +38

    “The UEFA Championsleague”
    “That’s what’s going on right now!”
    Nope, wrong again.
    What’s going on right now is the European Championship (Euros)

  • @samatarMohamed
    @samatarMohamed Před 2 lety +48

    Lady: "Is his name Jose or Jose"
    Jose Mourinho: "RESPEEEEECT MAN!!!!!"

    • @M-Soares
      @M-Soares Před 2 lety +3

      Funny thing is it is neither lol

    • @teotonioviolante8374
      @teotonioviolante8374 Před 2 lety

      @@M-Soares mesmo

    • @joaovictor20101
      @joaovictor20101 Před 2 lety

      @@M-Soares yes hahahaha...

    • @flswttr
      @flswttr Před 2 lety +2

      @@M-Soares sempre é mais parecido com o que o gajo disse no video, se é pra dizer entre a versao inglesa ou espanhola que digam a inglesa

    • @mffmoniz2948
      @mffmoniz2948 Před 2 lety

      Spanish: hose.
      Portuguese: jose. Think Jo-seph.

  • @timcliffsmith
    @timcliffsmith Před 2 lety +209

    A few points:
    1. A centre-forward and a striker are the same thing. He got a bit confused there. What he labels the CF is known as a number 10 or attacking-midfielder and is usually the most creative player.
    2. Yes, any player can go anywhere. He is referring to their primary responsibilities. Midfielders have to get up and support the attack and get back to defend (unless you have a specified defensive or attacking role, but even then you should always contribute to attacking and defending in your own way).
    3. It's Jose with a hard J because he is Portuguese, not Spanish.
    4. The Champions league is a continental competition in which the top teams from each European league play each other.
    5. There are 92 teams in the top 4 divisions. These are professional teams. From the National League downwards, more and more teams are semi-professional, and there are hundreds of divisions in what we call the pyramid because they become increasingly regional and feed into each other.
    6. What's happening now is the European Championships, which is between national teams. He is talking about the Champions League. See point 4.
    7. That's not Morocco. That is Western Sahara, a disputed territory.
    8. Some countries, such as Spain, have mandatory release clauses in a players contract, but they are often very high. However, most countries do not include release clauses as standard, though they can be negotiated by individual player's agents.
    9. Regarding kids, yes, that is real. Almost all teams run youth programmes starting at that age. However, you cannot technically 'sign' anyone under the age of 16 (though money does change hands sometimes!). Clubs will have scouts at school games and local youth games and invite talented kids along to the club. A club will run under-10s, U-12s, U-14s, U-16s, U-18s. Think of it like a filter system, with the most promising kids from each level progressing into the older teams. Once someone is 16, they can sign a professional contract.
    10. An alternative to FIFA and PES is Football Manager, which is more about signing players and tactics. You set up the team and then watch them play.
    11. It is difficult to just dip into a sport if you have no context about the significance of the games, or even what the players are doing and whether it is good or not.
    Overall, this wasn't a bad video, and good for you for wanting to learn about this stuff.

    • @roy_for_real2674
      @roy_for_real2674 Před 2 lety

      scouts at school games? where?

    • @timcliffsmith
      @timcliffsmith Před 2 lety +7

      @@roy_for_real2674 I mean at inter-school level, you know, like town championships, that sort of thing. I don't mean just normal sports lessons in school.

    • @shubashinvictus
      @shubashinvictus Před 2 lety +1

      That's really long 😂.. even tho ik everything it was interesting to see someone explain it...who.do you support?.

    • @timcliffsmith
      @timcliffsmith Před 2 lety +1

      @@shubashinvictus Cardiff City

    • @shubashinvictus
      @shubashinvictus Před 2 lety +1

      @@timcliffsmith you are in championship right now?. Good luck mate

  • @Daveydoodoo
    @Daveydoodoo Před 2 lety +324

    Jose is like 'joe say'. That is the Portuguese pronunciation. You have probably only hear 'Ho say' which is the Spanish pronunciation

    • @matyy_.
      @matyy_. Před 2 lety +20

      Hoh-zay is spanish pronunciation portuguese in fact is not joe it's more like Zho-Zee

    • @Jonsson474
      @Jonsson474 Před 2 lety +18

      Well Jose can’t pronounce English names either so i guess it really doesn’t matter. 😉

    • @garibaldilebeau
      @garibaldilebeau Před 2 lety

      @David Poole you watched the All or Nothing: Tottenham Hotspur series as well, didn’t you😎

    • @zahrans
      @zahrans Před 2 lety +1

      @@Jonsson474 *Respect Respect Respect*

    • @BrunoBarata78
      @BrunoBarata78 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Jonsson474 I'm Portuguese and that just cracked me up.

  • @Inferiis
    @Inferiis Před 2 lety +21

    "How many teams you guys have?" To be fair pretty much every city has at least one football team, even towns. Bigger cities may have 5-6 or even more

  • @klamin_original
    @klamin_original Před 2 lety +18

    16:30 "How many teams do you guys have"
    Well every town has one. And some simply managed to be better than others and so found their way into the top leagues. That's the beauty of the whole relegation thing, you can reach the top league when 30 years earlier you were just another local club.

    • @user-ed5bu3xp5m
      @user-ed5bu3xp5m Před 2 lety

      Yep there literally like Sunday league teams

    • @HrHaakon
      @HrHaakon Před 2 lety +1

      Correction: Every town has at least one...

  • @jdrancho1864
    @jdrancho1864 Před 2 lety +190

    There's no need to call it 'European Football', just 'football' will do.

    • @fran-yv1xc
      @fran-yv1xc Před 2 lety +5

      American perspective, not so hard to understand..

    • @everything_usmnt5300
      @everything_usmnt5300 Před 2 lety +3

      When will people ever stop feeling the need to say this. Get over it

    • @Muschelschubs3r
      @Muschelschubs3r Před 2 lety +7

      @@everything_usmnt5300 No. Out of principle. The world does not revolve around 'Murika.

    • @damasogaymmer9497
      @damasogaymmer9497 Před 2 lety +1

      @hfc He literally explained it

    • @everything_usmnt5300
      @everything_usmnt5300 Před 2 lety +3

      @hfc stop wasting your breath bro. These people are snobs.

  • @Alfred_Domke_antispace-sounds

    „Football is a simple game. Twenty-two men chase a ball for 90 minutes and at the end, the Germans always win.“ - Gary Lineker

  • @aranchuica1936
    @aranchuica1936 Před 2 lety +7

    When they talk about signing 8 year olds they mean that they sign them unto their youth academies. Some teams have more pretigous ones than others, the most prestigious ones kinda act more like a private school until they're in their mid-late teens when they actually start helping them work towards being a professional athlete.

  • @lellab.8179
    @lellab.8179 Před 2 lety +5

    17:22 That's exactly what happened in Italy with ChievoVerona: Chievo is a fraction/part (I don't know how exactly you say it in English) of the city of Verona. They started from the minor regional leagues and arrived in Serie A, where they managed to stay from 2001-2002 until 2018-2019, even competing in UEFA Champions League.

  • @klaxoncow
    @klaxoncow Před 2 lety +116

    When he said that the midfielders can "go either way", what he means is that they're in-between defence and attack.
    They do both jobs. If the team is pushing forward, then the midfielders might join the attack. But if the opposition gets the ball and is pushing forward, the midfielders will drop back and become additional defenders.
    There is no restriction on movement - or, indeed, role - in the game at all. Well, besides the "offside" rule and that goalies will almost always stay at their goal, for obvious defensive reasons.

    • @whodis113
      @whodis113 Před 2 lety +8

      Then we have Manuel Neuer, honorary CB and sometimes, CM :)))))))

    • @elatetunic-wd9ig
      @elatetunic-wd9ig Před 2 lety +5

      In the 1974 Netherlands if you ask where you play, they will say yes

    • @janwojtyna3392
      @janwojtyna3392 Před 2 lety

      Every player has to play D.

    • @michielvdvlies3315
      @michielvdvlies3315 Před 2 lety

      it depends on the tactics

    • @michielvdvlies3315
      @michielvdvlies3315 Před 2 lety

      @@elatetunic-wd9ig Total Football. just like van Gaal did with the Netherlands in brasil just let an attacker play right wing defender

  • @hasibalfuad9652
    @hasibalfuad9652 Před 2 lety +65

    "The only thing I hesitate to do is to play with Barcelona. Cause I can control Leo Messi and who am I to say god what to do"
    Best quote in the history of Mankind.

  • @esburnside
    @esburnside Před 2 lety +12

    At least you're trying discount Jodi Foster

  • @luca_castellari
    @luca_castellari Před 2 lety +44

    this is the most American reaction I've ever seen hahaha

    • @revolucion-socialista
      @revolucion-socialista Před 2 lety

      "Americans" are all people who live in the American continent, not just in the United States

    • @davguev
      @davguev Před rokem +1

      @@revolucion-socialista How would you call people from the US, then? Unitedstatetians? If that's the case, Mexicans could also be called like that. Mexico is Estados Unidos Mexicanos. But they're Mexicans. Same with the USA. Sucks that they chose America for their name, but it is how it is.

    • @johnjungkook2721
      @johnjungkook2721 Před rokem

      @@revolucion-socialista in theory, but not in practice

  • @Fenet2000
    @Fenet2000 Před 2 lety +83

    16:00 yeah, we have about 24,000 football cubs in Gemany. That makes a LOT of leagues just in Germany

    • @altemzwo8390
      @altemzwo8390 Před 2 lety +10

      The thing that I haven't seen properly explained in any of these videos is that European league pyramids combine pro, semi-pro and amateur into one giant thing. Organised sports isn't done primarily in schools and colleges, instead we go to our local sports clubs, those play games within said league pyramid (which is being called a pyramid because at lower tiers, there will be multiple leagues at the same tier). In theory, anyone can form a club, have the club join the applicable sports association and get promoted into the top flight, the only practical problem being that this will take 10+ promotions to get from the bottom tier to the top tier.

    • @murderboytje
      @murderboytje Před 2 lety

      That arent just profesional teams.... Thats what they talked about. Not the amateur stuff there is all around Europe.
      The US has that as well. This was just about the pro leagues.

    • @Spuddowww
      @Spuddowww Před 2 lety

      @@murderboytje The point is that these leagues all feed in to each other and are all part of the same system. For a good example checkout Hashtag United on CZcams. A club which was formed and is now climbing the leagues from nothing, it can help to explain how the semi-pro teams work. Effectively anything from national league and below would be 'semi-pro' but you could get promoted to the pro leagues with enough work and skill.

  • @johndare3576
    @johndare3576 Před 2 lety +181

    Morocco place in the African federation. You may be getting a bit confused looking at the map because part of Morocco seems to be left out.That’s because it’s not Morocco. It’s the Western Sahara which Morocco illegally occupied and is not recognised as being part of Morocco by the rest of the world

    • @rbarnett3200
      @rbarnett3200 Před 2 lety +3

      Ceuta is a part of Morocco but is actually owned by Spain and is thus Spanish territory with all that that implies...

    • @uztre6789
      @uztre6789 Před 2 lety +18

      @@rbarnett3200 Nobody was talking about ceuta

    • @TheGarryq
      @TheGarryq Před 2 lety +6

      Then again, Spain simply walked out without leaving behind a proper government. As far as the UN is concerned that leaves Spain, as the former colonial power, responsible for the area

    • @Ambitwine
      @Ambitwine Před 2 lety +5

      @@TheGarryq Morocco invaded the place with a massive civilian force, Spain was on the verge of the collapse of the dictatorship, they just left because that was the easy thing to do, wtf do you expect?

    • @jorgeferdenav
      @jorgeferdenav Před 2 lety +1

      @@Ambitwine Spain is still responsible for it. Spain chose to have colonies, so it's Spain obligation to fulfill the pertaining obligations. Can't handle the responsibility? Don't have colonies.

  • @tavitsmith1284
    @tavitsmith1284 Před 2 lety

    Great video!! Thank you. I learned a lot!!

  • @cesargomes2378
    @cesargomes2378 Před 2 lety +20

    20:48 americans and their geography, i didn't want to say it but the joke wrote itself hahahah

    • @revolucion-socialista
      @revolucion-socialista Před 2 lety

      "Americans" are all people who live in the American continent, not just in the United States

  • @vaudevillian7
    @vaudevillian7 Před 2 lety +76

    Champions League is a cross-European League for each of their teams from their leagues
    What’s going on now is the Euros, which is for national teams (e.g England and Scotland) - essentially it’s like the World Cup but just for European nations. It also takes place every four years, and fits in-between the World Cup (like the Summer/Winter Olympics)

  • @scipio764
    @scipio764 Před 2 lety +35

    ”Are Man Utd and Man City the same thing?”
    That's like asking is Lakers and Clippers are the same. You might've just burned down the city of Manchester with that comment.

  • @NaftaliAndrade
    @NaftaliAndrade Před 2 lety +15

    José has two different pronunciations based on where the person comes from. If they come from a Spanish speaking country, the pronunciation is "Hosé". However, since both Brazil and Portugal have a strong presence in football, you'll likely find players with this type of names (that look Spanish) with a different pronunciation. The portuguese sound for "jo" in José has no equivalent in English, so people usually use this "djosé" sound (try to say this but imagining that there's no leading d in the sound and you'll come close to saying it in Portuguese). The same applies to players with names like Jesus, Joaquim, etc.

    • @Hawk762ii
      @Hawk762ii Před rokem +3

      J = Zh
      There is equivalent pronunciation in French, Japanese and Mandarin Chinese.

  • @gustavoolinto1816
    @gustavoolinto1816 Před 2 lety +1

    I really love when the youtube recommend me a little channel from the other side of the world and when I watch it is pretty good. Anxious to see more of your firts contacts with football, wich is the most popular sport in my country, wich is the country who had won the World Championship more times. Cheers from Brazil. Nice to meet you.

  • @carlos_takeshi
    @carlos_takeshi Před 2 lety +130

    "Parma vs. Bologna... Are these teams good?"
    Sometimes...?

    • @tjampman
      @tjampman Před 2 lety +1

      But remember to check if you are on the food network, before you state they are good teams

    • @senja_official_
      @senja_official_ Před 2 lety

      i mean they were in serie A at some point

    • @alessiobaruzzo1679
      @alessiobaruzzo1679 Před 2 lety

      Last year were both in Serie A, but Parma got relegated at the end.

    • @yellowcactustvz4929
      @yellowcactustvz4929 Před 2 lety +1

      Daje cazzo, non sono così male. Imo batterebbero la nazionale americana

    • @roryslaine7896
      @roryslaine7896 Před 2 lety +1

      Parma had a great side in the 90s/early 2000s. I think they were just shockingly mismanaged and were spending above their means. Like Leeds around that same time period. Great squad but an absolute train wreck behind the scenes.

  • @michael_177
    @michael_177 Před 2 lety +109

    700 football teams isnt much, thats just the number of teams who entered the FA cup lol, theres thousands here

    • @strategiefan277
      @strategiefan277 Před 2 lety +8

      and only a fraction of those are professional teams, most of them are free-time clubs

    • @michael_177
      @michael_177 Před 2 lety +8

      @@strategiefan277 Oh yes of course, not all thousands of them are of a professional level, but there are a hell of a lot

    • @BlameThande
      @BlameThande Před 2 lety +13

      I think the difference is that here (or in a European country or South America or wherever) if all the professional players and the TV coverage and the money vanished overnight, kids and amateurs would still play football for fun. Whereas if US sports vanished overnight, I'm not convinced anyone would still play them without money being part of the equation. So the idea of every town and village having its own team is alien over there, sports is a top-down money making exercise not a bottom-up people's activity.

    • @dorianevans6638
      @dorianevans6638 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BlameThande Is this something to do with the insurance based US health care system ? In movies, the sport you see being played in the US by adults are non contact sports such as baseball, basketball & 10-pin bowling - not soccer or rugby, where the risk to injury is much higher.

    • @9thbloodandfire508
      @9thbloodandfire508 Před 2 lety

      @@BlameThande The reason football is the - THE - most successful sport in the world is it is easy accessible. All you need is a ball (or something alike a ball). No bat, no protective gear, no ice-skates, no basket, nothing. You don't need rich parents, and you yourself don't need money. Just a ball.
      Second, the basic rules are pretty simple: Do not touch the ball with the hands, and kick it into a goal more often than your opponent does.
      But by far the most important part is, wether you are a top pro, or just some freetime kicker, you play this game with your heart! It is competition, it is fun, it is feeling, emotion. It affects your body and your mind, and both need be to sharp to overcome your opponent. As a freetime player, you easily can relate to any professional, cause he faces the same struggles (for sure on a different level). Football is more than just a sport for a lot people all over the world. It is very near to religion.
      Therefore, you are absolutely right. Put away all the money in football, and yet you would still have the same players, the same league organization, and still people all over the world would play it.

  • @dasy2k1
    @dasy2k1 Před 2 lety +2

    You have to remember that out of those 700 teams only the first 3 or so divisions are actually full time professional...
    As you move down the leagues you will start to find part time professional teams (they get paid to play (generally per appearance rather than a salary) but also have a day job...) go further down and you end up with pure amateur teams

  • @arposkraft3616
    @arposkraft3616 Před 2 lety +7

    @7:15 no....3 subs for the whole game all players collectively... including if there is; overtime and penalty shootouts ... and usually you need to keep 1 sub aside for the case of an injury , so recon 2 subs as per standard and you might use the 3rd in the last 10 minutes to try and force a goal

  • @charlestaylor3027
    @charlestaylor3027 Před 2 lety +56

    That's 700 professional or semi-pro teams in England alone. Scotland has 3 leagues of its own. There are 17 professional teams in London.

    • @antonycharnock2993
      @antonycharnock2993 Před 2 lety +4

      Don't forget Welsh teams are included in the English leagues but Wales also has it's own league. Also Berwick on Tweed is in England but is included in the Scottish leagues. Oh this is so simple 😂

    • @paulguise698
      @paulguise698 Před 2 lety

      @@antonycharnock2993 Hiya Anthony, the reason Berwick is in the scottish league is there would of been 93 football teams in English football league, that's why they put Berwick in the scottish league to make the scottish and english leagues an even number of teams

    • @williebauld1007
      @williebauld1007 Před 2 lety +1

      Scotland has 4 leagues mate

    • @charlestaylor3027
      @charlestaylor3027 Před 2 lety

      @@williebauld1007 technically 3 leagues, one of which has 4 divisions but I was in the wrong.

    • @kannattini9190
      @kannattini9190 Před 2 lety

      @@paulguise698 Berwick got relegated from the league few years ago, the played in Scotland because other teams were closer in Scotland

  • @foggy951
    @foggy951 Před 2 lety +59

    You should watch "Soccer in Europe in four simple steps: a guide for americans" it gives you a better simple overview and is only 4 minutes long.

    • @Deadralord777
      @Deadralord777 Před 2 lety

      Personally I really don’t like that video. I think this video explains tactics and how leagues work much better. If you can get past the presentation which I can, I don’t really care. The other video doesn’t bring up the multiple cups and the FIFA stuff. If you are wanting to learn rules the best way to do that is by watching games and playing FIFA that’s how I learned.

  • @SNP-1999
    @SNP-1999 Před 2 lety +1

    I really liked this - your honesty and cute questions were refreshing. Hope you enjoyed the Euros - England versus Scotland wasn't representative of how England can really play, or of how international football can be when really exciting. My tip, watch the match Italy against Belgium in the Euros - now that was an excellent match, even if I must say so as an Englishman. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @pisos95
    @pisos95 Před 2 lety

    Hola from Spain!
    I honestly admire your honesty. There's something in me which makes me feel so uncomfortable when I have to show people I don't know something.
    Keep it up with the videos and, by the way, that is not Morocco 🤣

  • @Ozzpot
    @Ozzpot Před 2 lety +90

    The three subs a game is exactly that. You can only make a substitution three times. So at least 8 players out of the 11 will have to play the full 90 minutes. At the European Championships right now though, they're allowing five per match. I think that might become standardised in the near future.

    • @13dg
      @13dg Před 2 lety +6

      Not just in the Euro. In some leagues they did it as well.
      The reason is Covid.

    • @jiansonz
      @jiansonz Před 2 lety +5

      Yes, five subs allowed, but still only during three occasions.

    • @tonytynebridge510
      @tonytynebridge510 Před 2 lety +1

      It wont its just because of covid the players have played lots of matches so more subs

    • @bigcheese6212
      @bigcheese6212 Před 2 lety +2

      Before the 65-66 season the English League didn't allow subs at all and when they did, only one was allowed

    • @GarkKahn
      @GarkKahn Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah but this is for covid only
      If that didn't happened then we'll still have 3

  • @joeloates1685
    @joeloates1685 Před 2 lety +148

    Why are people disliking? The video been up 6 minutes and she's trying to learn ffs.

    • @alansmith1989
      @alansmith1989 Před 2 lety +24

      There are those on You tube who put dislike to as many videos as they can-just to be like that!

    • @markwilliamson2864
      @markwilliamson2864 Před 2 lety +15

      Probably a bunch of people searching CZcams for a free stream of the live Italy vs. Switzerland match and finding something quite different.

    • @joeloates1685
      @joeloates1685 Před 2 lety +1

      @@markwilliamson2864 probably. 🤷‍♂️

    • @michael_177
      @michael_177 Před 2 lety +5

      I had a theory its one guy with sock accounts, theres a string of comments on this video in very bad english saying some mean stuff that doesnt make any sense lol. Just ignore em' SoGal if ya see this

    • @Dementat
      @Dementat Před 2 lety +2

      Welcome to the internet Joel

  • @nickchivers9029
    @nickchivers9029 Před 2 lety

    When he talks about "midfielders who go forward or back" he's referring to basically a particular midfielders specialty - a defensive midfielder will hang back and help defend when your team are in the opposition half and collect stray balls, attacking midfielders join the attack to overwhelm defenses or sometimes hang a bit deeper and are used to execute key passes to the forwards. Some midfielders are a mix of the two (sometimes known as box-to-box midfielders - referring to the fact they operate primarily from the middle of the pitch to the edge of either penalty box)

  • @BobHerzog1962
    @BobHerzog1962 Před 2 lety

    They raised the amounts of subs a bit but yes it used to be 3 subs for the whole match. And that could include overtime in tournament conditions. Nowadays you get an additional sub spot in case of overtime. But you may not have enough subs for all positions anyways since in tournaments like the European Championship each team is limited to 26 total. So you can't have several backups for all positions.
    Players can go anywhere. What he means that from their tactical role midfielders tend to switch between defence and offence. There are also tactical outlines and players that will use a midfielder position more defensive or offensive but that is to detailed for the basics. If you are interested look how many teams don't use classic strikers anymore.
    Champions League is actually teams of the different European leagues playing something similar to a playoff tournament. Only teams that did well in their league get a spot. There is also a lesser tournament for teams a little lower in the league table (Europa League) but only followers of teams playing there really pay much attention here.
    The FA cub is open to any team. So its not just the professionals that compete. In fact the FA cub started in a time where the (English) Football Association made a very big deal about only amateur teams being allowed (as in no player gets payed more than some compensations for stuff like travel).
    Same is true for the leagues. From a certain point downwards the teams will be less and less professional until you reach the real regional level where you find only after work village/city district teams. As he said in theory those teams play in the same superstructure of connected leagues but in reality there is a divide between the professionals and the amateurs.
    The 10 year olds are not traded like regular players. He is talking about talent youth programs/academies each major team has. Those encourage talented players to move there by offering various incentives. But the child (via their parents) usually signs a contract that will mean the talent program will at least get something out of it should the player later sign a professional sports contact. Think of a replacement for college talent scouts and the incentives colleges give prospective players.

  • @dapablo2
    @dapablo2 Před 2 lety +35

    in 1872 the first ever International football match was played, England vs Scotland, Final score 0-0. There is some history here. :)

    • @jacobtierney4419
      @jacobtierney4419 Před 2 lety +1

      And in 2021, history repeats

    • @mikael884
      @mikael884 Před 2 lety +1

      Nothing international about that game..Scotland is just a English region.

    • @jacobtierney4419
      @jacobtierney4419 Před 2 lety

      @@mikael884 head out in Glasgow one night and say that pal, be some funny last words 😂😂

    • @dapablo2
      @dapablo2 Před 2 lety

      @@mikael884 Sorry but that is just factually incorrect. Scotland has it's own parliament and is part of a group of nations called the United Kingdom which is seated in England. England is not in charge of anything Parliament is.

    • @mikael884
      @mikael884 Před 2 lety

      @@dapablo2 Sure...as did the "homelands" in South Africa...as did the occupied countries of Nazi Germany...Mock up parliaments taking orders from Westminster.

  • @talkshowhost85
    @talkshowhost85 Před 2 lety +15

    I especially like how football fans can talk about various leagues around the world and their teams. Also, football fans know a lot of players from different part of the world. Truly, the world's favourite sport.

    • @Kevin-bt4wb
      @Kevin-bt4wb Před rokem +1

      For the most part, they only know teams, leagues and players in the bigger leagues in Europe.

  • @Uzodesign
    @Uzodesign Před 2 lety +1

    I think the guy who explained the video did a great job. Could it have been better on the visuals? Yes. He has a nice soothing voice. Could definitely be a voice actor, narrator, or voice-over guy. I never quite realized how complicated understanding World football could be for someone new to it. You have the clubs and their tournaments and then you have the international tournaments. I suppose they would like to know when are they played? Which teams qualify etc. Well, the first thing is baby steps...immerse yourself in the culture by playing, going with friends to watch games and with everything else the more you do it the better you understand it.

  • @bobbobson3098
    @bobbobson3098 Před 2 lety

    So when he says midfield can go either way, they mean they will be a regular part of both the attack and defense at most points of the game, since it is a flex position.
    Some teams will have formations that have center-backs or center-forwards, that are mid-fielders that play slightly more defence/attack, sorta like how a tight-end is a combination of a receiver, o-line and running back.
    Whereas defenders in soccer usually will only be in the attack if they were out of position and they are taking the opportunity, or if it's a desperation play, and the defender is acting as attacking player.

  • @Nightknight1992
    @Nightknight1992 Před 2 lety +57

    my condolences for watching scotland vs england hahaha. what an unlucky one to try and get into it. germany portugal wouldve probably been the more nteresting one :D

    • @jon62punk
      @jon62punk Před 2 lety +3

      Couldn't pick a more boring side to watch than England , basic tactic put opposition to sleep , and I am English . To many fans I would say your club side is more important than country , I am a Leeds supporter and though they have had many lean years in recent times , I always put club first .

    • @Nightknight1992
      @Nightknight1992 Před 2 lety

      @@jon62punk yeah agree, also clubs always play and also have the relegation stuff at their hands, plus the transfer economics part.
      your match vs croatia was pretty entertaining though

    • @jon62punk
      @jon62punk Před 2 lety +1

      @@Nightknight1992 Must have been an accident if England had an entertaining game . Usually in these competitions , World Cup , Euro's , if I want a good game to watch I avoid England ........ but I guess with Marcelo Bielsa at Leeds we have been spoiled by the quality and entertainment , win or lose . England tend to have one entertaining game per decade and we may have had this decades one !!!!!!

  • @liverbot4854
    @liverbot4854 Před 2 lety +26

    "How many teams do you have?"
    We have 92 teams in the top 4 professional leagues in England. Those teams cover almost all (semi) urban residences in England and Wales, so theoretically my hometown of 120,000 people could win the biggest club competition in Europe. That can’t happen in the US.

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 2 lety +2

      220.000 teams all Eropa

    • @Kevin-bt4wb
      @Kevin-bt4wb Před rokem +2

      Just to clarify for accuracy... it's 92 teams from the *Top 4* professional leagues in England. YNWA

    • @liverbot4854
      @liverbot4854 Před rokem

      @@Kevin-bt4wb Thanks! I’ve edited my comment now. YNWA.

    • @BrentTJo
      @BrentTJo Před rokem

      Except for when the Green Bay Packers are winning. Population is about 100,000 with the closest larger city being 190 km away.

  • @usctrojanfreak
    @usctrojanfreak Před 2 lety

    it takes guts to put out a video like this lol respect to you

  • @yarriddevogelaere2005

    You can only substitute 3 out of your 11 players over the whole game. It's been cranked up to 5 during the pandemic because the schedule was very condensed after leagues being on hold for 2-3 months during the first wave and then having to make up for lost games, basically doubling the physical strain. For some reason afterwards most competitions decided to stick with 5.
    When he says the midfielder can go either way he doesn't mean there are any regulations. He's mainly talking about tactical instructions they get from their coaches. Most coaches give their players a lot of tactical and creative freedom to do what they think is most beneficial in any given moment but some coaches very much prefer to restrict the actions and movement of their players depending on their position and their tactical role. Easily put, there would be 3 midfielders most of the time but all 3 would have different roles. The CAM (centre attacking midfielder) does not do a lot of defending and is mainly active when his team has the ball. The CDM (central defending midfielder) does a lot more defending than attacking and usually stays in position as a guarding player when his team has the ball. Should his team lose the ball he's there to either win the ball back quickly or to stop opponents from going forwards too quickly and buying his teammates time to get back into defensive positions. The CM he was talking about is somewhere in between those 2 and goes forwards and backwards about equally. The often play the aptly named box-to-box role. (fyi the boxes are those large squares you see on either end of the pitch)
    Jose Mourinho is Portuguese so yeah it's 'chosé' not 'Johwsay'. However, many people (even non-Brits) use the English pronunciation for most names in football because the English League is the biggest and most popular one and all competitions that are played internationally are organized in English. It's kind of the sports official language.
    Yes every country has their own series of leagues. The Champions League is the European competition where the best teams in all of Europe compete. They don't play in a competition format like the domestic leagues do but in a play-off/knock-out format.
    Morocco is included. I think you might be mistaken. Morocco is directly below Spain. It's the most northwestern country in Africa. They're part of CAF: Confederation Africain de football or African confederacy of football in French. The greyed out part is just an unclaimed part of the Sahara that's uninhabitable I think, could be mistaken.
    Release clauses are very, very rare. At least outside of Spain. In Spain it's obligated for teams to include a release clause in contracts with players but in other countries it's not. In some, like France it's even prohibited. I know of 3 players in the Premier League right now who have a release clause as far as the public knows (contract details are not made public so you're never sure as an outsider). Even in Spain big clubs like Madrid and Barcelona have to abide by the rule to include a release clause in every contract (which theoretically puts them at a disadvantage compared to other European giants) so they just make it a ridiculous number like 1 billion Euro's, which no-one will ever pay. That way it's the same as if they didn't have a release clause included. Only the biggest clubs like Madrid and Barca can do this however because players and their agents have a say in this release clause and they won't agree to something as outrageous as that unless they feel they've reached to peak of football and there's no way to go up any further so they won't mind if no club ever buys out their contract.
    Yes, players are 'signed' at a very young age. Most professional clubs have their first team which usually consists of around 25 players. Other than that they have a youth academy that consists of up to 20-25 different teams divided in different age brackets, the youngest often being 7-8 year olds. These kids can however leave as they please and are not bound by contracts. Most countries don't allow a child to sign any professional contract with a club before the age of 18, or in some cases 16. That means they're not getting paid but they're also not legally bound to a club and are free to do as they please. However, if a club comes and poaches an academy product right before they've signed their first professional contract that club is often obligated to pay you a development fee to compensated you for the money and time invested in developing this young player. This can often range in the hundreds of thousands of Euro's.
    Also most countries don't allow clubs to go and get kids under the age of 16 or 18 from different countries so whole families don't get lured with promises of fat paychecks to move to a completely different country and culture as that would not be healthy for the child obviously. For instance, Brazil has a lot of very promising talent all of the time. Their league is quit good but nowhere near the big European ones, not in quality nor in funds. So the best Brazilian kids get signed by European clubs. However, they're not allowed to sign for a foreign club (officially) untill the age of 18. They are allowed to sign a professional contract domestically at the age of 16. What happens with the brightest of them, the likes of Neymar, Vinicius etc and now probably Endrick, is they sign a professional contract for their youth club in Brazil at the age of 16 and if they're good enough they start playing for the first team immediately. However, European clubs have probably know the kid since he was 13 or 14 and they're waiting to pounce. So in their first professional contract they often include a release clause (60 million in Endricks case). Just a couple of weeks or months after they signed their first professional contract a big European club puts the money on the table and signs a pre-contract with the player stating that they'll sign with them the day they turn 18.
    Next to the sporting part, the tactics, the squad, the games and so on, football is also just big business. Much more so than most US sports, which is strange to see. The worlds capital of capitalism getting 'outcapitalismed'.
    The euro's are not the UEFA. The Uefa is the governing body of European football, like the FIFA is for the world. The euro's is short for the European Cup. A tournament organized every 4 years for European countries to compete in, like the world cup is for countries all over the world.

  • @generaldreedle2801
    @generaldreedle2801 Před 2 lety +77

    Live reaction to England v Scotland. Good luck with that. Bring popcorn, beer, a tin helmet and a flak jacket. It will get spicy.

    • @johnashtone7167
      @johnashtone7167 Před 2 lety +4

      Flack jacket, nah hide in a Nuclear bunker, especially when Scotland lose :-).

    • @reecedignan8365
      @reecedignan8365 Před 2 lety +1

      Oh, the Tartan Army’s going to own the stadium mate no debate about it 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @generaldreedle2801
      @generaldreedle2801 Před 2 lety +9

      @@johnashtone7167
      I wouldn’t be surprised if the SNP blame England when they lose👍👌😁

    • @generaldreedle2801
      @generaldreedle2801 Před 2 lety +1

      @@reecedignan8365
      So long as they don’t wreck it😁👍

    • @reecedignan8365
      @reecedignan8365 Před 2 lety

      @@generaldreedle2801 ehh they probably will. But at the same time if we win enough and get to the final… we may also get a national holiday too

  • @vaudevillian7
    @vaudevillian7 Před 2 lety +14

    Last comment, I promise 😂 yes they will sign 8-10 year olds, because professional sports outside of the US isn’t tied to schools and college it’s all extra curricular. A kid might be scouted at a middle school game though (although teams also hold tryouts so kids will go along) and then be put into that teams development system, so they’ll be going through their training academy and playing for their youth teams (they’re not being signed for the main team)
    And yeah it’s 3 substitutions only, for the whole team, again that applies to most European sports including rugby etc. most players will play the entire game.

  • @nathanaelhawke8722
    @nathanaelhawke8722 Před 2 lety

    absolutely loved this

  • @rosco3
    @rosco3 Před 2 lety +1

    24:40 Also good to mention that release clause for some players, especially the most valuable ones are just too high, basically impossible to pay off.

  • @mtth6758
    @mtth6758 Před 2 lety +83

    I love how surprised Americans are that there are literally thousands of Football teams (hundreds making it onto tv) and not just major cities like they do over there lmao

    • @emobx02
      @emobx02 Před 2 lety +4

      I mean, I think she’s understanding this as them all being professional, whereas these numbers include semi pros, and some amateur leagues. If you included all the American football leagues, including “amateur” aka colleges and high schools, many of which generate millions and play in stadiums bigger than NFL and premier league stadiums, then there are thousands (maybe hundreds of thousands if you really got down to it) of football teams all over the US too, literally every town has a high school team, no matter how small, and every state has multiple major NCAA college teams, which like I said, are actually much more popular throughout the whole of the US than NFL. NFL is just highly commercialized and obviously the top 🏈 league so it’s understandable why people think of that when they think of American football, but it’s hardly an accurate picture.
      A guy at my university that was from Germany had a hard comprehending that we were at a college game and not a professional game because we were in a 100,000+ stadium, and he couldn’t get over the crowd compared to an NFL game he’d been to, as well as the tradition and team loyalty amongst fans. He still keeps up with our college team years later and before Covid, he would try to make the trip over for at least one game every year. Just an example though. As a football (⚽️) fan myself, I have many teams in Europe on my list to visit, but the more I speak to European (or anywhere else tbh) football fans, they are usually just as ignorant about American football (🏈) culture as most Americans are about their football (⚽️). I just love and appreciate it all haha.

    • @yellowcactustvz4929
      @yellowcactustvz4929 Před 2 lety +2

      @@emobx02 Yeah but american football is basically just american, football is incredibly international. Being ignorant about american football is absolutely not as bad, you would need to learn cricket first since it's more played than anerican football lol

    • @yellowcactustvz4929
      @yellowcactustvz4929 Před 2 lety

      @@emobx02 Also we definitely have more teams per population than America by quite a bit still lol

    • @emobx02
      @emobx02 Před 2 lety

      @@yellowcactustvz4929 Idk if I believe that if you're counting every single high school, college, and professional team. I mean there are thousands in each state alone, and the UK is smaller than a lot of single states, but I doubt there's an actual statistic for it (and I certainly don't doubt that there are many in the UK too btw haha).
      Totally agree that American football is, well, more American and therefore just not going to be as well known outside of the US lol. But that's what I mean, especially on the internet when people from outside the US think they have this perception of it that's actually hardly accurate at all. In particular, every European I've met doesn't realize how in, especially smaller towns and cities, football teams are integral to each town, city, state, etc. Like, these are teams that are far from professional but have histories that go way farther back than the NFL's existence, and many have similar formation times to the period of history when (⚽️) football was being forged in England. People outside the US just tend to have a much more "NFL" view of American football, which is hardly an accurate or total view was my point, and why I shared the story about my friend from Germany. But on the whole, I get what you're saying!

    • @emobx02
      @emobx02 Před 2 lety

      @@yellowcactustvz4929 Just looked this up because I'm curious, but there are around 16,000 high school football teams across the country. Some are in small run-down towns (usually the most passionate fans) and some of these kids go to huge schools and play in stadiums that rival professional arenas. There are 893 colleges (university) teams spread out over 3 different divisions, the largest of which most teams are older than professional American football and play in stadiums that hold over 100K fans (because a lot of American football fans have a stronger allegiance to these teams than to any NFL team, as NFL teams are only in big cities, and contrary to popular belief, nearly half of all Americans don't live anywhere near a big city... remember, it's a huge country, and many states are the same size or bigger than the whole UK, so it's not like you can just pop up to an NFL game whenever if you don't live close). I stress the stadium size because it's not an exaggeration to say you feel like you're in the middle of nowhere, and all of a sudden there's this HUGE stadium that attracts more people than even live in the town where it is. It's hard to explain in a youtube comment haha. Then you have different semi-pro and lower-level professional leagues. Idk if you're even considering completely amateur Sunday league-type teams, but there are thousands, if not millions of those. Sorry for this long reply, I honestly just got curious about this and looked it up myself. I figured sheer size difference would play a part, even with a higher population density in the UK, and it appears so.

  • @tomeboaventura9054
    @tomeboaventura9054 Před 2 lety +67

    Klopp doens't play possesion football, he uses pressing and counter attack just like mourinho. And counter attacking is not negative ffs

    • @niall5701
      @niall5701 Před 2 lety +2

      Spot on there. Counter attacking football knows as gegenpressing

    • @tomeboaventura9054
      @tomeboaventura9054 Před 2 lety +6

      @@niall5701 counter attacking football is as old as the game. gegenpress is something new, because the players press very very high on the opposition half.
      you can play counter attack without pressing high and just sitting back.

    • @niall5701
      @niall5701 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah I understand that, I was simply saying Klopps brand of counter attacking football is called gegenpress

    • @fran-yv1xc
      @fran-yv1xc Před 2 lety +3

      Thats the difference, finished Mou always stays back while Klopp uses high pressing, that's why Klopp >>>> finished Mourinho

    • @peterkelly1515
      @peterkelly1515 Před 2 lety +2

      Jose teams are about sitting back and going for counter attack. Klopps teams are about pressing high and trying to win the ball high up the pitch to counter. Their tactics vary quite a bit

  • @CitroTeam
    @CitroTeam Před 2 lety +1

    Here in Portugal almost every village and town has a football team. Many cities have 2 or 3 or 4 clubs, or even 7 clubs. Some clubs have more than one team that must participate in different levels.

  • @ApolloNasty
    @ApolloNasty Před 2 lety

    Finally, what reaction videos where always meant to be :D

  • @shanwyn
    @shanwyn Před 2 lety +16

    "How many teams do you guys have?"
    Answer: consider that each larger city has at least one top and a few minor teams... more than sand in the desert LOL

  • @alexanderwilliamhassaikay
    @alexanderwilliamhassaikay Před 2 lety +27

    20:50 you mentioned that Morocco isn't included in the CAF which is not true it is included and football is extremely popular here as well but the thing is that map (like many other maps) doesn't include the disputed western Sahara region into Moroccan territory but Morocco does control that region in reality

  • @mweskamppp
    @mweskamppp Před 2 lety

    - the different setups of the teams are about a philosophy the team plays. Keeping the ball, constant pressing, fast surprising counter attacks. etc
    - There are many leagues. In my country it starts with local teams at maybe the age of 6. It is not school related. With age and league it goes over to professional or semi professional playing, when a team pays some handout for players to stay or to change to that team. That happens already in the so called amateur leagues. Usually it starts without pay with county class 1, 2, 3 sometimes down to 5. Then area class or city class. Then county league, state league (21 areas of the whole country - app 18 teams each), upper league (12 areas of the whole country), Regional league (5 areas in the whole country). 3rd league nationwide lowest full professional league. Then 2nd league and finally 1st league. First pocket money is payed in the county league, maybe one class lower or higher.
    - marocco is in the afc. The grey area is the occupied Westsahara, not accepted as part of Marocco by many countries.
    - the red marked countries in south america i am not sure. French guyana is still part of france. Surinam was a colony of the Netherlands and became independent in 1975, Guyana was originally also a netherlands colony but after Napoleon it was given to the english. It became independent in 1966. All of those three countries do not speak spanish or portugese.

  • @SNP-1999
    @SNP-1999 Před 2 lety

    To answer your question - all players, including the goalkeeper, can go anywhere they like on the pitch (i.e. the field), but if the defenders - and especially the keeper - did that, then their goal would be crazily open to attack by the other team. So, the defenders usually stay back, but the two on the outside, the left and right full backs, can go forward to attack as well. England showed how this is done last night against Italy, when both full backs went up, one flanking the ball over to the other in Italy's penalty area, who then scored for England. That doesn't often happen, and was brilliantly played.

  • @MrNifts
    @MrNifts Před 2 lety +15

    I applaud you for taking the time and interest to learn about footie

  • @michael_177
    @michael_177 Před 2 lety +40

    SoGal i beg you to Look at European soccer in 4 simple steps, even if you don't react to it, it will help you understand the system so much more. This video didn't do a very good job at explaining stuff but i can't blame you for not screening a video beforehand, or else its not a geniune reaction lol. A lot of people not familiar with the sport tend to get most confused about the difference between club football and football between nations. The Euros is on right now, which is Euro COUNTRY vs COUNTRY, whereas the champions league for example, is football clubs vs football clubs. The national team of each country is usually made up of the best footballers of that nationality. However when it comes to football CLUBS, you can pretty much come from anywhere and play for that team

    • @SoGal_YT
      @SoGal_YT  Před 2 lety +4

      I’ll look at that one, thanks. This one was also recommended to me, but I kind of agree it wasn’t the best.

  • @KahurangiSteez
    @KahurangiSteez Před 2 lety +1

    When they say "700 teams" they're counting pretty much any team in the country who wants to enter. In American terms, imagine you lived in some small town with 10,000 or so people in the midwest. In that town you have a local baseball team with people playing for fun who have normal day jobs and don't get paid at all to play football. Then imagine a massive supertournament where every team like that as well as every professional team in the country, and every level in between, have the ability to enter and compete against the best players in the country. That's the FA cup.
    Also, well spotted on that bit under Morocco that isn't part of the league! I believe that's the disputed territory Western Sahara which multiple parties have a claim to. It's mainly empty desert and pretty complicated who it belongs to, and Western Sahara doesn't have any football teams.

  • @KizaruBorsalino
    @KizaruBorsalino Před 2 lety

    What he meant by midfielders can go both ways is that they are involved both in attack and defense. Striker and wingers are usually purely offensive players, they can dribble, pass and shoot but don't have much defensive skills because they don't need to since they're almost always in attacking positions. Similarly, center backs and the goalie are purely defensive players, their skills are mostly defensive skills and they also have basic all around skills like passing and basic dribbling but when it comes to finishing and more advanced offensive skills they are the ones you search for. But midfielders are different because they attack as much as they defend. So they have to be good around players with both offensive and defensive skills. They also often have the best stamina of all the players on the field since they have to do back and forth when the team from attacking to defending and vice versa. Which is the main reason why most of the greatest players in the world are midfielders or forwards who like to get involved in the midfield.

  • @jobfranschman8436
    @jobfranschman8436 Před 2 lety +20

    Almost every city, town, village has a football club in Europe. Most are really small of course but still.

    • @DaxRaider
      @DaxRaider Před 2 lety +2

      thats wrong,. most cities have 5+ xD and i know alot of villages with 2-3 clubs xD

    • @paulwalsh598
      @paulwalsh598 Před 2 lety +2

      @@DaxRaider I would venture to say that most cities have a couple of hundred clubs, but up 5 professional the rest amatuer or even a few part time pro.

  • @nigelfennell4860
    @nigelfennell4860 Před 2 lety +8

    I loved this video, I love to see Americans learn about football.
    I see the football culture from a different angle. I'm English living in Thailand. All the Thai football fans support Manchester United, Liverpool or the like. They support those teams because they are expected to win.
    I support my home town team, Brighton and hove Albion. We don't win often but when we do, the feeling is amazing. In general, English people support their local team regardless of how good they are.

  • @TizianuMenzukialu
    @TizianuMenzukialu Před 2 lety

    +SoGal In soccer you have 3 substitution in total per game, after covid and the lack of athletic preparation for the season, to avoid injuries, federations raised substitution to five for the past season.

  • @freshjuice457
    @freshjuice457 Před 2 lety +1

    The video was not boring at all! It explained european football very well but just as a short summary! Yes there were blank screens, because he put more emphasis on explaining it!

  • @benj1955
    @benj1955 Před 2 lety +9

    It's really brilliant that you'll be watching England vs Scotland on Friday. I hope you enjoy it...like the rest of us here will. Watching a game live is a great way for you to learn the rules and to see how a game works. Because of covid they are allowing teams up to 5 subsitutes each in a game rather than the usual 3. Regarding 'the clock' you'll see the clock running in the corner of the screen while you watch the match, the 1st half counting from 0 mins to 45 mins until half time and 45 mins up to 90 mins for the 2nd half.

  • @eddhardy1054
    @eddhardy1054 Před 2 lety +8

    Sogal 700 teams entered the FA Cup but there are far more teams than that. Most cities, towns, villages and hamlets have at least one football club. 😊

  • @bjoerkbjoerk4688
    @bjoerkbjoerk4688 Před 2 lety +1

    700 teams are the ones who apply and enter the FA Cup. There are 40,000 football clubs in England. More than 5000 of those are actually in the same competition, the league pyramid. In Europe there are probably a couple of hundreds of thousands of clubs that are involved in the league systems and ultimately compete (theoretically!) for the champions league title.

  • @maximilianmaier3950
    @maximilianmaier3950 Před 2 lety

    I grew up in a German city with 45K residents and we had about 12 soccer clubs in the city alone at the time. Even most small towns and villages have their own club, so there are thousands of soccer clubs here in Germany. Of course most of them play in Amateur leagues, but unlike in America where professional leagues are completely seperated from other leagues, all Amateur leagues and professional leagues are connected through the relegation system.
    Most clubs basically just exist for people to play as a hobby for recreational purposes, but theoretically they could go on a run and work their way up to a professional league and in fact, some teams like the TSG Hoffenheim have done that with the help of an investment by SAP co-founder Dietmar Hopp. And there are other clubs that used to be in the Bundesliga but have been relegated many times, like the Stuttgarter Kickers who are currently only in the 5th league.
    If I compare it to hockey (which unfortunately is the only sport where I know anything beyond the top professional league) in America i would do it like this:
    The Bundesliga in Germany is like the NHL, the best league in the country.
    The 2. Bundesliga and the 3. Liga are comparable to the AHL and ECHL still very professional, but not quite on the top.
    Regionalliga and Oberliga/Bayernliga are like college hockey. Still pretty good, with a lot of young ambitious players who want to get recognized by a professional team.
    And below that you gradually go from some regional hockey leagues i never heard about, but which still have some ok players more and more down to just beer league level.
    And the further down you go the more seperate leagues there are on each levels.
    In Germany for example the top 3 leagues are nationwide, but the 4th league (Regionalliga) is already split up into 5 seperate leagues (North, NorthEast, Bavaria, West and South-West) and if you play in one of the lowest leagues, you won't have to travel a lot for games, because the entire league is just in and around one city.

  • @paulusarnhelm704
    @paulusarnhelm704 Před 2 lety +16

    You mention that American football games can last up to four hours but did you know that international test cricket can go on for five days?

    • @supernovaleftover1812
      @supernovaleftover1812 Před 2 lety +9

      5 days and often ends in a draw, which blows some American's minds.

    • @fluffibuni8663
      @fluffibuni8663 Před 2 lety +3

      Don't forget classic bike races like the Tour de France, which is raced over 23 days (21 race days and 2 rest days).

    • @mtk3755
      @mtk3755 Před 2 lety +1

      @@fluffibuni8663 ya it was happening just a month back, though I missed it and regret not watching, when does it happen again do you know?

    • @fluffibuni8663
      @fluffibuni8663 Před 2 lety

      @@mtk3755 Sounds like you're referring to the Giro d'Italia that was on about a month ago .... the Grand Tour race based in Italy. This year's Tour de France begins next Saturday, June 26th :-)

    • @pebbleyt1357
      @pebbleyt1357 Před 2 lety

      If jokes were like cricket it would be like:
      “Knock knock”
      “Whos there?”
      “Come back in a few days to find out”

  • @JoseFerreira-vj3lq
    @JoseFerreira-vj3lq Před 2 lety +16

    This JOSÉ "J" you read like the J of "Japan", because he is Portuguese.

    • @arthurnunesc
      @arthurnunesc Před 2 lety +1

      actually there isn't any sound like the portuguese J in English, but I guess that is closer than "H"osé.

    • @hexoslaya3696
      @hexoslaya3696 Před 2 lety

      But I say Hapan

  • @Saz-wy5bg
    @Saz-wy5bg Před 2 lety

    Btw it is rare teams use both a ST and CF usually its CF and CAMS this is due to the centre forward droping back to act as a CAM or false 9 and allowd wingers to become inverted and attack the box. This allows space creation outside of the area as both the CAM and CF will act together to supply the inverted wingers. Inverted wingers are just your right and left wing players who attack the box directly rather than creating chances down their allicocated areas.

  • @Matahalii
    @Matahalii Před 2 lety +1

    We have a countless number of teams, since every local football club, that is in the DFB(for germany) is in theory able to climb up through the leagues, no matter if it is amateurs or professionals. Of cause at some level the professionals are in advantage, but here and there you have matches between a really big team against an underdog village-club.

  • @ha22el5
    @ha22el5 Před 2 lety +17

    As other comments already asked, you should reaally watch European soccer in 4 simple steps, the video remains true to the title and it says "europe" but the it applies to every continent, it works kinda the same way everywhere. I subscribed this channel 'cause of the history videos, I'd never expect some football content, but i love it, hope you keep going.

    • @smedia2991
      @smedia2991 Před 2 lety

      Umm no. European leagues and other leagues are very different!

    • @ha22el5
      @ha22el5 Před 2 lety +1

      @@smedia2991 I don't know how it is where you live, but in South America it is the same structure. Each country has its own league, a cup, relegation, and they compete to qualify to a continental tournament: Libertadores. To the extent of knowledge, Africa and Asia work the same way too. Of the might be exceptions within countries like The USA am India, but overall it's the same.

    • @smedia2991
      @smedia2991 Před 2 lety

      @@ha22el5 Let me correct myself; I agree that it's not completely different.
      But in some ways, it's different. But season timelines are different, transfer windows are different. Copa Libertadores qualification is different. Copa Libertadores itself is different. Number of teams are different.
      Maybe I see the difference because I only watch football; for a fan of other sport, it may look the same.
      European football is centred around 4 seasons which is not the case in tropical regions.
      Lots of leagues have playoffs. In some countries, cups are more important than the leagues, so and so.

  • @fizbanw.9157
    @fizbanw.9157 Před 2 lety +13

    26:27 eight year olds cant sign any contracts, the parents are doing that. and at least in germany there are many limitations when and where someone is allowed to play, regarding their age.

  • @arroe8386
    @arroe8386 Před 2 lety +1

    the substitution rules changed due to the very full calender in todays club football. You can now substitute 5 players (+1 if it goes to overtime)

  • @hjalmiris4230
    @hjalmiris4230 Před 2 lety +1

    A correction of the Champions League. (14:24)
    The Champions League (CL) is the continental club competition organised by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). Clubs from each country compete in a tournament to determine which club is the best club/team in Europe in that season. The flow consists of a qualifiers for teams in low to mid-ranking UEFA nations, then a group stages, to the knockout stages.

  • @andywilliams7323
    @andywilliams7323 Před 2 lety +6

    In an entire 90 minute match. You can only substitute just 3 players within the 11 player team. Many matches play the full 90 minutes without either team making a single substitution. The most common usage of a substitution is to replace a player who has suffered an injury. Beyond that, they normally happen towards the end of a match to replace a player who's become especially tired from some much running.

    • @MrPaulMorris
      @MrPaulMorris Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, as you say often there will be no substitutions simply because the manager needs to keep substitutes available in case of injury. It wouldn't be too helpful to swap three players out early in the first half because, say, you didn't like the way they were performing then get a couple of injuries which might mean either playing with fewer players or with injured players on the pitch.
      Unlimited substitution, along with clock-stopping, is what really differentiates American sports from those of most other countries and what, in my personal opinion, makes them tooth-grinding tedious and drawn out; do we really need to swap the entire team just because you've gained or lost possession (I'm looking at you, American Football)--yet Americans find European football slow?

    • @craniusdominus8234
      @craniusdominus8234 Před 2 lety +1

      Yup. And if a coach already used all 3 of his allowed substitutions for that match, and another player gets injured, then tough luck. The coach has to keep the injured player on the field for the rest of match, or just play with one less player for the rest of the match if the injury is bad enough that the player can't continue.

    • @michaeltempsch5282
      @michaeltempsch5282 Před 2 lety

      During the currently running EC, for some reason of Covid, they're allowing 5 substitutions.

  • @cpt.flamer7184
    @cpt.flamer7184 Před 2 lety +7

    Actually last year there was a change in the rules, every team has 5 substitutions per game, but they still can make substitution 3 times, so one single and two double swaps. Worth to mention that players who were taken off the field can't back to the game.
    Jose Mourinho is Portugese, not Spanish. In Portugese "J" is pronounced like "G" in the word "Genre" ;p

  • @elvispresley9442
    @elvispresley9442 Před 2 lety

    Football players are very fit and can play 45 minute halves with a 15 min half time. There are no clock stops unless a major injury requires a player removed and a sub comes on and then they play constantly to the half time or full time whistle. The players can play in other position hence a sub takes the position of the player coming off. There are not individual people that only come on to kick a goal and sit back on the bench or come on for a specific play and sit back down. Usually the coach chooses the sub for the strengths the player has for the position they are put in to. To clarify the aim of the game Defend your goal and attack the oppositions goal (offence and defence). The back lines primary role is to defend and stop the opposition from scoring but have been known to score if they move forward to take a free kick or penalty or corner. The midfield can drop back to defend or can assist attacking to score goals. the run back and forth all game and the forwards need to score as that is the best way to win. However any player can score. even the goalkeeper but usually that is during a penalty if they have a very accurate kick and they can come forward and kick at goal.