Americans React to "The Rules of European Football"

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 675

  • @Simon6020
    @Simon6020 Před 3 lety +666

    Your TV stations don't like it, because there are no commercial breaks for 45 minutes

    • @cornelius8617
      @cornelius8617 Před 3 lety +28

      Somebody had to say it. THANK YOU

    • @eltiburon2796
      @eltiburon2796 Před 3 lety +7

      Lots of TV stations show it out here. The Champions League Final was on CBS's broadcast network. They've gotten creative for the ad dollars.

    • @jazzx251
      @jazzx251 Před 3 lety

      I think they're missing a trick with [DRAMATIC ROMAN GLADIATORS MUSIC] "INJURY TIME!"
      "When we come back - it's INJURY TIME! ... Just 3 minutes of destiny remain - only here on Fox Sports 3, when we come back ..."
      I simply don't believe the "2 minute warning" was an original rule of the game of American Football - it was made for TV, I would just like to know when.

    • @monkeytennis8861
      @monkeytennis8861 Před 2 lety

      Italian TV has, or at least used to have, ads during the game.

    • @bledarlala6822
      @bledarlala6822 Před 2 lety +1

      @@monkeytennis8861 they would show the game on half screen though....and it's a 3 sec ads...

  • @hongk0ngfu3y
    @hongk0ngfu3y Před 3 lety +273

    is not European Football, its Just Football👍

    • @sana3843
      @sana3843 Před 3 lety +4

      I think it’s better than soccer.

    • @bentels5340
      @bentels5340 Před 3 lety +5

      If you want to be clear, association football.

    • @jillhobson6128
      @jillhobson6128 Před 3 lety +7

      Also hugely popular in S America so can hardly be called European football

    • @jeetsahu5513
      @jeetsahu5513 Před 2 lety

      Yes yes yes

    • @jillelliott8175
      @jillelliott8175 Před 2 lety

      Bloody Oath it is even in Australia its being called that or the beautiful game.

  • @daviddavies3637
    @daviddavies3637 Před 3 lety +231

    Red card = off for whole game.

    • @vandal_prime9934
      @vandal_prime9934 Před 3 lety +27

      And with a man down for the rest of the match cause you can't just sub someone who has a red card :)

    • @jameshumphreys9715
      @jameshumphreys9715 Před 3 lety +9

      As well as 3 game banned

    • @callumlucas4444
      @callumlucas4444 Před 3 lety +8

      @@jameshumphreys9715 straight reds only

    • @xetulggr3496
      @xetulggr3496 Před 3 lety +11

      @@jameshumphreys9715 depends on the Foul. Usually it’s only a 1 Match ban.

    • @ianprince1698
      @ianprince1698 Před 3 lety

      called an early bath

  • @bucklberryreturns
    @bucklberryreturns Před 3 lety +107

    America: If we don't win, the sport sucks and isn't worth playing.
    That's why it's not watched in the States 😋

    • @Nekotaku_TV
      @Nekotaku_TV Před 3 lety +17

      Americans don't have the attention span for it.

    • @kmeanxneth
      @kmeanxneth Před 3 lety +6

      but you don't win in ice hockey 🤣
      hi from Finland

  • @stuart8201
    @stuart8201 Před 3 lety +438

    We call it football because you use a foot and a ball what you guys call “football” is more like hand egg.😂

    • @paulthomas8262
      @paulthomas8262 Před 3 lety +13

      Rugby's full name is rugby football union / league and originally just rugby football and American football was named in that tradition, so all the football games like Gaelic football or Australian rules football are part of the same idea. There were many football games before them came up with association rules. Before Association rules you could take players legs from under them, tackle them, hold on to them and even hand ball depending on the local rules.

    • @overall1937
      @overall1937 Před 3 lety +50

      It should be called American rugby

    • @joealyjim3029
      @joealyjim3029 Před 3 lety +6

      @@paulthomas8262 yes but afaik you cant use your feet at any point in american football, at least in rugby you kick it occasionally.

    • @kevoconnor145
      @kevoconnor145 Před 3 lety +7

      @@paulthomas8262 the difference is Rugby uses the foot too for a large part of the game.

    • @BassandoForte
      @BassandoForte Před 3 lety +9

      @@kevoconnor145 - The difference is: We don't need Joan Collins shoulder pads and body armour just to enable yanks to thow the "ball?" forwards... 🤣🤣

  • @kaszaspeter77
    @kaszaspeter77 Před 3 lety +48

    Answers to your questions:
    1. Tackles: you cannot tackle like in the NFL. You can only touch the other player if you touch the ball first; this can mean pretty hard tackles if you slide in and block the ball and the other player falls over your blocking leg. But you cannot go for the opposing players body, that's a foul.
    2. Red cards: the player gets sent off for the rest of the game AND his team cannot send in a replacement player i.e. the team will be one man down, which is obviously a huge disadvantage. Red cards are rare and they have a huge impact on the game, esp. if they happen early in the game and the team still has to play a lot of time with one man less than the other team.
    3. Out of bounds: there is no reset of any kind and the clock does not stop. The team who gets possession throws in the ball and the game goes on, that's all. Inbounds from the side can only be thrown in and throw ins have some rules too: both feet on the ground, both hands on the ball and the inbound has to happen from outside of the lines.
    4. Players faking injuries: this happens a lot, I think this stereotype is somewhat true. They try to gain an unfair advantage by trying to get a penalty/free kick/yellow or red card for an opposing player.

    • @mundaneMindanao
      @mundaneMindanao Před 3 lety +8

      The problem with players going down easily is that referees don't give fouls if you don't go down. So players make a big deal out of the tackle to make sure the decision goes there way. They also don't punish players that dive. Imo players that dive should get booked.

    • @SuAva
      @SuAva Před 3 lety

      @@mundaneMindanao I agree, but how come that's not that big of a problem in women's football then?

    • @mundaneMindanao
      @mundaneMindanao Před 3 lety

      @@SuAva I can't really comment because I don't really watch women's football but equally it's not like all male footballers dive. I'd say the majority of footballers don't.

    • @Muckylittleme
      @Muckylittleme Před 3 lety +3

      Not all physical contact without the ball is a foul though.
      Football is actually a contact sport and there is hundreds of times there is contact between attackers and defenders that is not a foul the most basic of which is shoulder to shoulder trial of strength but also shielding the ball etc.

    • @ianprince1698
      @ianprince1698 Před 3 lety

      in some tournaments, they can stop you from playing for one or more matches depending on the tournament

  • @katarinawikholm5873
    @katarinawikholm5873 Před 3 lety +50

    In ”normal” football? 😂
    #TheRestOfTheWorldLaughTheirJointAssesOff

  • @Londronable
    @Londronable Před 3 lety +126

    He's going like really fast so just putting it in a line here.
    A) Substitutions are decided by the coach. The 3 you see mentioned are the general rules but leagues can change this, just as they can change how many bench players there are available so instead of 18(7 subs) in the 6th tier of England I know it's only 5 subs for a total of 16 players. The first tier of England(premier league) does have 7. Subs are decided by the individual LEAGUE. So the second tier can have different rules than the first. This can be problematic when the rules change in regards to how many foreign nationals are allowed in a league. Lower tier leagues tend to want to encourage more local talent.
    Do note that if you did all your subs and you have a player injured you're not allowed to bring one one. Refering back to the game of football manager, this is why you don't make all your subsitutions at the 60th minute, if somebody gets injured you're out of luck.
    B) A red card means you play with a person less.
    C) Tackles and the like being penalized should be seen as the armor of the players. The armor in American football looks a bit silly but is necessary. Strict rules on tackles and dangerous play is necessary as well. We were less strict on this in the past and it just resulted in short carreers and a lot of "what if this player didn't get injured" situations. Football carreers these days can easily last 15 and up to 25. A single step on a persons ankles can end carreers and has not to mention people have died in collissions.
    Experience in football counts for a lot. The Belgian 3 man defense is at moments over 100 years old. They're not in top form athletically but they're sturdy, have experience and know how to play intelligent. Football is incredibly tactical. Defensively old defenders often have the upperhand over their more fit and young counterparts.
    D) Rules on handball these days are a fucking mess and ever changing. Don't bother with it.
    E) Penalty kicks were explained rather poorly. If one is given during a game the following rules apply.
    You can kick once but not again unless another person touched it first. This means that if you hit the crossbar and it comes back to you you're not allowed to touch it. If the goalkeeper keeps it out and it comes back to you you can touch it. The players during this have to stay outside of the box until the shot is taken.
    If under any circumstances the ball goes behind the goal line the one who touched it last loses posession. So either it will be a corner kick or a goal kick(goalkeeper can kick it far) depending on who and what team.
    Same applies to the sidelines. Whoever touched it last loses posession.
    He tried to explain a bit too much at once there and the video didn't exactly match with what he was talking about.
    F) VAR(or replay I think Americans call it) is rather new in Europe because it's expensive. Not for the big clubs but remember, England alone has tens of thousands of clubs. This isn't a problem for the 30 or so wealthy teams the US has. Europe has to think of all levels and ages.
    F2) This means that small errors are an accepted part of play. Sometimes the wrong team gets it, this is an accepted part of it. Play when a ball goes out isn't stopped for longer than it takes than for the player to get the ball(ballboys) but the refferee will decide who gets the ball and make the decision on the spot.
    Same applies to for example, a corner. If you don't pay attention and it is taken by the opposing team, tough luck. Games and championships have been won and lost on this fact when the attacking team taking a corner catches the defending team napping. Free kicks have ended in the net because the goalkeeper wasn't paying enough attention.
    G) His offside rule was actually wrong.
    The actual rule is that 2 players of the opposite team has to be between you and the goal when a pass is being played towards you. It's just that in most circumstances the goalkeeper is one of those players. So goalkeeper + one defender(again, not necessarily defender but realistically it is in most cases)
    Offside applies to when the ball is being played towards you. Not when it is received. So a person can receieve the ball with 4 players behind him and still be declared offside if the ball was played with him running back towards said ball and it being played when he was still offside. The moment the player gets the ball is irrelivant.
    Same applies to the rule that you can play a sideways ball. The direction of the ball isn't important, the position of the player the ball is being played towards is. Meaning you can pass a ball to the side and forward as long as the person is sideways or behind you even when that player is in an offside position

    • @joealyjim3029
      @joealyjim3029 Před 3 lety +12

      Id add that draws only happen in league play or tournament group stages, knockout games in tournaments will go to 30 minutes of extra time (2x15 minute halfs) and then penalty kicks until someone misses if the score is level at 90 minutes.

    • @bewareofsnow
      @bewareofsnow Před 3 lety +5

      I read this comment and thought "Good explanations, but tens of thousands of clubs in England sounds a bit much - it's probably more like a thousand." Then I googled it, and wow, you're right. Over 40,000 clubs! That must be why we've won the World Cup so many times.

    • @inisterlemon1516
      @inisterlemon1516 Před 3 lety

      Thanks, finally someone explains offside correctly. Because shit like this happens czcams.com/video/l9EF-BDWxTs/video.html and people don't understand what's going on.

    • @ferguswood53
      @ferguswood53 Před 3 lety +3

      @@bewareofsnow lad not to rain on your parade but you’ve won it once.
      Also players for clubs in a country don’t necessarily have to be FROM that country, for international (ie the World Cup) they have to be from said country.

    • @bewareofsnow
      @bewareofsnow Před 3 lety +2

      @@ferguswood53 Don't worry, everyone in England is keenly aware of our World Cup record. I was being silly.

  • @bigtummy4824
    @bigtummy4824 Před 3 lety +56

    It’s very easy to mock footballers going down after a tackle, but when you have a guy with studs ploughing through you it’s a different story 😂

    • @galinor7
      @galinor7 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm a martial artist. You're kidding me. RL, RU, Aussie Rules are for ALPHA athletes. soccer = Weak people who fall down in the penalty square.

    • @ricardoraposo3630
      @ricardoraposo3630 Před 2 lety +27

      @@galinor7 keyboard warrior doesn't qualify as a martial artist

    • @prototipolq-84i46
      @prototipolq-84i46 Před 2 lety +7

      @@galinor7 haha how do you know you are a gringo, when you can run at 36 km/h you talk to me

    • @usmanlone2643
      @usmanlone2643 Před 2 lety +2

      *cough,cough
      Sergio Ramos

    • @gerwalt668
      @gerwalt668 Před 2 lety +1

      @@galinor7 If Adebayo Akinfenwa tackles you, oh boy.

  • @richt71
    @richt71 Před 3 lety +61

    Ok. Some answers for you. Red card permanent exclusion from game and you can't replace the player so you play the rest of the match a man light.
    Goal line technology has recently been introduced. The technology can tell if any part of the ball hasn't gone over to millimetres. The ref wears a watch that buzzes if the ball crosses the goal line.
    A tackle is winning the ball with your feet.
    There are some play actors in football that fake injury to get an opponent in trouble but with var (video assistant referee) that watch incidents in reply and can alert the referee to go and watch the incident again on a pitch side monitor.
    They didn't mention here but players have different positions they play in the team. Coaches use the 10 outfield (you goalkeeper is fixed!) players in different formations.
    Hope that helps?

    • @Kai92
      @Kai92 Před 3 lety +3

      Also if you get a red card you miss the current game and you can't play in your next match (in that same competition)

    • @Dex586
      @Dex586 Před 3 lety

      GLT starting used 6 December 2012 in the first match of the 2012 FIFA Club World Cup. The first match to use the Hawk-Eye goal-line technology was Eastleigh F.C. versus A.F.C. Totton in the Hampshire Senior Cup final at St Mary's Stadium, Southampton in England on 16 May 2012.

    • @konradlure8729
      @konradlure8729 Před 3 lety +2

      Faking injury also known as Neymar

  • @samanthatyrrell2240
    @samanthatyrrell2240 Před 3 lety +28

    Ok so American Football is a sport where where you use you hands, and players score a touch downs without actually touching down. Maybe it should be American Carryball? 😂 Loved the video 🇬🇧 😍

    • @DraconimLt
      @DraconimLt Před 2 lety +1

      haha, exactly what I was thinking when that was mentioned! 😄
      I've always thought it should be called American Rugby, but Carryball works too.

    • @Leopoldo888
      @Leopoldo888 Před rokem +1

      And they carry with their hands, a thing that it's not a ball that resembles a Papaya... So American football should be called HandPapaya🙂

    • @antiwokehuman
      @antiwokehuman Před 9 měsíci

      Eggball

  • @thedisabledwelshman9266
    @thedisabledwelshman9266 Před 3 lety +46

    when a player gets a red card he/she is sent off for the rest of the match.

    • @HootMaRoot
      @HootMaRoot Před 3 lety +5

      Also in cup matches the red and yellow cards go on your record and after certain amounts you can get match bans, unsure if it happens during a football league

    • @T0MT0Mmmmy
      @T0MT0Mmmmy Před 3 lety +19

      Important! It's not only, that the player is sent off, he also can NOT be replaced by another. So his team continues playing with one less player on the field. The more red cards, the less players for the rest of the match.

    • @MrOwned94
      @MrOwned94 Před 3 lety +3

      @@HootMaRoot During the domestic league season if you accumilate 5 yellow cards you get a ban (I can't remember the duration). A red card will also net you a ban, which is decided by the football association or the league, that one will be based on the seriousness of the offence.

    • @benjaminmorgan8282
      @benjaminmorgan8282 Před 3 lety

      @@MrOwned94 For the first half of the season it's 5 yellows for a 1 game ban then its upped to 10 after the halfway point

    • @adrianpallis4568
      @adrianpallis4568 Před 3 lety

      Not only the player but the team will have to play with one fewer player rest of the game.

  • @stevelknievel4183
    @stevelknievel4183 Před 3 lety +61

    As far as I can tell, your wife's pronunciation of football would reflect her brother-in-law's German accent.

    • @free2er
      @free2er Před 3 lety +10

      In German football is called Fußball where the character "ß" means "ss" and is pronounced "s".

    • @atomare1
      @atomare1 Před 3 lety +7

      @@free2er "where the character "ß" means "ss" and is pronounced "s". "
      Man, I really love my language haha

    • @adrianpallis4568
      @adrianpallis4568 Před 3 lety

      The pronounciation might be closer to the french way of saying football.

    • @strange144
      @strange144 Před 3 lety +1

      @@adrianpallis4568 Nah, French is "football" and pronounced kinda like "foot-boll". German is Fußball, and pronounced like "foos-ball"

    • @alctalks1487
      @alctalks1487 Před 3 lety +2

      @@adrianpallis4568 she says it exactly like the Dutch say it. Voetbal

  • @Dex586
    @Dex586 Před 3 lety +38

    5:39 one red card results in an automatic suspension of three games (or one if second yellow) unless overturned by an appeal if it is deemed as "frivolous" then adds 1 game to original ban. Additionally, receiving many yellow cards throughout the season (like premier league) can also result a suspension, length will depend on the league / tournament.
    (editied by comments)

    • @RevenTon73
      @RevenTon73 Před 3 lety

      and u can not replace this guys , u have to play with less player...

    • @hornetgags
      @hornetgags Před 3 lety +2

      2 yellow cards (red card) is an automatic 1 match ban
      Straight red card is an automatic 3 match ban
      Unless the red card is overturned on appeal after the game, however if the appeal is considered 'frivolous' the ban can extended by 1 game.

    • @johnsimmons5951
      @johnsimmons5951 Před 3 lety

      RevenTon73 your comment needed further explanation; you have to play with one less player for the rest of the game.

    • @RevenTon73
      @RevenTon73 Před 3 lety +1

      @@johnsimmons5951 yes , and it could be that u play with more less that that. for every red card ... so its possible that u have 11 vs 9 player....

    • @andyc6542
      @andyc6542 Před 3 lety

      Incorrect - a red, via two yellows, is a one match ban. A straight red is a three match ban.

  • @coastercreations6126
    @coastercreations6126 Před 3 lety +2

    A red card means the player will not be able to play in the rest of the gae or for a number of games after that game. When the ball goes off to the side, a player from the team that didn't touch it last, throws it back in with an over-head throw from the position that the ball went out. If it goes off the pitch on the line that the goal is on, and the defending team touches it last, then the attacking team gets to have one player kick it in from the corner flag. If the attacking team hits it out last, before it goes out on that line, the goalkeeper can kick it in the smallest box in the penalty box without an attcking player being near them (attackers have to be outside the bigger box when a goal kick takes place). Also a goalkeerper cannot handle the ball outside of the big box, if they do, they are given a red card. In the knockout format, that you see in tournaments like the euros, world cup etc, 30 minutes are added after the 90 minutes, and if a winner isn't clear after that, it goes to a penalty shootout.

    • @coastercreations6126
      @coastercreations6126 Před 3 lety +1

      Also, in a league format, a win counts as 3 points, a draw counts as 1 point no extra time/penalty shootouts in a league format) and a loss is no points.

  • @Chris_GY1
    @Chris_GY1 Před 3 lety +55

    When you are sent off you will receive a ban from playing some many of the next matches. American football isn’t football it’s rugby. It’s five substitutions now. The clock keeps ticking when the ball goes off the pitch for a throw in or corner kick.

    • @benjaminmorgan8282
      @benjaminmorgan8282 Před 3 lety +2

      It depends on the competition the only reason it's 5 at the moment is because the games are crammed so close together

    • @davisburchett9678
      @davisburchett9678 Před 3 lety +1

      American football is not rugby it is American football.

  • @rachelchamberlain6827
    @rachelchamberlain6827 Před 3 lety +11

    Nice to see your wife in the video. 😃👍

  • @castleladpaza76
    @castleladpaza76 Před 3 lety +20

    Yeah it's easier to learn the rules by watching a game that trying to explain it.

    • @callumlucas4444
      @callumlucas4444 Před 3 lety +1

      No you just need to listen this is a decent starter video to watch

    • @marcusgirling
      @marcusgirling Před 3 lety +1

      @@callumlucas4444 I love these too I really do just they talk over him and miss vital information and get confused

  • @richclasper8272
    @richclasper8272 Před 3 lety +6

    German word for football is Fussball - very close to the English word. I am studying German at evening classes, but have mixed emotions today when England are playing Germany in the last 16 of the Euros! Australians call Football “soccer” as well, as they have their own version of Australian rules football, which is more like Rugby League in the U.K.

  • @kairee1
    @kairee1 Před 3 lety +29

    Incoming Euro 2020 final would be a great opportunity for you to watch a football/soccer match for the first time :)

    • @johnavery3941
      @johnavery3941 Před 3 lety

      anni I would not get too excited just yet but you did play well from Scotland

    • @carlybishop6160
      @carlybishop6160 Před 3 lety

      Switzerland v France! That is the match to watch!

    • @nickreinders6347
      @nickreinders6347 Před 3 lety +1

      @@carlybishop6160 I liked this one so far, I never expected Switzerland to win against France

    • @darkwolf1202
      @darkwolf1202 Před 3 lety

      @@carlybishop6160 Croacia- Spain

    • @carlybishop6160
      @carlybishop6160 Před 3 lety

      @@darkwolf1202 Croatia - Spain was good but I preferred Switzerland - France. The World Champions getting knocked out by a fairly small team on penalties after being 3-1 up at 80 mins! Enough said.

  • @fefid2218
    @fefid2218 Před 3 lety +7

    when a player gets a red card he/she is sent off for the rest of the match and no one can replace them. So you go down to 10 men etc

  • @matevzahacic9641
    @matevzahacic9641 Před rokem +1

    i like how she reffered to NFL football as "normal football" .. nuts!

  • @wobaguk
    @wobaguk Před 3 lety +7

    There are several knock out competitions in football, here there would be extra time, then penalities to resolve a tie. If it was a league game, where the aim is just to be the best overall team at the end of the season, ties/draws are left as is, with both teams getting some credit.

  • @eddiegaltek
    @eddiegaltek Před 3 lety

    There are three things you need to know about Off-Side.
    1. You can not be Off-Side from a Throw-in; that's were when the ball goes out at the sides the player who touches it last concedes the Throw-in to the other team.
    2. You can be beyond the last defender if you are behind the ball; that is the ball is nearer your opponents end of field than you are.
    3. If you are Off-Side when the ball is passed to you but a member of the opposition touches it, however slightly, you are then On-Side.

  • @Nekotaku_TV
    @Nekotaku_TV Před 3 lety +2

    "Normal football, NFL football".
    It's not always a draw, sometimes there has to be a winner and it goes to penalty kicks.

  • @theredheadproject
    @theredheadproject Před 3 lety +1

    The offside rule wasn't described very well here (there's still a lot of football fans that don't actually know it properly). It's not the last defender, it's the last 2 opposition players, however 1 of these players is almost always the goalkeeper, so a lot of people forget or don't realise this. And it doesn't have to be defenders, it can be any opposition players. So, when the ball is played forward by a player on your team, there has to be 2 opposition players between yourself and the goal for you to be onside.
    Pretty sure I've got that right...but feel free to correct me anyone else!

  • @KernowWarrior
    @KernowWarrior Před 3 lety +3

    The off side rule is simple really, There has to be an opposition player between you and the goal when the ball is passed to you.

    • @Tr1k1e
      @Tr1k1e Před 3 lety

      That's not the only rule. You can be ahead of every opposition player so long as you are behind the ball.

    • @MixuLauronen
      @MixuLauronen Před 3 lety

      Actually, two players. The goalkeeper and the last defender. "any part of the head, body or feet is nearer to the opponents’ goal line than both the ball and the second-last opponent".

  • @ferguskinley860
    @ferguskinley860 Před 3 lety +20

    Good luck England vs Germany

  • @Ernoskij
    @Ernoskij Před 3 lety

    You asked if the clock stops for throw ins and corner kicks, it does not, the players go out and take it, for corner kicks they usually spend a little time setting up in the goal area before the kick, but they don't have to, they can go out and kick the ball pretty much straight away.
    The clock keeps ticking, and if they spend too long not actually doing it, the ref might give the ball to the other team for wasting time, though this rarely happens.
    The clock doesn't stop for anything, even if there are medic on the pitch attending an injured player the clock keeps ticking, and the ref will add some extra time, he adds extra time at the end of each half for the time the game has been stopped (corners, throw-ins and goal kicks will not add extra time, free kicks and penalties will along with other situation the ref deems should add time) It's 100% up to the ref exactly how much time is added at the end of each half.
    As for the question if the player is send off for good on a red card, yes, whenever a player leaves the pitch they can not come back, so red cards and substitutions alike, once the player leaves he can not join in again

  • @carlhartwell7978
    @carlhartwell7978 Před 3 lety

    There are no exceptions, the clock NEVER stops. And with the exception of bad injuries (which are not particularly common), the play will continue within 10-20 seconds. Corners and free kicks close to the goal might take 30 seconds, but throw-ins, free kicks and goal kicks are often taken within 10-20 seconds or so after the ball goes out or the foul is committed.
    So basically, very rarely does play stop for much more than 30 seconds. This accounts for why (sometimes) when a player goes down, they take a few seconds to get back up again, they're often just taking a break! The game can often be extremely fast paced and the average football player can run the equivalent of 7 miles per game (because there are only 5 substitutions most players play the full match of 90 plus minutes). NFL players run 1.25 miles per game. Yes I said 5 substitutions, the rules changed for covid.
    The amount of running about might also account for the 'injuries', all the running and quick turning makes injuries a big concern, this is a players livelihood of course, so if they feel a twinge, they understandably want to drop and make sure they're not injured when 'playing on' might cause it to become far worse.
    Incidentally, this might be the same for basketball, they run 2 miles per game, but there's an extreme amount of quick turns and strain on joints so that might make players wary as well.

  • @Beggar42
    @Beggar42 Před 2 lety

    8:52 ... that's explained earlier in the video. The clock doesn't stop. Any time spent getting the ball into play is added on to the end of the half. Since the referee can't be expected to accurately keep track of how much time is spent in this way, it's the job of the fourth official to determine the amount of stoppage time.
    Towards the end of the half, he holds up a sign with the number of additional minutes to still be played.
    This number will almost always be an underestimation. To take advantage of this, players will sometimes deliberately take a very long time to get the ball back into play. This is called time wasting and it is a foul you can get a yellow card for. Though most referees are reluctant to give cards for timewasting.
    As for the earlier question about red cards ... the players who gets a red card is sent off and can not be replaced, so for the rest of the game, his team is down one man.
    Even if the red card is give in the first minute ... then your team is going to have to play 89 minutes with 10 vs 11.
    If additional players get sent off, they too can't be replaced.
    I've known games that end 8 vs 11 or 8 vs 9 ... though this is very rare.
    In addition to missing out on part of THIS game, red cards usually give you a suspension for the next game(s).
    For a light foul, you might get just one additional game of suspension ... for an egregious foul, this can go up to 3 ... 4 ... 5 ... or even more games.

  • @daviddavies3637
    @daviddavies3637 Před 3 lety +5

    That diving around as if you've been hit by a sniper? Yeah, it's very real. I was jokingly doing it in the garden the other day to show my granddaughter how to do it! There should be videos of this kind of crap on CZcams. One of the most infamous is Rivaldo getting a player sent off by clutching his face and writhing on the floor when the other player kicked the ball angrily at him. It hit him in the chest. It's not as big a problem now because we have Video Assistant Referees (VAR) who can replay incidents of cheating like that and let the ref know he's been conned.

  • @mikaihlberg2269
    @mikaihlberg2269 Před 3 lety

    The offside rule wasn't explained fully. When the passing player touches the ball, the receiving player has to be lower up the field than the ball, OR there has to be 2 players of the defending team closer to the defending goal than the attacking player receiving the pass. Usually it is the goalkeeper and one outfield player from the defending team, but if the goalie is higher up the field than the attacking player receiving the pass, there has to be 2 outfield players from the defending team below him.
    Furthermore, you can never be "offside" if you receive the ball directly from a throw-in, corner kick or a goal kick, or if you are in your own half of the field at the time of the pass. It is also not an offside if the ball was deliberately played downfield by the defending team (for example the last defender passing back to his goalie), and a player from the attacking team intercepts the pass.

  • @LadyQAB
    @LadyQAB Před 3 lety +1

    I think watching a match with a commentator will help. They know the game, they know the rules, and there is a lot of replay so you can get a better understanding.

  • @ahorsewithnoname643
    @ahorsewithnoname643 Před 3 lety

    A goal kick is when the attacking team is last to touch the ball before it goes out over the opponents goal line, the line that the opponents goal is on. Any member of the defending team can take the goalkick.

  • @alexandria6054
    @alexandria6054 Před 3 lety

    ok so to address your questions:
    handball: any part of the arm including elbow and hands. when a handball is "accidental" aka has been hit into a players arm it is determined by officials whether or not their arms are in a "natural position". this means hands need be at their sides not flailing about in the air, if they are flailing it's a handball - and the opposing team is rewarded with a penalty usually. there's been a lot of discussion over this and whether or not shoulders count or if it's from the end of a short sleeve downwards that counts.
    red cards: the player is sent off for the duration of the match. they can not be substituted for and that team will play with one less player for the whole game - 2 reds would mean 2 less players and so on. depending on how you receive your red card changes things. two yellows becoming a red means 1 match suspension, whereas, a straight red means a minimum of 3 matches to be missed.
    sidelines: time doesn't stop when the ball goes out of play. a team can throw in or goal kick as quickly or slowly as they want. however, they can't be too slow as the ref will warn them for time-wasting and potentially give them a yellow.
    substitution: the "coach" or what we would call manager decides with their coaching team the substitutions. only 3 can be made meaning 8 of the players who start will play the whole game. substitutions can be made generally to have a fresh pair of legs or because someone has come off due to injury. in the premier league, there's now a "green card" this was due to a very nasty head clash that left one player in hospital and another very clearly concussed but they continued to play. the green card is an extra substitution that can only be used if a player becomes concussed in a game, each team has two.
    stereotypes: there is some truth to it. it's basically because they're trying to draw a foul. if they go down the referee is inclined to give a foul to the other team such as a yellow card and will give the team that has been fouled a free-kick so they regain possession of the ball. it can also be the difference between a yellow and red towards the opposing team - obviously, you would want a red against them as it's one less player and penalties which are regarded as an easier way to score than through play. however, unlike american football shin pads are the only protection they get from studded boots and contact from other body parts. getting a stud to the leg, knee in the leg or head or a clashing of heads does hurt a lot. also near the end of the game players are more likely to get injured because they are exhausted after playing for 90 minutes so hamstring cramps, pulls and injuries are common.

  • @smilieevie6998
    @smilieevie6998 Před 3 lety

    League games are 90 mins plus stoppage times but some cup and football competitions, where a clear win is required, 30 mins are added as ‘extra time’ made up of 2 x 15 minute sessions. If the teams are still drawn at the end of the 30 mins then the teams kick a set number of penalties. The team who score the most goals wins. If there is still a draw after 30 extra minutes and the penalty shoot out then they continue with the penalties until one team goes one goal up. Simples. I think that’s how it works …

  • @Cobalt-Jester
    @Cobalt-Jester Před 3 lety

    Fun fact. The British guy who invented it called it Soccer. Also most of your question that you asked were answered. It was stated that the clock never stops but then 20 seconds later you asked if the clock stops when it goes out of bounds... If you were watching this on your own without interruptions you'd take it in.

  • @misterflibble9799
    @misterflibble9799 Před 3 lety

    Ball going "out-of-bounds":
    1. If it crosses the lines at the side of the pitch first, then the team that didn't touch the ball last gets a throw-in (stand at the edge of the pitch where the ball left and throw the ball in over their heads.
    2. If it crosses the line at the end of the pitch, then:
    a) If the last team that touched it was the team whose goal is at that end (i.e. the defending team), then the other (attacking) team get a corner kick (place the ball in a little quarter-circle in the corner of the pitch, and kick it in from there).
    b) If the last team that touched it was the other (attacking) team, then it's a goal kick (the goalie is allowed to do a drop-kick from within their box). This will obviously clear the ball a long way down the pitch.
    The clock is generally not stopped (except for extreme circumstances if there is a problem retrieving the ball).

  • @peterbrown1012
    @peterbrown1012 Před 3 lety +1

    Normally when a game ends in a draw that's the score, but if it's a competition that needs a winner they play extra time, if it's still a draw they take shots at the goal, one player against the goalie, if it's still a draw then it's sudden death.

  • @TheNekoz
    @TheNekoz Před 2 lety

    Offside rule is bad explained... That line is drawn on the 2nd last defender. Since goalie count as a defender and he usually stays on the goal line, the rule is often simplified that way but this can bring controversies. For example in South Africa - Mexico during 2010 World Cup, south african keeper tried to punch the ball after a corner but he missed, the attacker who got the ball was between him and the last defender (who was on the goal line) and scored. Referee rightfully disallowed it but mexican team and a lot of football fans around the world couldn't understand why.

  • @oldman1734
    @oldman1734 Před 2 lety

    The original name of the game -first regularised in England - was Soccer. Soccer, soccer, soccer.
    For reasons I don’t understand people want to deny that fact. When I was young (in England) it was often referred to a soccer. That has slowly died out but it was called soccer in England. The word comes from the word “association” when the various forms of the game were combined into one game we know now.

  • @86RSJag
    @86RSJag Před 3 lety +9

    Like with most sports. You need an affiliation to a specific team to really get it. Once you know the players, the teams history. The rivalries and the importance of a particular match then it really clicks.

  • @markjones127
    @markjones127 Před 2 lety +1

    A red card gets you sent off for the whole game, and usually gets you a 1 match ban too, but if the offence is really serious the ban can be longer, Luis Suarez got banned for 4 months after biting another player and was fined £65,680 too, another time he was also banned for 8 matches and given a £40,000 fine for racially abusing an opponent.

  • @ilet3049
    @ilet3049 Před 3 lety +1

    Whenever I've been asked to explain offside, I turn to hockey blue line which most americans are familiar with. Instead of a static line, football has a dynamic line determined by the deepest defending player. You might notice the line ref always following the deepest player. Funny things can happen though. Imagine a defender laying on the ground holding his knee next to his goal post. Some might say he's not able to play and the offside line shifts to the next deepest defender, but more often than not the defender is just slow to get up and the line stays at the goal post essentially.

    • @drazenbicanic3590
      @drazenbicanic3590 Před rokem

      Between the attacker and the goal line (closer to the goal line), at the time of the pass, there must be at least two defenders (usually one is the goalkeeper, and one defander)
      Exceptions:
      - if the ball is passed by hand from the out.
      - if the ball is passed backwards
      - if the player is in his own half of the field.
      If a player does not play on the ball, it is usually not judged. When the opponent plays the ball, the player is no longer offside and can be activated.

  • @Vollification
    @Vollification Před 3 lety +6

    1. There is no such thing as "European Football"! There is football that EVERYONE in the world plays, and there is whatever it is you're doing and call "football" (despite the fact that it looks like some kind of rugby and almost never involves your feet) that almost no one plays!
    2. You are not supposed to actually care about the rules. You are supposed to get blind drunk, rage at the opponents and burn something. The rest is just window dressing.
    (This is all just satire, great video) :)

  • @Bob10009
    @Bob10009 Před 3 lety

    When the ball goes out for a throw in, goal kick or corner kick, the referee stops play but not the clock. The ref blows his whistle to allow the ball to be brought back into play when he and everyone else is ready. Likewise for a free kick (after a foul, handball etc) the ref ensures the opposing team are the correct distance away and blows his whistle to allow the kick to proceed.

  • @zoolook666
    @zoolook666 Před 2 lety

    Offsite makes sense: It prevents that the attacking team "hides" a person behind the defence and kicks ball into him. The game would be quite lame if that happens all the time.
    Instead, the player can pass the last defender just at the time the kicker hits the ball - it all about clever timing.

  • @HorseWithNoUsername
    @HorseWithNoUsername Před 3 lety

    Also called soccer by the general public in Australia, as there are two other bigger football codes (Australian football and rugby league).

  • @jounihiltunen3729
    @jounihiltunen3729 Před 3 lety +5

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

  • @octavianpopescu4776
    @octavianpopescu4776 Před rokem

    I see some comments related to the fact that American football isn't named properly since players carry the ball. It seems the explanation for the naming is that football wasn't supposed to be named like that because it's played WITH the foot, but because it's played ON foot (as opposed to others sports played on horseback). So, in this sense, it's ok to call, both association and American football like that.

  • @rashomon351
    @rashomon351 Před 3 lety

    Usually. In league matches, you'll either have a winner or a draw (tie). The leage champion is the team with the most point at the end of the season. In tournaments , there will usually be a "group phase" which is handled like league games. The winner of a group is the one with the highest number of points. the best teams of every group will enter the "knock out" phase. In the "knock out" phase, only the winning team of any match will continue to the next round. So there cannot be draws, you'll definitely need a winner! Therefore if the regular playing time (90min) ends with a draw, the match has to go into a 30min overtime, which is just two halves of 15min. If there's a winner after that time, the match ends. the winner continues to the next round and the looser gets kicked out of the tournament. If after overtime there's still a draw, the match will be decided by a penalty shoot-out. Every team gets at least five penalty shots. If there still no winner after that, the penalty shoot-out will continue until one team wins.

  • @daviddavies3637
    @daviddavies3637 Před 3 lety

    A few things the video didn't mention. If the ball goes out of play at the sides of the pitch, it's a throw-in but there are even rules about how a throw-in should be taken. And goalies can't pick up deliberate back passes from his own player unless it's been chested or headed back to him. This is one of the newer rules that was introduced about 30 years ago to stop teams wasting time, especially if they were winning, by constantly passing the ball back to the keeper.
    Rules have changed quite a lot since I was a kid. Back then, only one substitute was available. There was a time when there were no substitutes, so if one of your players got injured, tough luck to you. Tackles that are red card offences today would have warranted no more than a stern word from the referee back then. The rules on what constituted fair tackles have changed to protect players from serious injury, as you get a few leg breaks or facial injuries per year in the professional game.

  • @dominique8233
    @dominique8233 Před 3 lety +4

    Ethan does 'my wife' have a name ?

  • @steevenfrost
    @steevenfrost Před 3 lety

    The field of play we call "The pitch". It can vary in length and width from 1000-130 yards long and can't be less than 50 yards in width but can be up to 100 yards wide. Everton Football Club is 112 x 78 yards. Liverpool F.C about the same
    The penalty area(the box in front of the goal is 18 yards either side of the goal and 18 yards in front of the goal.
    There is a box six yards from the goal line that's where the goalkeeper has to take his goal kicks fro m to restart play if the ball goes over and behind the goal line either side of the goal posts of course.
    If a ball crosses the lines either side of the pitch, then the ball is held in the hands and thrown from above the head and forwards into the field of play by the team which didn't kick the ball out.
    There are 11 players for each team that are in the starting line up and 3 substitutes which can be used tactically to replace a [player or if a player is injured. If the goalkeeper gets injured or is sent off the team puts an outfield player in goal. They have to play with ten men, as you can't replace a player who is sent off. The sent off player stays off for the rest of the game/match.
    45 minutes are played for each half and the referee keeps check of any stoppages in play and adds on the time at the end of each half.
    As the commentary explained the team which scores the most goals wins the 3 points, also it matter how many goals a team scores ,but only matters come the end of the season when all the fixtures have been played. If there are two teams or more ,which have the same points at the top of the league,then goal difference is used to determine the winner of the league,if still tied then the highest scorers take the title.
    Manchester City won the Premier league in 2011/2012 on goal difference scoring the winning goal in stoppage time.

  • @carlov67
    @carlov67 Před 2 lety

    when a player is expelled, not only is his expulsion not temporary at all but it has effect for the whole game but the expulsion also has consequences for the following games: The player will receive from the sports judge from one to more games of disqualification. Not only that: if a player receives a total of two yellow cards in the course of two games, even if not consecutive, he enters a "warning". If he gets a yellow card again in a later match he is disqualified. He will not play the next game.

  • @kellydg471
    @kellydg471 Před 2 lety +1

    It is called Soccer in the US, Canada and Australia

  • @mxlexrd
    @mxlexrd Před 3 lety

    When the ball goes out of play, the clock doesn't stop, and play usually restarts within 10-30 seconds. Usually it's obvious how play will be restarted, the referee only has to get involved if there's some doubt over who touched the ball last or if the ball actually left the playing area.
    Time isn't generally added on for such stoppages unless it takes excessively long. Time is mostly added on for unexpected things like injuries.
    Regarding what counts as crossing the line, if any part of the ball is above any part of the line, it's considered to be within the area that the line specifies.

  • @jonjohnson2844
    @jonjohnson2844 Před 3 lety +2

    This hurt my head you guys trying to understand it, but to be fair I'd be the same with NFL having more questions than answers

  • @brian9731
    @brian9731 Před 3 lety

    In Rugby a "try" is the equivalent of a touchdown BUT it is an actual touch down - the ball must be placed down on the ground (not just thrown or kicked) beyond the end line.

  • @rexex345
    @rexex345 Před 3 lety +1

    So with out of play on the lines, as stated in the video the clock never stops, and the ball is just picked up by a member of the opposite team to who last touched it and throws it back into play

  • @Marioejoseph
    @Marioejoseph Před 3 lety +3

    If it's 2 yellow card then you get a Red card, with one match Ban.
    If you get a straight red then it's a 3 match ban.

  • @bluesz1bluesz17
    @bluesz1bluesz17 Před 3 lety

    When slide tackling your tackling foot has to make contact with the ball, you can make contact with other parts of your body, such as leaning in with your shoulder or your trailing leg catching them in the slide tackle, but if the contact obstructs the attacker from retrieving the loose ball i.e. by knocking them down its a foul which is why so many player's used to fake being fouled by diving. A red card mean's your sent off for the remainder of the match without your team being able to replace him. You will also be suspended for the next two matches. League games are the only games that end in a draw, cup knockout matches are extra time and penalties. The manager/coach decides who's subbed. When it goes off to the side its a throw to the team that didn't kick it off. If it goes off behind the goal line its a corner if the defending team kicked it out but a goal kick if the attacking team knocked it out. And England don't suck we just knocked out Germany the 2nd best team in the history of football

  • @brunobastos5533
    @brunobastos5533 Před 3 lety

    goal kick can be done by any player but generally is the goalie, is the ball leave the laterals is put in game no reset, the game only goes to the middle if there is a goal

  • @City-iD
    @City-iD Před 3 lety

    The difference in tackling is that in “American Football”(as the whole world calls it besides US) you attacking the player, where in “Football” you attack the ball.

  • @albinjohnsson2511
    @albinjohnsson2511 Před 2 lety

    I don't know why so many Americans believe football is a non-contact sport. Yes, you can tackle! Like real tackles, not just "taking the ball". You're not allowed to grab hold of someone or to use elbows or hips, and you may only tackle the ball holder, but you're very much allowed to tackle. It's a natural part of the sport.

  • @mr.cgaming8789
    @mr.cgaming8789 Před 2 lety

    In football there is extra time if there is a draw and it isn't a league so one team has to go out. like a tournament. if its a league if you win you get 3 points. draw is 1 and lose is 0. Also if the ball goes out the players kick it back in play. they can do it quickly or slowly. The time doesnt stop but is added in extra time

  • @hayleyalexander7179
    @hayleyalexander7179 Před 3 lety

    okey a couple of things here. 1) The name of the sport it is Football, do not call it Soccer rest of the world really hate it but now that in the US and Canada it is call that. 2) The clock don´t stop during the game, that way the referee gieve some extra minutes after the 45 minutes and even then the referee can end the game after the 45 min finish it. So the clock do not stop even if a player it´s being attendent by the doctors, the usually are take off the fields so the match continue. If the ball go outside the clock don´t stop, basically the clock only stop during the half time. 3) Handball: If you touch the ball from the forarm to your fingers and look intensional then the referee can call a Handball, it depends of how intentional and if you are in the box of your the last player before the goalkeeper in the moment that your trying to get a goal for your team. 4) In order to score the ball have to pass more that half of the line inside the goal line, the are a lot of cameras and replays and now the V.A.R. (Video Assistant Referee) also konw as another way to ruin the game. 5) Tackle, in these football "to tackle" it to try to get the ball off the play- players of the other team, that what the defender and mid-filders do, mustly them but anyone including the Goalkeeper can do it. When you tackle you can´t punch, kick o do other things to the person that have the ball if you do, depends of the referee, you can get call out for foul and if you seem to have intension to hurt him/her you can get a Yellow card o Red Card if you seem to seriously want to hurt that player. 6) If you are take out of the game you can go back, either because you where replase o you get a RED CARD. If you get a Red Card you can get really bad consecuence for it, losing games, pay a fee being take out is no so bad. Okey i stop now but i would glaadly keep the answer doubts.

  • @dhiraralsaadi8138
    @dhiraralsaadi8138 Před 2 lety

    As a NFL fan you would say that the tackles in soccer are not that tough or harmless, but on the contrary, although NFL tackles are done with the full body with grabbing and bunch of throwing and pulling, but at the end it’s not that harmful because players are wearing safety. In soccer, player only wear safety on their shin “shin pads” and while getting tackled you could easily get a broken bone or bruises. That’s why you see players often faking and diving so that they could rest and also cheat the referee by giving him an idea that the player who tackled him needs to be warned or sent off.

  • @markjones127
    @markjones127 Před 2 lety

    I'm not even English but have to admit they're one of the top teams in the world, they just never perform to their full capability in big competitions, so they're massive underachievers, but on paper, they're one of the top teams. You should start following Wrexham Football Club as they were bought by Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney last year, they're quite low down in tier 5 of the league system but they have high hopes of creeping up the leagues over coming seasons, so it would be the perfect team for anyone new to the sport to follow, especially foe Americans, there's an excellent tv series following their progress too.

  • @watfordjc
    @watfordjc Před 3 lety

    The Laws of the Game. Available in handbook form since 1863. The original rulemakers... on CZcams for 3 1/2 years and only have an unlisted video. The current rulemakers... not on CZcams, but they have a PDF (powerpoint-esque) presentation on their Web site and the rules are also available in... a succinct 2,725 Tweets.

  • @thoso1973
    @thoso1973 Před 3 lety

    - The team that loses a player due to a red card, plays with one less player for the rest of the match. The whole team and its winning chances are penalized.
    - The offside rule exists to promote smart and inventive offensive play, contrary to just parking players constantly in the opposing teams box. Don't worry if you don't quite 'get' the rule. :)
    - A match can end in a tie, unless it's a knock out stage match or the final match of the tournament. Then they play for an additional 2*15 minutes and if it's still a tie, a penalty kick competition (starting with 5 kicks by different players for each team) will decide who ultimately wins the match.
    There are no commercial breaks interrupting each half of 45 minutes initial playtime, hence the game doesn't lose momentum constantly as it happens in NFL. Considering that football is the most commercial and financially succesful sport in the World, it's deeply bizarre that North America hasn't been able to launch its own top tier national league.

  • @annaf617
    @annaf617 Před 3 lety +3

    It’s not even European football it’s just football world wide except North America ....

    • @handsolo1209
      @handsolo1209 Před 3 lety

      If you are in America then it is Soccer or European football because they have their own version of football. If you are in Australia you will call Rugby League or Aussie Rules football and soccer will still be soccer. They all derive from the same game (or village vs village violence) and all have as much right as each other to call themselves football because they are all different evolutions of the same original game (Atherstone Ball Game is the last remaining version of the original game).

  • @michaelgrabner8977
    @michaelgrabner8977 Před 3 lety

    Red Card = player is sent off the pitch totally for the rest of the game..he even isn´t allowed to stay at the sideline to watch the rest of the game because he has to wait in the player´s cabin/dressing room till the game is finished..and his team has now to play with one player less for the rest of the game = huge disadvantage/punishment of course.
    During the League draws/ties are part of the game because the league is about "collecting points" and for a draw both teams get 1 point... for a win the team gets 3 points and the loosing team gets none..BUT... there are also Tournaments where you have Knock out rounds like World Cup or Europa Cup for instance..at those Knock out rounds you play 90 minutes and when the result is a draw/tie then you will play additionally 30 minutes parted into 2 times 15 minutes which is called "Overtime" (the whole game is then 120 minutes) and after that if the result is still a draw/tie then you have a final penalty shoot out where 5 players of each team has to shoot from the penalty spot...If then it is still a draw/tie then every team has to send 1 next player after another till some of those don´t score.
    the clock - as already mentioned in the video - does not stop during a halftime..Throw ins, Freekicks, Corner Kicks etc has to be done without stall for time... the scenario is that the referee is blowing the whistle to stop the game then he makes his decision who owns the ball and then he blows the whistle again to continue the game and after that whistle blow the player has to play basically immediately and if then a player is taking too much time to do the Throw in, Free Kick what ever he will be punished with a yellow card for "letting run down the clock/time play" which is a misdemeanor considered as "Bad Sportsmanship" and every kind of "Bad Sportmanship" (= hard fouls or fouls where you don´t had any chance to get on the ball in the first place, time play, insulting, etc) is punished with a yellow card or if it was very bad with a red card...and receiving 2 yellow cards during a game is equal to a red card and the player has to leave the pitch heading to the player´s cabin as well.

  • @Simon6020
    @Simon6020 Před 3 lety +7

    You should go to watch a game and make it a Vlog

    • @f.s.9833
      @f.s.9833 Před 3 lety +1

      You should watch the France against Switzerland from yesterday! (Euro 2020) it was pretty intense

    • @Simon6020
      @Simon6020 Před 3 lety +1

      @@f.s.9833 that was amazing!

    • @f.s.9833
      @f.s.9833 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Simon6020 I haven't watched it unfortunately. But I've seen the highlights. Reminded me of Portugal vs England in 2004

  • @Zandain
    @Zandain Před 3 lety +1

    Hello Ethan & wife 😊
    Canadians do say soccer, but hey, they're Commonwealth! 😉
    This is soccer where tackling (in NFL terms)is not allowed! 🤣
    but ok in fx. rugby 🏉!!
    No arms allowed, incl. elbows or hands
    Red card, player is out for the remainder of the game => team plays with 1 player less, than the other team
    In normal soccer games, there is NO overtime...only at Championships where a winner has to be found.
    fx. if no winner has been found after regular time of 2 x 45mins
    - overtime is 2 x 15mins, if there hasn't been any scoring - the game goes to penalty
    Each teams picks 5 playing players (cannot use players off the field) to kick penalty
    Usually either a player will miss or the goalie will take it, but if not, each team picks a consecutive player until one team after the same amount of penalties, wins by one!
    If the ball goes outside the field lines, the last player to touch it, passes the ball to a throw-in by the opposite team...
    and the clock keeps running.
    The referee stops the clock, on injury or smaller discussions with players...
    As a proud Dane, I am psyched that we have done so well, despite our tragic start in the 2021!!
    - so I can be largess and hope that it goes well for England, against Germany tonight.. 👋
    Hello from Denmark 🌸🌱

  • @chrislawley6801
    @chrislawley6801 Před 3 lety +1

    Always interesting to see CZcamsrs with their wife to see how different you react together : ) Very rude of you to not introduce your lovely wife not saying her name

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee8831 Před 3 lety

    Hello Ethan and Mrs American.
    Four things to see are:-
    1 Quotes from the legendary Liverpool manager Bill Shankly.
    2 Neil Innes video of song One Thing on Your Mind.
    3 Ripping Yarns episode Golden Gordon, but watch Eric Outhwaite first if you have time.
    4 The film The Damned United.
    I listed these in time needed least to most, but all will help understand both football and UK.
    I was a bit late today seeing this as I was watching match and a live stream from a channel that gained lots of subscribers recently from football.
    Note there are two types of rugby if you look at that. My favorite is Rugby League which is like NFL without pads, helmets and the forward pass.

  • @25dimensionsfrancis42
    @25dimensionsfrancis42 Před 3 lety +1

    I can remember a different timein football. I can remember when players were not paid and the ball was made of leather and inflated with a rubber bladder which was tied with laces. When the ball got wet it became very heavy and could leave the mark of the laces on ones head if one headed the ball on the lace up. The game could be played in mud or snow and the goal keeper could be shoulder charged often into his own net ,there was no play acting or attempt to get the opposing player sent off and not as fast or skilled as today almost by definition. The point being that football is a changing game [for better and worse] .

  • @alancook
    @alancook Před 3 lety +4

    To answer many of your questions check out 'Understanding Soccer in Europe in 4 Simple Steps - A guide for Americans' by Pen and Paper.

  • @rachjade8785
    @rachjade8785 Před 3 lety +1

    England is actually doing really well in the Euros right now. We are playing in the quarter-final on Saturday and we beat Germany last night for the first time in 55 years.
    I'd love to see you react to rugby union or rugby league (I mainly follow rugby union but it would be interesting to watch you react to both as that's more similar to NFL).

  • @eddiegaltek
    @eddiegaltek Před 3 lety

    The last (football) World Cup had a bigger TV audience than the last Olympics.

  • @dhiraralsaadi8138
    @dhiraralsaadi8138 Před 2 lety

    If the ball went across any side line of the pitch at any time during the game it is out of bounce and the play will go the team who didn’t touch last.

  • @SelwynClydeAlojipan
    @SelwynClydeAlojipan Před 3 lety

    Canada, USA, and Australia call Association Football as soccer because they each have other forms of football. It's to avoid confusing themselves by calling the different games the same name.

  • @jwjwjkw
    @jwjwjkw Před 3 lety

    FAKING INJURIES:
    Yes a lot a players fake them or exaggerate them, they do this to trick the ref to award the the ball as a free kick, they usually do this when they loose the ball, or are about to loose it fairly/legally, there are a million reasons to fake an foul (get ball, get penalty, MAKE TIME, piss off your opponent, psychological pressure, etc etc.) The whole point is mostly to take advantage of a situation not because they are "babies or weak" it depends on how good the ref is, if he calls it or not. If you get caught faking an injury you get a yellow card.

  • @ffotograffydd
    @ffotograffydd Před 3 lety +11

    “Go England... but I know they suck!”
    Your wife nailed it, we need to see more of her!

    • @Hi_Doctor_Nick
      @Hi_Doctor_Nick Před 3 lety +1

      I nearly spat my coffee out when she said that 🤣

    • @michael_177
      @michael_177 Před 3 lety +5

      You made this comment 2 hours ago. And we just beat germany for the first time in an international tournament for the first time since 1966. ITS COMING HOME.

    • @James-yw1lj
      @James-yw1lj Před 3 lety

      @@michael_177 u fucking know it!!!!!!

    • @Asendra01
      @Asendra01 Před 3 lety

      @@michael_177 You'll somehow bottle it against Ukraine 😅

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd Před 3 lety

      @@michael_177 OMG mate, is your life so empty that one win causes you to trawl through the comments section tagging people? It’s just postponing the inevitable, England won’t win the tournament. But no doubt saddo England fans are now making up songs about how they beat Germany in the last 16. Pitiful! As was booing another country’s national anthem, England fans should watch a few rugby internationals and learn how to behave.

  • @donepearce
    @donepearce Před 2 lety

    Teams score nothing if they lose, 1 point for a draw and 3 points for a win. In one division there are twenty teams and they all play each other twice in the season - once at home and once away. So each team plays 38 games. The team with the most points at the end of the season is the champion.

  • @sdepountis
    @sdepountis Před 3 lety

    1. First of all: Normal football is NOT NFL Football...
    2. Red card is an ejection BUT you're not allowed to replace the ejected player. So the team that suffered the ejection plays with one less player on the pitch for the remainder of the match
    3. Every team gets 3 substitutions for the whole game. It was recently moved up to 5.
    4. The clock does not stop in any case. The referee will add minutes to the end of each half to compensate for stoppages in play such as injuries and substitutions. Ball going out of bounds does not count as a stoppage in play as the ball is put back in play as soon as possible.
    5. Tiebreakers exist in knockout matches in tournaments. After 90 min regulation there are 30 more minutes of play (2 15-minute halves) and if the score is still tied, we go to penalty shootout (similar to hockey but without the running start :)).
    6. Play resumes almost immediately after an out of bounds situation, with the team that was not responsible for putting the ball out of bounds.

  • @NicholasJH96
    @NicholasJH96 Před 3 lety +1

    It’s Association football is the proper name for it, but it’s shorten to football In European countries as they use British English. Some in Asia & some In African countries closest ones to Europe call it football like Turkey, Azeribijan, Russia,Georgia. USA,Canada,Mexico,Australia call it soccer. Whilst New Zealand use to call it Rugby Football, they now use soccer as well. Asian countries closer to USA Korea,Japan call it soccer as well. Australian Rules Football already has name football so they used soccer for it, same as USA but to a driffeance type of football American football, Canada calls American football Canadian Football but it’s same football you two call football. New Zealand do same with Australian rules football. Whilst Irish call Football British one football & they also had another type of football called Gaelic Football is officially name, is also called football in Ireland which is driffeance to British football.
    It’s not as popular in the USA for a few reasons, it was for some reason considered a woman sport in the USA, while rest of world use to consider it a men’s sport. That was in the olden days 1920,1930 & so on. To men game in the USA for football ⚽️ there is no promotion or relegation in USA & without promotion & relegation it’s not as exciting to watch. I’m unsure if women football ⚽️ team has relegation or not in the USA as league west bust a quite a few years back. You also operate & treat it like a business where the owners can do what he or she wants with it. It doesn’t work like that in U.K. & in European countries, in Germany supporters truest own a share of club so the owners can’t do what they want. Some English clubs are fan owned in lower non leagues leagues. My club has American owners when they first brought it they kept manger but then sacked him & replaced with an American manager called Bob Bradley who was completely terrible & then got sacked just after Boxing Day in the U.K. on 27th of December. Fans then players then staff them owners come last as owners can’t do just what they want to in U.K. & they can’t break FFP rules otherwise they get fined or point taken off them this also applies if they go in to administration points get taken off highest amount can be taken is -30 points which one did have. 1314 football ⚽️ actually got banned & so did few other sports. When kings Edward was in charge. Not sure if know this but official English for beach football doesn’t actually use the word football & they call it beach soccer as Fifa aren’t in control of it & they trying to regulate the rules of beach Football/soccer. People where I live will call it beach football as it copies some of rules of Association football and unlike game on the grass beach football was invented in 1950s in Brazil. Iv watch Australian,American,beach Football & association football & most popular is Association football then American football then Australian football then beach Football. I can’t judge Galic football as I have never seen a match of it. But in my view British football then Australian football them beach Football them American football my city in Wales in Swansea do have a American football team & Australian football team but are not professional players unlike football & rugby.

  • @captainpewpew1451
    @captainpewpew1451 Před 2 lety

    Don't want to be THAT guy but offside is a bit more complicated than that. That imaginary line is on the second last defender - that means the goalkeeper in this example counts as the first (which is what happens most of the times). Also, if the pass is made backwards (in the direction of your own half, so to speak) it's never offside.

  • @abbiecorcoran6006
    @abbiecorcoran6006 Před 3 lety

    people fake getting “injured” or fouled sometimes because as the video explained, depending on where the foul happened you can either win a free kick or penalty if the ref thinks it’s a valid foul so sometimes you get people that will try fake a foul

  • @Orionte9
    @Orionte9 Před 3 lety

    5:38 red car you are out the all game
    8:58 No, The only time the clock stop is in the half time. Except in free kicks you can just grab the ball and put it back on play.
    10:47 Because the clock does not stop, sometimes the wining team palyers exaggerate injuries, so some time get wasted. Or to break the opponent momentum

  • @martinbynion1589
    @martinbynion1589 Před rokem

    Did I miss the bit where the goalkeeper's role is explained?? It IS rather important!

  • @TCHC85
    @TCHC85 Před 3 lety

    I'm Canadian and I have never heard it being called football here. NFL (and to a lesser extent the CFL) is extremely popular here and that's the sport were talking about if we say football.

  • @morganetches3749
    @morganetches3749 Před 3 lety

    It's often called soccer in Australia as well (as 'football' often refers to Aussie Rules Football or even Rugby) and even sometimes in Wales people will call association football soccer, as the dominant code of football is Rugby Football. Note that they are ALL formed of football (gridiron football, association football, rugby football, Australian rules football)

  • @jarls5890
    @jarls5890 Před 3 lety

    Probably the last guy that should talk about football but - consider what the game would be if you did not have these rules:
    Offside - the game would quickly devolve into some very long shots from one side to the other. The offside rule prevents this.
    Corner and Throw in - if these rules did not exist the defending team could simply kick the ball out of the playing field every time they are attacked to "reset the game". However with this rule, if you do that, you automatically give (almost always) your opponent an advantage.

  • @timbo7762
    @timbo7762 Před 3 lety +1

    yes arms and hands. You should watch a full game???

  • @TheLastCrumb.
    @TheLastCrumb. Před 3 lety +1

    In footy the thing with the tackles are they are normally aimed at your legs, which is why do many snap lol

  • @Crowned-Qwesi
    @Crowned-Qwesi Před 3 lety

    1) The player sliding in with his foot to take the ball is a tackle.
    2) When the match ends in a tie, (depending on the tournament) an extra 15 minutes half's (ie 30 minutes) is played and if it is still a tie, 5 penalty kicks for each team is until a team has the most missed penalties.
    3) Yes, football has more parallels to basketball than the NFL.
    4) Yes, football players fake injuries get a cheap free kick or to get an opponent a yellow or red card. A scummy move but it works.
    5) Compared to all the major sports footballers run the most miles. A football player runs an average of 7 to 11 miles per game as compared to basketballs 3 to 5 miles.
    Sometimes they just flop to catch a break. 😁
    Awesome video though.

  • @judgejudyslover
    @judgejudyslover Před 3 lety

    If there has to be a winner due to a tournament, knock out stages they have extra time. Extra time is 30 mins. (Two 15 min halves) then if there is still not a winner then it goes to penalties which is 5 penalties. If it’s still drawn penalties keep going until there’s a winner.