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Well, in my opinion, there hasnt been a decent Official England Anthem since New Orders 'World In Motion'.As a side issue, is there anything Dizzee Rascal wont do to get a bit of publicity?
I have to agree about the enthusiasm bit, I honestly fell as though I couldnt g.a.f. about it.
I don't care at all about how England do, just abunch of spoilt brats who only care about being there as it increases their already inflated wage packets. I watched some of the game against Japan and could not believe how poor they played. Anything like that and they will fail to qualify for the knock outs. I do enjoy watching Brazil play, with their natural skills but I won't be watching a loads of the World Cup.
Barmby Rover wrote:QuoteI don't care at all about how England do, just abunch of spoilt brats who only care about being there as it increases their already inflated wage packets. I watched some of the game against Japan and could not believe how poor they played. Anything like that and they will fail to qualify for the knock outs. I do enjoy watching Brazil play, with their natural skills but I won't be watching a loads of the World Cup.Do you know what..I think I agree with you. In fact, one of the most enjoyable Tournaments I have watched were the last European Championships where we failed to qualify.
You miserable buggers! Its nice to know that we are being supported by all the people at home! (not).
None of you with the exception of Silent appear to have attended a World Cup then? Once bitten........Roll on next Friday, South Africa here I come.Lack of enthusiasm? Now I understand why the Keepmoat is like a graveyard. :dry: :dry:
Sweet Jesus, get a grip. Time to balance this thread.I'm looking forward to this, I will shout myself hoarse for England. I'm excited and nervous now. Come on England.In all honesty I do not read the papers so all the tacky hype and bandwagon jumpers, I have little knowledge or just dismiss it immediately.Get behind the boys. As individuals I hate most of the t**ts, but I'm supporting our country not them alone, it's about football and it's about England. Come on England!!!
Sweet Jesus, get a grip. Time to balance this thread.As individuals I hate most of the t**ts, but I'm supporting our country not them alone, it's about football and it's about England. Come on England!!!
I'm slavering with anticipation, but not excusivley because of watching England. It's because of what Simon Barnes, the greatest sports writer alive says here:http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/international/article674582.eceThe World Cup is a wonderful spectacle, giving us everything that sport has to offer. Sublime skill, the joy of victory, heartache in unfair defeat, and drama in spades. As Barnes says, at some time over the next month, we'll all be awe-struck at the performance of a player or a team that we've barely given a moment's thought to. Anyone who sees the World Cup through a purely English lens is like someone going to a top class restaurant and demanding to have egg and chips without looking at the menu.Every once in a while, England add to the drama and the spectacle, however briefly. The classic match against Germany in Italy 90, which had everything you could ever wish for in a football match. The brief, doomed fights against all odds against Argentina in 86 and 98. More often, we are shown up to be lumpen plodding artisans in a field of sumptuously skillful artists.I have been to a World Cup. I had a wonderful few days in Koln in 2006 and I will treasure the experience for the rest of my life. The feeling of riding on the train from Schipol to Koln, slowly seeing the train fill up with fans from all over the world - realising that I was partcipating in the greatest show on Earth. The spirit in Koln was wonderful. Brazilian Samba dancers. Ecuadorians dressed as multi-coloured Condors. Ghanaians in national dress. The Swiss, Swedish and the local Germans drinking the place dry and singing along all night in a way that was both macho AND unthreatening. Even the non-competing Paddies and Jocks had their fans there, joining in the party, dancing and drinking with the folk from other countries.And then the English. Watching the England-Ecuador match on the big screen round the corner from the wonderful Cathedral was a squirming embarrassment. The football was like a Nora Batty gatecrashing a party of supermodels. Grim, po faced, inelegant. The England supporters matched it. Grim, po faced, inelegant. Wandering round in lairy gangs, looking by turns menacing or embarrassed at being incapable of joining in the big party, not being able to relate to the other nations. I remember being stood next to a cropped-headed, bull necked group of Chelsea fans in the big screen square, eyes popping out of their heads as they screamed, \"Gaaan Jaaaayyy-Teeee. Fackin kill im!!!\" and the like at the events unfolding on the screen. Utterly, utterly, utterly against the entire spirit and feel of every other national group I saw there.You might, might just be able to justify that spirit if it went hand in hand with a dominatingly victorious team. You could justify it as the swaggering arrogance of perennial victors. But ally it to a pitiful, embarassingly inept team and it was a deeply saddening thing to see.As I say, I'd love for England to win the World Cup. For us to win it with panache and elegance, for our fans to be cosmopolitan, worldly sophisticates who could engage with the rest of the party rather than bunker down in their own laager/lager mentality. I suspect I'll be disappointed on both counts again this time round, but I'll have a wonderful time watching everybody else.
silent majority wrote 'chelsea fans at WC you must be joking'where did that one come from fella,i know iam out of the following of are national team today,but as fir yer chelsea fans slant i must beg to differok they might not be as promiment on the england away scenetoday as they was from 1980's right upto cfc winning the prem i guess due to club before country honour.when chelsea were shite they was a very strong hard core of cfcgoing all over with england as the norm was to fly independent for 3day jaunts for all and sundrywith chelsea fc now in CL every sesaon that as had knock on effect to the 3day jaunt on england travel to the travel in and back on day of game with 'flight options'
BST,Firstly an apology, I didn't read your post accurately and had assumed that you had cut and pasted said article rather than pointed the way and then offered an opinion. Furthermore I must confess confusing the Simon Barnes you mention with another, different, half witted journalist. I will put that down to a very late journey back from Glasgow and an early start this morning. Interestingly I have seen more flags of St George in the last few days in that football backwater than ever could be imagined.However I must take issue with you in your description of the typical England fan and the surroundings you experienced. I wouldn't argue with your experiences as you describe them, however a majority of England fans who follow the national team will agree with me when I say that your impressions are not reflective of what we see. Firstly, it wasn't me who stated that England fans made the World Cup in 2006, nor was it me who stated they made Euro 2004 in Portugal, it was both FIFA and Uefa respectively who did so, voting England fans the fans of the tournament on both occasions. I have travelled the World following England through qualifying tournaments and competitions for quite some time now and I've seen most of what their is to see. To suggest that the typical England fan is some kind of knuckle dragging voyeur of tournaments as opposed to the flamboyant sophisticated participants from other nations doesn't fit with my experience. I've witnessed the hooligan element from England's opponents in places as widespread as Moscow, Slovakia, Madrid, Lens, Toulouse, Kiev etc etc. Don't worry every nation has them, yet surprisingly due to the way the official supporters club is run we have virtually none. I do understand that when England play an away friendly or similar in a very close European country a different England party animal is attracted to that venue, Berlin, Amsterdam are good examples, but not the wholesale support your post suggests.We have the capability of being as fun loving and worldly wise as any of the nations we see in a competition, but as is so typical of our nation we choose to focus on the other prevalent cultures. For instance, how much time did the BBC film crew we spoke to in Germany follow the England fans around the cultural hotspots of Germany? Did they follow the fans who visited the museums, the wine routes of the Moselle valley, the Roman heritage in Trier, the delights of camping in the Black Forest? No, they chose the hotspots of certain city centres and shock television. Every tournament figures are kept for the amount of arrests made from each nation, do we come top, no, do we come second, no, surprisingly our figures appear in the very bottom of this league table.During the tournament in Germany a very English and Caribbean scene took place in the centre of Nuremberg. The very next day England were meeting Trinidad & Tobago in our group game but in the days previous 6,000 England and T&T supporters got together to organise a whole day of a joint cultural sporting experience, playing cricket in a park, followed by dancing, singing and a celebration of a unique and fascinating sharing of our historical and cultural activities. To suggest that we go to these worldwide sporting events and are merely spectators with our pissed up laddish intimidation is so wide of the mark. Sometimes people only see what they want to see.You say, 'Don't get me wrong. As I said in my original post, I would be delighted if England won with panache and the fans wooed the world with wit, exuberance and fun. I'm just yet to experience either.' Well our experience of following England is just that, wit exuberance and fun, and believe me when I say we will do exactly the same again in South Africa and do not be surprised if we are once again voted the fans of the tournament. My experiences of following England are so different to yours.By the way, my favourite journalist would be David Conn of the Guardian.