2013/02/04 18:47:22
webbs hill studio
Have any of you seen an AFL Grand Final-our SuperBowl.?
Some of our best punters "retire" to the NFL to escape the rigours of our game:
most of our soccer players are "too small" to play AFL:
i do appreciate gridiron but lets face it-it`s rugby without the body armour.

the popularity of soccer has me baffled as there seems to be more happening in the stands than on the ground and all that prancing around and clutching of shins and wailing leaves me cold.
explains why it`s the most popular uni-sex game in the world,(apart from horizontal folk dancing).

anyone for a round of golf?

 
  

2013/02/04 19:13:15
Rain
As I mentioned in another tread. I'd never gotten football until very recently, when I was stuck in the waiting room at the hospital. Now I somehow get it.

One thing I don't get is the almost biblical proportion the event takes. Where I used to work, absenteeism showed a remarkable peak every year for Super Bowl in the US office.

I remember people trying to plan vacation days just for the Super Ball. If their vacation couldn't be granted on first try, they'd try and try again until the very last minute.  And they'd send e-mails, mentioning that they HAD to be off for the SB. 

If they still couldn't get the day off, they'd simply call in sick. 

They knew that we knew that they weren't sick, that their manager would follow up and they had the e-mail trails - yet, they took off. Funnily enough, I've seen the same thing happen w/ Spanish folks and soccer - those guys actually lost their job for a soccer game.

That's the one thing I could never figure out - not the sport, but the obsession w/ it. Be it football or soccer or hockey - I don't get it.
2013/02/04 19:34:54
webbs hill studio
That's the one thing I could never figure out - not the sport, but the obsession w/ it. Be it football or soccer or hockey - I don't get it.

i guess it`s because we need heroes and sport is a necessary diversion from the realities of life.
to me,being in a band is the ultimate team sport and let`s face it,apart from golf maybe,how many other team sports are still playing their own superbowls after 50 years and having witnessed Beatlemania etc,as a child ,i reckon we are as arguably obsessed with music as we are with sport?
2013/02/04 19:39:39
pistolpete
Cricket. Now there is a really boring sport. It's like a baseball game that lasts for days. They throw the ball in the dirt and they make up the rules as they go.
2013/02/04 23:27:02
sharke
pistolpete


Cricket. Now there is a really boring sport. It's like a baseball game that lasts for days. They throw the ball in the dirt and they make up the rules as they go.

The joy of cricket is sitting drinking beer and eating sandwiches on a warm (i.e. mild) British summer day. Think of it like a long picnic. 
2013/02/05 00:13:48
spacealf
No doubt that football player was thinking "Hotdog!" of which he turned out not to be.
2013/02/05 00:44:45
Jonbouy
Im trying to understand the SuperBowl

 
That's easy...
 
It's a place to keep your Super fish in.
 
 
HTH
2013/02/05 01:41:25
foxwolfen
I must take exception to the statement that even the cowboys could beat any other team. Football in Canada is not to be sneezed at. It is faster (3 downs, not 4), farther (150 yards not 120), and longer time in actual play (due to the previous two items). Some great American football players have earned their wings in Canada. Much like the so called "World Series", there are actually competitive teams who might give the NFL a run for their money outside the USA who are not part of the competition. Calling the winner of the Superbowl world champions is... well.. simply wrong.
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