Moderator: Community Team
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
Let's see...Nola_Lifer wrote:Anyone who is a Favre fan is a fan of any other true American traitor,
kinda like Benedict Arnold, trading his yellow and green for purple.
oVo wrote:Let's see...Nola_Lifer wrote:Anyone who is a Favre fan is a fan of any other true American traitor,
kinda like Benedict Arnold, trading his yellow and green for purple.
Brees used to wear lightning bolts on his helmet, Shockey has a Super Bowl win with the Giants
and Farve is a man who loves the game of football... and grew up a Saints fan.
I'll be pulling for the SAINTS to win their first NFL Championship in Miami
and sure hope they play better there than they did in the Dome last Sunday.
The Vikings turned the ball over 5 times and the Saints still needed OT to squeeze past 'em.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
BrotherWolf wrote:One of the things that has always surprised me about American sports fans is that you don't sing songs at sports events. In the UK it just wouldn't be right if you didn't sing at a football match (unless you're an Arsenal fan).
Of the two songs I know you sing, there is the imaginative "U-S-A" sang at the olympics. The other is "Who dat team gonna beat the saints? Who dat, who dat?" A song so devoid of everything that it means I'll be cheering on the colts. You'd have to be playing the cowboys for me to support you!
BrotherWolf wrote:One of the things that has always surprised me about American sports fans is that you don't sing songs at sports events. In the UK it just wouldn't be right if you didn't sing at a football match (unless you're an Arsenal fan).
Of the two songs I know you sing, there is the imaginative "U-S-A" sang at the olympics. The other is "Who dat team gonna beat the saints? Who dat, who dat?" A song so devoid of everything that it means I'll be cheering on the colts. You'd have to be playing the cowboys for me to support you!
thegreekdog wrote:BrotherWolf wrote:One of the things that has always surprised me about American sports fans is that you don't sing songs at sports events. In the UK it just wouldn't be right if you didn't sing at a football match (unless you're an Arsenal fan).
Of the two songs I know you sing, there is the imaginative "U-S-A" sang at the olympics. The other is "Who dat team gonna beat the saints? Who dat, who dat?" A song so devoid of everything that it means I'll be cheering on the colts. You'd have to be playing the cowboys for me to support you!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1b97wo2Ekww
Titanic wrote:thegreekdog wrote:BrotherWolf wrote:One of the things that has always surprised me about American sports fans is that you don't sing songs at sports events. In the UK it just wouldn't be right if you didn't sing at a football match (unless you're an Arsenal fan).
Of the two songs I know you sing, there is the imaginative "U-S-A" sang at the olympics. The other is "Who dat team gonna beat the saints? Who dat, who dat?" A song so devoid of everything that it means I'll be cheering on the colts. You'd have to be playing the cowboys for me to support you!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1b97wo2Ekww
Is that actually sung at the ground though? Sounds more like an team anthem then a terrace song.
Titanic wrote:Fair enough, but I still think that football matches in Europe have a better atmosphere and more singing then in the USA.
Titanic wrote:Fair enough, but I still think that football matches in Europe have a better atmosphere and more singing then in the USA.
Titanic wrote:Fair enough, but I still think that football matches in Europe have a better atmosphere and more singing then in the USA.
Also, did you read that the largest amount of foreigners going to the 2010 WC in from the USA, with the UK in second. But something like 75% of the tickets have been bought by South Africans as the amount of foreigners going is less then 50% of FIFA's estimate.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.