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General Soccer discussion.

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dwaino:

--- Quote from: Bentleigh-esque on July 29, 2013, 08:58:27 PM --- came into use.

Certainly the most famous story in lawn bowls is about Sir Francis Drake and the Spanish Armada. On July 19, 1588, Drake was involved in a game at Plymouth when he was notified that the Spanish Armada had been sighted. The tale says his response was, "There is plenty of time to win the game and thrash the Spaniards too." He then proceeded to finish his match and the British Navy soundly defeated the Armada. There is a lot of controversy as to whether this event actually took place.

 : :yep

--- End quote ---

Fun fact:
No crap, but Drake actually famously executed one of my ancestors for treason.

Yeahright:

--- Quote from: dwaino on July 29, 2013, 10:35:53 PM ---Fun fact:
No crap, but Drake actually famously executed one of my ancestors for treason.

--- End quote ---

One of my Mum's ancestors hung some scrawny bloke on a cross but you don't see me bragging

dwaino:

--- Quote from: Yeahright on July 29, 2013, 10:40:04 PM ---
--- Quote from: dwaino on July 29, 2013, 10:35:53 PM ---Fun fact:
No crap, but Drake actually famously executed one of my ancestors for treason.

--- End quote ---

One of my Mum's ancestors hung some scrawny bloke on a cross but you don't see me bragging

--- End quote ---

Pontius Pilote is very relevant to a wogger thread IMO.

one-eyed:

--- Quote from: Yeahright on July 29, 2013, 07:51:47 PM ---I was taught rugby was called rugby because it was invented in Rugby highschool  :-\

--- End quote ---
Yep that's right.

When the F.A. was formed in 1863 to come up with one agreed set of Football rules in England, it included Rugby rules delegates but they couldn't compromise and broke away from the F.A. in 1871 and Rugby remained a separate code of Football. The remaining F.A. delegates (Cambridge Rules and Sheffield Rules) were able to find a compromise between their two set of rules and created what we know as Soccer today - Association (rules) Football - in 1877.  Rugby itself then split in two when those advocating professional Rugby (mostly the Rugby playing working classes of Northern England) broke away to form Rugby League in 1895. The same schism occurred in Australian Rugby in 1908. An interesting historical footnote is if Rugby League didn't form in Sydney in 1908 then the working classes of Sydney would've switched to Aussie Rules and the Australian sporting landscape wouldn't have ended divided by the so-called Barassi line.

As for Soccer, British sailors, merchants and migrants took the game with them around the world and formed clubs even in non-English speaking countries which the locals embraced and those clubs have now gone on to become some of the biggest football clubs in the world - eg. AC Milan where the AC stands for Associazione Calcio (Association kick/football) and Milan is the English spelling of the Italian Milano; River Plate which was formed by Argentinians who saw British saliors playing Soccer on the Buenos Aires docks; Athletic Bilbao in Spain is another that keeps its English roots in its name.

tiger101:
Man Utd have rejected Chelsea's 2nd bid for Rooney


--- Quote ---Manchester United have rejected a second bid from Chelsea for striker Wayne Rooney, the club have confirmed.

Chelsea put forward an offer for the England forward on Sunday, thought to be around £25m plus add-ons that would take the deal towards somewhere near the £30m mark, but it was immediately rejected.

A United spokesman said: "A bid was received yesterday and immediately rejected. Our position remains that he is not for sale."

The second bid and United's swift response will now focus Rooney's mind on his future at Old Trafford – there have been reports that he will consider handing in an official transfer request. The Chelsea manager, José Mourinho, has made the 27-year-old his top transfer target and Rooney told the former United manager Sir Alex Ferguson last season that he wanted a move. Chelsea's goalkeeper Petr Cech has also welcomed the club's pursuit of Rooney.

David Moyes has repeatedly stressed that Rooney is not for sale. The player, however, was unimpressed by the manager's remarks that he would effectively have to be an understudy to Robin van Persie.

http://www.theguardian.com/football/2013/aug/05/wayne-rooney-man-united-chelsea


--- End quote ---

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