- Rashes on their faces in the colours of the team they're supporting;
- The wearing of clothes in their team colours, or in more severe cases, the wearing of national flags;
- Huddling in groups around big screen TVs in bars favouring their teams, for mutual support;
- Exuberant and sometimes irrational behaviour, in the streets of the city after their team wins; and
- In extreme cases, calling in sick, coincidently on the days when their team is playing.
I have to admit that I'm not interested in soccer (or football, as it's called in Europe). Oh sure, I've kind of been following the standings, especially now that the competition is in the elimination round and it's down to the finals. But that's more because I work in a cosmopolitan office in a cosmopolitan city. So it's more for a little water cooler talk than actual interest in the game. Maybe I would have been more interested if the country of my birth, or of my heritage, had made it to the finals. But then again, maybe not.
Because of my lack of real interest in the sport, maybe I should rebel against all those supporters. Why don't I show everyone that I won't succumb to the "Fever." That I'm immune to the symptoms that appear, at least in four year cycles. But how? How do I wear my rebellion on my sleeve?
I think I have the answer! I'll take a cue from a movie that's opening this summer. That's right, The Pirates of the Caribbean is not only entertainment, but it's educational too. I'm going to fly the pirate flag, The Jolly Roger, on my car!
Maybe it's a little too late in this year's World Cup competition to do that, considering the competition is almost over, but it's certainly something to keep in mind when this fever reappears in about four years. I'll show everyone that I will not fall to the fever everyone else does.
When it comes to the World Cup of soccer I say, hoist the sheets, set course, and...
UP THE JOLLY ROGER!!!
Wings Over The World
1 comment:
Yes, soccer is quite popular in Canada. I don't know if the viewership is greater in Canada than in the U.S. With the number of immigrants that come every year, they bring with them their love of soccer. During World Cup, all the sports bars are packed, especially in decidedly "ethnic" bars.
Yes, I am a hockey fan. It's pretty much the only sport I can sit through to the end. I just find there's more continuous action throughout the game compared to other sports. But in the end, I'm more of a doer than a watcher. I would rather play sports, than watch them. And given all of this talk lately about obesity rates in North America, maybe everyone should take up at least one or two sports.
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