Popular Post El Presidente Posted Tuesday at 09:00 PM Popular Post Posted Tuesday at 09:00 PM That was a little too easy from Spainย Some of the football played by Spain was mesmerising.ย 5
Li Bai Posted Tuesday at 09:13 PM Posted Tuesday at 09:13 PM There was only one team on the field tonight, kudos to Spain ๐ 3
dan05 Posted Tuesday at 10:20 PM Posted Tuesday at 10:20 PM Now if we had Argentina vs Spain, that would be something.ย 2
dan05 Posted Tuesday at 10:43 PM Posted Tuesday at 10:43 PM 10 hours ago, El Presidente said: That was a little too easy from Spainย Some of the football played by Spain was mesmerisingย You are right, Spain were running rings around France as far as ball handling. I like it when the referee got in the way. It happens.ย ย
JohnS Posted Wednesday at 07:58 AM Posted Wednesday at 07:58 AM Spain completely controlled the game. It would make Argentina and England think about what they have to do to break through that seemingly impenetrable defence at the back there. 3
Popular Post El Presidente Posted Wednesday at 07:24 PM Popular Post Posted Wednesday at 07:24 PM Would love ot see England get up here.ย ...And I have never backed an English sporting team in my life....against anybody. If an English team were playing theย Osama bin Laden XI today, I would be fully cheering on the cave dwellers.ย I feel dirty...but "Go England"ย 2 5
ha_banos Posted Wednesday at 08:35 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 08:35 PM I'm not seeing a 2-0 at the moment...And the heat is turning up... 1
El Presidente Posted Wednesday at 09:02 PM Posted Wednesday at 09:02 PM 1 hour ago, ha_banos said: I'm not seeing a 2-0 at the moment...And the heat is turning up... That English goal only managed to wake Argentina up.ย 1
VeguerosMAN Posted Wednesday at 09:21 PM Posted Wednesday at 09:21 PM England stopped playing after their first goal. Totally the manager's fault. 2
JohnS Posted Wednesday at 09:39 PM Posted Wednesday at 09:39 PM 14 minutes ago, VeguerosMAN said: England stopped playing after their first goal. Totally the manager's fault. Right on. Gordon scores in the 55th minute and then gets subbed in the 72nd. Why did England go so defensive for most of the second half? By the time Toney and Rashford came on deep into stoppage time, it was far too late.
ha_banos Posted Wednesday at 10:13 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 10:13 PM Look at the momentum turn after the first goal. Be interesting to overlay the substitutions. AI is failing me. 2
Arabian Posted Wednesday at 10:50 PM Posted Wednesday at 10:50 PM 5 hours ago, JohnS said: Right on. Gordon scores in the 55th minute and then gets subbed in the 72nd. Why did England go so defensive for most of the second half? By the time Toney and Rashford came on deep into stoppage time, it was far too late. It's one of those dumb tactics that many coaches recently go for once they score the 1st goal, I'm not sure who created it. At this point it's copy & paste. Why would you go defensive after the 1st goal? The match was handed over to them. "Sorry we scored, now its your turn". I watched the game and it was a matter of time for Argentina to score, they dominated the game,ย Emiliano Martรญnez wasย almost on a vacation. The whole England squad was in the back and Messi made them look like training cones. Tuchel gets an F.ย ย 1
Ken Gargett Posted Thursday at 12:07 AM Posted Thursday at 12:07 AM 4 hours ago, El Presidente said: Would love ot see England get up here.ย ...And I have never backed an English sporting team in my life....against anybody. If an English team were playing theย Osama bin Laden XI today, I would be fully cheering on the cave dwellers.ย I feel dirty...but "Go England"ย shame, ayala, shame. there is no legitimate reason ever, for anything, to support england in any sport. synchronised swimming against epstein island, you'd still back the pedos.ย the only thing i do not like this Newsweek article does not truly stress how much we despise english sporting teams.ย ย ย Hooray! Itโs OK To Hate England ย updated Jul 15, 2026 at 05:10 PM EDT England supporters react after Argentina scores to draw level as they watch a live broadcast of the 2026 World Cup semifinal football match between En The despair felt inย Englandย after their 2-1 defeat toย Argentinaย in theย World Cupย semi-finals may appear inconsolable, but there is a upside. The England teamโs failure to reach their first World Cup Final since 1966 comes with the knowledge that, for a while at least, the globe is united. In a world bitterly divided by ideology, religion and national rivalry, there is one thing that can still bring people together: itโs OK to hate England. Argentinaโs animosityย towards England is well documented, expressed on theย soccerย pitch in fractious World Cup meetings in 1966, 1998, 2002 and, most famously, 1986 in Mexico City when Diego Maradona proved he was both a cheat and a genius. That 2-1 win 40 years ago took place in the shadow of the 1982 Falklands War and Maradona was clear that beating England was revenge for the Argentinian soldiers who died in the conflict (the fact that Great Britainโs victory in that war all but ended a vicious military dictatorship in Argentina seems to have escaped those who now proclaim their hatred of the English). ย But Argentina will have to get in the queue. The prime spots for this national pastime are held by the other constituent parts of Great Britain itself, in particular Scotland and Wales, where hating England (if not individual English people) has become a compulsory part of the national culture. ย Argentine banners have been on show all week in Scottish cities, where the โanyone but Englandโ mantra may as well be written on the flag of St Andrew. In Wales, loathing of England is most often expressed around the sport of rugby rather than soccer, based on an assumption that English people are โarrogantโ and even today tainted indelibly by Englandโs historic role subjugating Welsh independence. It has been pointed out, in a polite English way, that many Scottish and Welsh soldiers died fighting in the Falklands War, so it seems counterintuitive to support the football team of the country that killed them. But this just shows how ingrained anti-Englishness has become. Even if the truth of a famous speech before a Wales v England rugby match in 1977 has been called into question, that doesnโt stop some fans wearing phrases from it on T-shirts today. The Wales captain Phil Bennett was supposed to have said: โLook at what these b******s have done to Wales. They've taken our coal, our water, our steel. They buy our houses and live in them for a fortnight every 12 months. And what have they given us? Absolutely nothing. We've been exploited, raped, controlled and punished by the Englisโand we're playing them this afternoon.โ So, the answer to the question โWhy is it acceptable to still hate the English so vociferously?โ can be answered with โItโs history, stupidโ and it wouldnโt be far wrong. On a superficial level this is true of the French, who although being Englandโs longest running historical adversary (1,000 years and counting) are prolonging a kind if England-hate cosplay out of habit. France is Britainโs closest European ally, but nobody likes to admit that in public. Australia sends much of its bored, restless youth to England each year to work in bars, and the historical ties with the mother country as among the closest of any two countries in the world, yet Australians still feel perfectly willing and able to decry the English as feckless, arrogant and pompous when it suits them. Again, this is most often expressed in the context of sport, in this case cricket. The historical animosity is most raw for Ireland, which endured centuries of colonization, mistreatment, mismanagement and in some cases terrible bloodshed at the hands of its nearest neighbors. The anti-English sentiment extends deep into the US too, from the idea that nasty old King George III was a tyrant in 1776 right up to today. What Joe Biden meant in 2023 when he answered a request by BBC journalist for a quote by saying โThe BBC? Iโm Irishโ was less a proud proclamation of his heritage but an assurance that he was anti-English. Many Americans love to discuss their familyโs personal heritage, with one notable exception. ย ย ย There is a similar sense of low-level resentment and suspicion among the Indian and Pakistani establishment both for Englandโs (as part of Great Britain) colonization of their countries and as an expression of a thrusting national identity. The desire to project 21st-century power means that post-colonial countries will hang on to their resentment of Englandโin particularโeven after 80 years have passed since they gained independence. Itโs just too convenient as a national rallying point. Disliking England, even if itโs just for show, is the sentiment everyone can get behind. The irony is England doesnโt often seem a like a very powerful, confident or indeed arrogant country anymore. Huge sections of English society donโt care for being English, perhaps egged on by the evidence that so many other nationalities feel the same way about England as they do. Only 45 percent of those in a series of recent polls said they were proud to be English, with โembarrassmentโ tracking at around 10 percent. The Scots and Welsh are living in the same โBroken Britainโ as the English, a fractured society with an underpowered economy, yet they are still permitted to cherish their national identity. Many English people feel like theyโre not allowed this luxury, which is contributing to the English nationalism feeding into the rise of the populist Reform UK party. Even flying Englandโs own St Georgeโs Cross is a source of continual public debate about whether it is a symbol of oppression. There is a football club in south London called Millwall, once notorious for its hooligans, whose most famous chant became โNo one likes us, we donโt care.โ This World Cup has proved once again, that England may have to accept being the Millwall of the world, whether it likes it or nor. Perhaps England should take it as a compliment. Itโs probably better to be hated than ignored. 2
cigaraholic Posted Thursday at 12:08 AM Posted Thursday at 12:08 AM An old saying in the NFL that doesnโt seem to have reached โfootballโโฆ"the best defense is offensive".
cgoodrich Posted Thursday at 12:50 AM Posted Thursday at 12:50 AM It was a great game if you wanted Argentina to win (which I did). They played their game from start to finish. They made one bad mistake and England capitalized on it. Then England made the absolute wrong decision to try and protect a 1-0 lead, so foolish. The final has the potential to be one of the best finals ever: European Champion versus South American Champion. I wanted both to win their respective semifinals, now I donโt know who I want. My only wish is that it isnโt decided on penalty kicks; I hate penalty kicks deciding the game and wish theyโd bring back the Golden Goal in the extra time periods.
VeguerosMAN Posted Thursday at 10:45 AM Posted Thursday at 10:45 AM Possession after 60 mins of the match: Argentina 88% England 12%ย
El Presidente Posted Thursday at 08:16 PM Posted Thursday at 08:16 PM Diego Armando Maradona Smoking The Fattest Cuban Cigar In Heaven Today ย ย https://www.betootaadvocate.com/diego-armando-maradona-smoking-the-fattest-cuban-cigar-in-heaven-today/ ย 4
VeguerosMAN Posted Thursday at 08:34 PM Posted Thursday at 08:34 PM 1 hour ago, El Presidente said: Diego Armando Maradona Smoking The Fattest Cuban Cigar In Heaven Today https://www.betootaadvocate.com/diego-armando-maradona-smoking-the-fattest-cuban-cigar-in-heaven-today/ Don't know whether he's still supporting the current Cuban regime in heaven or not. Nice Che tattoo though. Oh I almost forgot Che was a fellow Argentinian who had to f*** over Cubans justย because he was a romantic.
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