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John Vorhaus

John Vorhaus

Posted: June 4, 2010 04:12 PM

Why You Should Care About the World Cup

What's Your Reaction:

If you're watching ESPN at all these days, you can't help noticing their heavy hype for the upcoming World Cup soccer championship in South Africa. Of course they're wheeling out the heavy hype because, yeah, guess what, they want you to care and they want you to watch. In this post, I'm going to make a case for caring and watching, for reasons that have nothing to do with ESPN's viewership goals.

First, let's dispense once and for all with the notion that the game we're talking about is called soccer. Well, we call it that, but we're a tiny fraction of the soccer-viewing public. The rest of the world calls it football -- sometimes futbol -- and when they want to distinguish it from our game of football, they call that game "American football" or "gridiron." Therefore, we live in a world where billions and billions of fans around the world call their game football, while we ten or so enthusiasts here in America call it soccer. Being Americans, and longtime fans of majority rule, we really need to let the majority have this one. Never let the word "soccer" pass your lips again; among your cosmopolitan and foreign friends, if nothing else, you'll score a point or two.

Now that we've established that football is football, let's address the question of why we should care. Surprisingly, it has nothing to do with winning or losing. Yeah, sure, the U.S. Women's team won the Women's World Cup in 1999, and that made us a (women's at least) football power. But that's not the point. The point is, billions of football fans around the world care passionately -- insanely -- about the World Cup, and that includes people from places like Switzerland, which has scant chance of winning, and Russia, whose national team didn't even qualify. You see, in case you don't know (and hundreds of millions of Americans simply do not know), the World Cup is the biggest, most compelling event in world sport. And if you don't follow the competition, you're letting the rest of the world go to the party without you.

So how do we wrap our brains around the World Cup? First of all, forget about the relative rankings of the teams. Sure, Brazil is a perennial powerhouse, just like England is a perennial underachiever. Even ignore strategy. Yes, the Germans will bring their usual highly disciplined approach to the game, and yes the Italians will promote passion as the strength of their play. Don't even pay much attention to underdogs. Can the Ivory Coast emerge from group play with a chance to play spoiler in later rounds? Can host South Africa make a decent showing? None of that matters, and I'll tell you why: Because that's all about outcome, and the World Cup is not about outcome, it's about story.

I discovered this firsthand in 1998, when I found myself on a flight from Jamaica to Europe on the same plane as the World Cup-bound Jamaican National Football Team, the legendary Reggae Boyz. And I could just tell that, win or lose -- like I could just tell that they didn't really expect to win -- they were determined to have the time of their lives, the adventure of a lifetime and, above all, a story to tell when they came home. Well, this they achieved. They emerged as the darling of the '98 World Cup, didn't win, but made everyone fall in love. Down there on a personal level -- my personal level -- that eight-hour plane flight made it clear to me that something special was going on in their world, a special thing that I'd never even known existed. During my next six weeks in Europe, I made it a point to pay attention to the World Cup. I didn't understand the rules, barely understood the game, but none of that mattered. By the time it was over, I had become infected with everybody's -- and I mean everybody's -- energy. Football wasn't my sport - isn't and never will be my sport - but billions of people care enough about it to put their lives on absolute hold for four weeks every four years. As a responsible citizen of the world, I feel like that's something I should pay attention to.

So that's my charge to you, gentle reader. If you've never watched a football game, watch a World Cup match or two. If nothing else, you'll see the best practitioners of the sport bringing their best game, and it never hurts to watch excellence in action. More to the point, you'll get a taste of something that the rest of the world cares passionately about. In these troubled and isolated times in America, it couldn't hurt at all for us to understand the passions of our foreign friends, competitors, even enemies. Watch the World Cup. Ignore who wins or loses. Just watch the story unfold. To do so teaches us all something vital about the world we live in and the people we share our planet with. Trust me, an America population turned on to the World Cup won't bring about international harmony and joy, but it just might be a start. And a pretty damn riveting one at that.

 
 
 
If you're watching ESPN at all these days, you can't help noticing their heavy hype for the upcoming World Cup soccer championship in South Africa. Of course they're wheeling out the heavy hype becau...
If you're watching ESPN at all these days, you can't help noticing their heavy hype for the upcoming World Cup soccer championship in South Africa. Of course they're wheeling out the heavy hype becau...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
McMarcia
07:47 PM on 06/07/2010
um there is some paint drying and I need to go watch.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Azrael1701
03:39 PM on 06/07/2010
I have a lot of English friends and so I will be so happy if the US beats England!
01:25 PM on 06/07/2010
Thank you! Thank you! and Thank you!

What a nice and gentle way to draw in those isolated group of people here to partake the world cup frenzy. You said it well. I think U.S needs to stop being so insular and inward focused and enjoy sports beyond their borders, especially football. This sport is a passion in just about every continent except NA. And yes, please stop calling football soccer.
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11:22 AM on 06/07/2010
The Beautiful game is simply unrivaled in terms of popularity, competition and the way it´s truly a global sport. The World Cup always produces some magical moments you can look back on and think "oh that was 16 years ago, tempus fugit". However you shouldn´t be pushing it on people who simply aren´t interested, there is always the vast majority of people around the globe to ensure football staying in the spotlight.
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11:51 AM on 06/07/2010
Right! Don’t like don’t watch it.
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11:13 AM on 06/07/2010
Soccer, Hockey just don;t translate on TV the way NFL and MLB do.
Short of scoring World Cup tickets I'll pass.
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10:28 AM on 06/07/2010
italia campioni del mondo !! forza azzurri!
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09:26 AM on 06/07/2010
and if you call it football here, people are not going to know what you're talking about. If most of your friends are Americans, calling it soccer is fine.
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11:15 AM on 06/07/2010
Lift= Elevator
Boot =Trunk
etc.
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05:08 PM on 06/07/2010
Yeah i wouldn't say boot here either if i meant trunk
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11:52 AM on 06/07/2010
It is not football, but futbol, tha's the diffrence.
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09:24 AM on 06/07/2010
And if you don't follow the competition, you're letting the rest of the world go to the party without you.
****
So?

I find soccer boring. Most of the people I know find it boring. Most of my friends don't watch it or pay attention to it. It does nothing for me in terms of enjoyment. I don't need to force myself to like it.

Why would i want to waste time "growing to like something?" i.e. forcing myslef to like something i don't and no one i know does either. Just for media hype.

I dont take issue with others liking it. So why do people who like it want to "force" it on those who don't? Like what you like, without the insecurity.
10:25 AM on 06/07/2010
I agree.

Everybody should watch what he likes and in most cases it is with what you grow up.

I find American football boring, the only thing worse is baseball, even more boring. Every now and then they try to push these sports over here in Europe and always fail. It is sport for minorities.
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05:08 PM on 06/07/2010
I do have this desire to learn more about cricket though.
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McMarcia
07:49 PM on 06/07/2010
good point, a lot of people don't like opera too.
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02:21 AM on 06/07/2010
"What happens on the football field matters, not in the way that food matters but as poetry does to some people and alcohol does to others: it engages the personality. It has conflict and beauty, and when those two qualities are present together in something offered for public appraisal they represent much of what I understand to be art."

Arthur Hopcraft.
11:40 PM on 06/06/2010
I WANT to like watching soccer SO MUCH. But nothing ever happens! In 90 minutes of gameplay they score ONE POINT. Make it feel like the teams are making progress toward a goal and I'll watch it!

Rugby is the real Euro sport to watch. Its been on NBC all weekend- kind of like football, except the play doesn't stop
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11:08 AM on 06/07/2010
Agreed, Rugby is great....futbol, is boring, and I've tried...I've really really tried to like it
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11:12 PM on 06/05/2010
I couldn’t say it better John, congratulations for the clarity of the article. You talk similar to a aficionado therefore you have to be one. To complement what you just said I would add the national element to your list that exists among the fans that loves to watch ‘my country’ play. Also, futbol fans has a enormous knowledge of sport going back to the establishment of FIFA, they tend to know the history of all countries and their famous players. Truly is a worldwide event that attract billions of viewers.

But don’t you worry the bug is catching up here too and if the USA happens to win this cup then forget it, will be a total pandemonium.

Here a is question for the Huffington Post Forum staff: Is there any plans to transmit the futbol games here? if not all, at least some of them, where the us team plays. Games start soon Friday 11 so make plans for the fans. Don’t let history pass you by!
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11:17 AM on 06/07/2010
You're not going to enlist new fans when you start off insulting them for using the word "soccer".
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11:48 AM on 06/07/2010
Well, that’s the original idea. We cannot allow soccer to compete with other sports.
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10:38 PM on 06/05/2010
So....basically teh world likes it and it should be called football? Yeah you've brought nothing to the table that remotelymakes the game interesting. Anything that ends in a tie, isnt that interesting....
05:53 PM on 06/06/2010
Oh, I'm old-school so have to say something about ties!

The trend is against ties in the US but football (NFL and college) used to have ties. Hockey used to have ties. Baseball and basketball never did (or not for a long, long time). Some people may like one and other people may prefer the other, but I don't think football (American football) and ice hockey are inherently less interesting (or were inherently less interesting) than baseball just because of ties.

In football's case, I think it's clearly better to have ties because the overtime in football seems so artificial (as well as adding to an already way too-overlong game).
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soisay
Angry? Scared? Thank a Republican.
11:21 PM on 06/06/2010
Futbol is like red wine, stout beer, sushi or blackened food. Its not for everybody and often not an instant favorite, but you can grow to like it by slowing down and appreciating its subtleties and nuances. There are those that will never make the effort, of if they do, will never come to enjoy it.

Fantastic article. The World cup, like the Olympics, is more about the event, the players, even the fans themselves, then the individual games and their outcome. Join the world, watch the world cup June 11 - July 11.
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11:18 AM on 06/07/2010
Baseball is like red wine, stout beer, sushi or blackened food. Its not for everybody and often not an instant favorite, but you can grow to like it by slowing down and appreciating its subtleties and nuances. There are those that will never make the effort, of if they do, will never come to enjoy it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
YeahDonkey
So are you saying I have a small bio?
09:14 PM on 06/05/2010
If you don't like it, who gives a s***, your in the minority.
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Puller58
Man of Mystery
11:04 AM on 06/05/2010
I simply find the game uninteresting. I also find the spectacle of violence at these games to be offputting.
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02:17 AM on 06/07/2010
Violence at world cup games.... when?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
princeza
10:42 AM on 06/05/2010
I can't wait for the World Cup to begin! I love both football and American football (I've gotten used to saying these from living abroad), but I'm always more excited for the WC than for the Super Bowl. Two different sports, lots of passion here!

And the World Cup will be on in my house, no matter what time it is. I'm watching Team USA, and I'm expecting great things from Deuce and the rest of the team (but please, better D!).