Comment by j4cobgarby
Comment by j4cobgarby 5 days ago
It wasn't until he mentioned 'soccer' that I realised football meant American football.
Comment by j4cobgarby 5 days ago
It wasn't until he mentioned 'soccer' that I realised football meant American football.
Aren't free kicks an example of this? There must be a few in every soccer game, no?
But I don't know how many times the 14 player scenario happens per game in American Football, is it a lot more?
Soccer fans also miss out on an hour of commercials each game (it's easy to skip the ones at halftime).
It's the LA Times, a clearly American newspaper, so of course the reader must assume football = "American" football. This is not contentious.
Further, the contention of the article is simply that there are many perspectives to a game like (American) football, and every perspective is limited in some way, not receiving the full information of everything happening simultaneously, and this also applies to any video source. Not sure how that relates to fascism, but somehow it apparently does. Regardless, the contention is just as applicable to soccer (aka the shortened name the brits made for Association Football)