I know why. In 1863 - the unified rules of association football were drawn up ... the schools wanted to play each other with the same rules. The game they developed (which I've played in front of 1000 people) ... was the beginnings of two different games. The game involved a heavy round ball - 4 possessions - the ability to scrummage for the ball - the ability to kick for goal out of your hands - the goal was just two massive long posts, no crossbar. You also had to tap/bounce the ball once every 10 yards. This is the version that got transported through the world in the early days - and, rightly, the locals decided to change some of the rules. So, the Americans liked the 4-possession rule - but they preferred a more carriable ball ... and to be able to throw it forwards (a no-no in Cambridge Rules 1863 football - or its schismatic brother, Rugby) The Australians couldn't give a XXXX about the 4-possession rule - but liked the tapping the ball every 10 yards thing. They added an extra two long goalposts so that near misses could score just one point. The Irish Gaelic Football is the closest to the original rules (round ball, that you can carry - but have to tap every few yards) ... but it later fused it with soccer. Crossbar on the goal, 3 points for a goal, 1 point for hoofing it over (but between the massive long goalposts). After that - the Football Association broke off from those that wanted to carry the ball around all the time, they kept the round ball and made it a strictly "foot" ball game. Being the Football AsSOCciation ... this version was called "soccer", even in England. Rugby broke away too, only to suffer its own schism between Rugby Union and Rugby League. All games named themselves "football". Even rugby. You'll hear commentators saying "St Helens is a great football team, they really are!" ... they're a superb Rugby League team! But Rugby teams are often called "Leicester RFC" (Rugby Football Club) In short - "football" is a term used to describe a wide variety of variations based on the 1863 Cambridge Rules.
Luke Del Toroski and golie being pulled is ridiculous idea because that means the players from opposing team can score from shooting all the way from the other pitch it wouldnt be fair. I won’t really blame u for it tho cause i know you dont know much about football(soccer)
Luke Del Toroski pulling out a golie is really ridiculous idea the game would be really boring cause the other team would score goals for 10-30 minutes straight, it would be like fucking 30-0 so yeah. Not attacking you just calling the idea stupid
He should have mentioned Europa League also and the fact that Winner of Europa League and Champions League then play for European Supercup. But it's a good explanation without that too.
SmokeDimi he also forgot the fact that in the second division in England, the teams that finish 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th play in the playoffs for promotion
you can win an aditional trophy...when a team wins the UEFA Champions League then is something called "Intercontinental cup" in which the european winner of Champions league play against the winner of Copa Libertadores (the latin-american version of uefa champions league)
I'm Brazilian and we have state championships (Carioca, Paulista and etc.), the cup (Copa do Brasil), the league (Brasileirão) where 4 teams are relegated, we have Championships like Copa Verde and Copa do Nordeste too. The Copa Libertadores is the Champions League and the Copa Sudamericana is the Europe League of South America. In the end of year the Champions of each confederation play the World Club Championship.
eldiego68 he isn't wrong, if the best south american clubs played in Europe they'd probably not even make it to Europe League, it's rare for south american clubs to beat European ones, south america does have good players, but European clubs have better conditions and money, they buy players from south america and develop them cheap to sell at higher price in Europe, with few exceptions.
In South America we have: Libertadores (Our continental championship just like Champios League) Each continent has its own championship and in the end of the year the winner of each one play one another to know who's the best football club in the world that year.
A few points: 1 - relegation doesn´t exist in the US because it's a franchise system. The league is a business with a owner. And rich people buy the rights to own a franchise, and the league even decides how many clubs can exist per city, etc. Nobody will buy a franchise if a bad season can put you in second division. 2 - the system is quite different by country, but in many countries, including most of South America, clubs have no owners. They are social clubs dedicated to sport, meaning the fans own the club. You can get associated to your club, and vote for president, councilors, etc. 3 - while the system is more stratified in Europe, in some countries, like Brazil, there were experimentation with different formats. Brazil only adopted the league system in its national competition in 2003. Before that there were play-offs too. 4 - not sure, but I guess the point of the video is soccer in general, not ONLY in Europe. In Brazil, besides the usual national cup, national league and continental cup, there are also STATE leagues (with playoffs) which run in the first 2-3 months of the season/year (it's southern hemisphere, so season start in february and run until end of november) 5 - video forgot to talk about the NATIONAL teams. Unlike american football, in soccer, national football is much more important and so that should also be mentioned.
See I would love to say that what you said there was perfect. But you kept on calling it soccer when it's a ball that you nearly all the time kick with your foot (apart from headers and when someone is passing it to you kinda high then you let it bounce of York chest). Football m8 it's football
Petr Hájek I’m Spanish a**hole. I said soccer because it’s an american video, in Spain we say Futbol (football) too, so shut up what are you talking about
@@petrhajek4869 You idiot, we don't call it football in Poland (but piłka nożna), nor do they call it football in Germany (but Fußball), in Italy they call it calcio. This is an American video where they call it soccer. How difficult is it to get? Simply said - we DO NOT CALL IT FOOTBALL IN EUROPE. That's what it's called in the UK.
Winning the three trophies in one year is called the Treble and is rare, but Man Utd did it in 1999, plus Barcelona in 2015, and I think it’s only happened like 7 times or something
English Football is a really old game. It originated during the Mid-Medieval Period and was, in its earliest form, a game without rules or regulations (it was also violent and injuries were fairly common . An entire village would play against another village and the game was won when the ball (either a pigs bladder or stone) was landed into the opponents village (similarly to Rugby), except the distance between the two villages could be 2-3 miles and each team could have up to 100 players. The game gradually evolved into two distinct games over the next few centuries, one was called Rugby and the other was Association Football. American Football is more closely related to Rugby (the two games are very similar in fact) but took the name as Football due to Rugby being referred to as a type of football (Rugby Football).
soccer is a 'pet-name' for 'association foot ball' - You americans are not to blame for calling it soccer. That name came with british people to america
+Leo Ellen Omg... I mean the British invented the word "soccer", but that doesn't mean you Americans have to use it. Don't use that pathetic excuse to justify the way you call the sport.
it was a way to say things in a slang during the late 1800's/early 1900's to add "-er" at the end of words. Soccer is a nickname for asSOCiation football in old timey slang, basically. Idk if anybody commented that clearly enough yet but in case not, here you go lol
The name of football (as I understand it) Football used to be a catch all name for any number of games played in the British Isles - but mostly in England - from at least medieval times. In the mid 19th century Cambridge University codified the rules, so that their undergraduates, who had mostly come from the big, famous, private schools, all of which played a different version of football, could play each other. These rules were adopted by the newly formed English Football Association and this new codified game was called Association Football. As stated, 'Soccer' is a corruption of the word 'association' and was commonly used in the UK for much of the 20th. As mentioned above, the big private boys schools all played their own version of football, this included Rugby School, and their game became what we call Rugby - which is really called Rugby Football but the word ‘football’ has been mostly dropped by both codes. However before that happened, it was taken to America where it morphed into what Americans call Football.
The winner of the champions league trophy also automatically qualifies for the FIFA Club World Cup. there the best club from europe will take on Champions from other continents such as the winner of the Asian champions league etc.
Actually the sport is Egyptian and is from 2500 BC but the earliest name that we know of is Episkyros dating back to around the year 600 BC in Ancient Greece.
The word "soccer" actually originated in England sometime in the 1870's. At the time the primary form of football (soccer) was played in the Football Association. Another form of football (rugby football) was gaining popularity in England, so to distinguish between the two, nicknames were given: "rugger" to rugby football, and "soccer" to association football. Association football became known by this English nickname in countries that were already pioneering their own game called football. Australia had what we know as "Aussie rules football." America adopted the nickname in the early part of the twentieth century to shorten their sports from American football and association football. England used the terms interchangeably (often with the hybrid "soccer football") until around the 1980's when the sport grew in popularity in America whilst being known as soccer. England rejected the colloquialism as being associated with Yankee culture. Apologies for the long comment, but I hope it's proven helpful.
Originally FOOTball wasn’t named for using feet, but differentiating it from rich people ball games like Polo that were played on horseback. It’s a ball game played „on foot“. That’s why people didn’t agree on using hands or not.
In Finnish language we have sports called: "Jalkapallo" and "Pesäpallo" directly translated as "Football" and "Baseball", but either one doesn't means what americans call football and baseball :D In Finnish language your "Baseball" is "Baseball" and your "Football" is "Amerikkalainen jalkapallo" but it's too long word to say -.- so in slang it's "Jenkkifutis" meaning "Yankee football"
Association football started a very long time ago in England Preston was actually one of the founding teams .A nickname for Association football became soccer.
in germany the 3rd last place doesn't automatically go down. they have either a one leg or two leg tie against the team that came 3rd in the 2nd division
Actually "soccer" is an English (as in England in the UK) term: when they were defining the rules that basically split football (soccer) from rugby the organisation that did it was Football Association and from that "association" you have soccer... why Americans use this obsolete term... well, you still use miles and gallons, so...
@@alexs7028 it shouldn’t be infuriating. American football started before The Football Association and the Rugby Football Union were created (Ruhby dropped the „football“ much later. At the time using hands in football was completely normal. Football wasn’t even named after kicking the ball with your feet. It’s was named that because it was played „on foot“ as opposed to royal ball games like Polo that were played on horseback. Even the English used the term soccer well into the 1960s. Just because they don’t like it anymore doesn’t give them the right to dictate what to call something on the other side of the world.
One more thing he forgot to mention is that 3rd team in each group of Champions league playoffs play in not so popular competition called Europa League and the winner even if he is not in position in the league allowing him to qualify for the Champions league,he is quallifying thanks to winning the Europa league.And depending ot the position in the league a team can directly qualify for Champions league or Europa league or play playoffs for a spot in either compettion,and as you can guess involvement in one of the tournaments can give a club big income and more popularity.
In England, the worst 3 teams in the First Division (Premier League) are relegated. The top 2 teams in the Second Division (EFL Championship) are promoted at the end of the season. Then the teams that are placed 3-6 in the championship go into what they call the ‘Championship Playoffs’. 3rd v 6th playing Home and away. 4th v 5th playing Home and away. Then the winners of those 2 ties go to the national stadium and play 1 game and the winner of that goes into the First Division.
In germany it’s actually only the bottom 2 teams that automatically gets relegated. The 3 to last team plays against the team that got third in the second divison to decide what team gets relegated
a lot of irish people call football soccer too because they have their own version of 'football' called gaelic football, just like americans have their own football, 'american football'.
messi lionel my cousins and their friends do, and I've got over 20 cousins. don't use yourself as the pool, other places and people will be different, but Ireland calling football, soccer is not uncommon
got to this video by just clicking around the youtubes... no idea who this dude is but im surprised as fuck that he actually listened to the stuff and didnt talk shit. props
Australians also call it soccer because they have aussie rules football and some countries have 2 cup competitions and the league example England has the FA cup ( in which any team from amateurs to professionals play in) the league cup ( in which only professional teams play) and the league
4:55 Well. not only 3 trophies. In total you can win 6 on the same season, as F.C.Barcelona did a few years ago. Apart from the league, the cup and the Champions League, there are 3 more trophies, at least in Spain, that you can win at the same time: The Supercup (played by the former league winner and the former cup winner), the European Super Cup (played by the former Champions League winner and a the former UEFA Cup winner) and the FIFA Club World cup (played by the forner Champions League winner and a team from another continent who won itself their own particular Champions League in that continent).
ya know I was gonna do a reverse to this on my channel trying to understand American Football from a UK man so after watching this yeah deffo got me interested also good video man always good to see people trying to understand football
N5: All champions from their respective continents (confederations) play for the FIFA Club World Cup. UEFA: Europe / CONCACAF: North&Central America / CONMEBOL: South America / CAF: Africa / OFC: Oceania / AFC: Asia The club that results to be the world champion gets to wear a golden emblem on their shirt as a reminder for other teams that they are the reingin champs. This is also true for World Cup (countries), Copa America (countries) and Euro Cup (countries) champions. You can see it in Germany, Chilean and Real Madrid shirts for example.
The maximum amount of trophies you could win as a English team is 7. But that is the most extreme case where everything falls into place. Prem, FA cup, EFL Cup, Community shield, Champions League, Super cup, Club world cup.
Point 5: The Europe League: The winner of all national cups in Europe and the runner ups in the national leagues (about place 3-6) play in the Europe League (former UEFA Cup). It's structured exactly like Champions League. The winner gets a trophy and can play in Champions League in the next year.
The word "soccer," which is believed to have originated in Britain some 200 years ago, comes from the official name of the sport, "association football." As other versions of the game evolved to include Rugby Football, it is believed the Brits adopted colloquialisms to distinguish each game.
it’s because they used to give sports nick names by adding -er to the end. rugby football used to be called rugged and association football (football) was soccer
It's called soccer because in England It is called association football and was at first shortened to soccer instead football due to rugby also being called rugby football which got shortened to rugby. Then America played rugby which evolved in to gridiron football you shortened that to football and kept soccer as the name for association football and rest of the world switched the name soccer to football. Thats the short answer to why Americans call it soccer.
That is true as long as you completely ignore the several hundred years before it was association football and was infact just called Football. Its original name is Football.
There used to be a programme on British commercial tv called Midweek Soccer, which showed a match played on that day. Therefore people my age would use the term soccer as much football. The term soccer was invented in 19th century England as a slang word for Association Football. As far as I know. the word was invented by English Victorian Schoolboys. People who play Rugby, from which American Fooball is derived, will also refer to their game as either rugby football or just football and "football" as soccer, to avoid confusion, if that makes sense.
Most countries also have a second cup competition, in some form or another. There is also a second tier Europe wide competition, for teams ranked just below the top teams in their national leagues and for national cup winners. P.S. It's football because it's played with your feet... and a ball. ;)
The league in each country can have a total different format as well... (In belgium there is a play off system after regular competition with the top 6 teams. For some strange reason... they half each team's points to create more tension & those 6 teams play eachother twice again and the team with the most points in the end becomes champion. This system is ridiculous, especially the points that get divided in half, but it's basically done to get more TV money, since there aren't many leagues anymore that can compete vs the bigger leagues, just cause of the ridiculous amount of money that goes around in football.) Next to the champions league, you also have the Europa League (less bigger teams that eventually get combined with the 3rd out of the group stages from the champions league). In several countries there are also more than 1 cup in a season (premier league as example)
They forgot to mention how play offs work. They mentioned it but you know. In england. 4 divisions (top to bottom) Premier league Championship League 1 League 2 Whoever wins premier league goes to champions league, keep in mind unless you get relegated in the prem, you stay. Winning means you play in both the prem and champions league Whoever loses each league goes down, whoever loses league 2 goes to semi professional Whoever wins each league below the premier league goes up to the above league. Basic Play offs in england work like this: The teams who come 3rd to 6th at the end of the season are in play off position. The team who came 3rd plays the 6th team and the 4th team plays the 5th. Whoever wins out of those games play at Wembley, the greatest stadium in the UK. Whoever wins overall gets promoted to the next league along with the other 2 who came 1st and 2nd
I’m from Canada and tbh we use the word “football” interchangeably between gridiron football and association football. If we are talking about the association football games we will say football or the same with the NFL or CFL
he forgot the Europe cup league, meaning the team that stays in 3rd place in the group stage of CL, will go the Europe Cup League, where the teams that stayed from 3rd to 6th place in their country league will play, and it is the method than the CL.
I don't really get all the outrage with people saying that Americans are ignorant to all other sports apart from their own. As an Englishman I don't fully understand how the draft picks work, or differentiate between different American football positions. I'm just not bothered about the sport, and that's fine. Some people over here follow American sports and some Americans follow football, but if you don't and it's just not something you're interested in, then who cares? 😂
Couple of things I want to add: not every european league plays from august to may. You also have the europa league, which is basically the champions league for the 2nd best teams in europe who didn't qualify for champions league.
The english actually came up with the word soccer because the soc of soccer is sort for association because the english used to like to shorten things down
The interesting thing is most of the MLS team are FC. Seattle Sounders FC. Los Angeles Football Club. FC Dallas. Toronto FC. Atlanta United FC New York City Football Club and so on...
Each country usually has more than 1 cup, there are 2 big European competitions, Champions League and Europe League, the 1st in country league is invited to Champions League group phase, 2nd in country league enters the Champions League playoffs and if they win they also join the group phase. The 3rd-4rd in country league join Europe League group phase, the 3rd in each group of the Champions League drop down to Europe League elimination tournament. At the start of the next season, the winner of the last Europe League faces the winner of the last Champions League in a supercup. At the end of the league starts the club world cup with the best of Africa, America, Asia and Europe, usually Europe or America wins, mostly Europe. The american finalist is mostly if not always from South America. The south american leagues have less resting time, they have twice the ammount of league games per year, and 2 seasons while Europe has 1. Nationally south america and Europe have the best national teams, If I'm not mistaken Europe has only 1or 2 more world cups, but in terms of clubs Europe has the best leagues, the best south american players play in Europe as well.
Why does American Football call itself Football anyway? The foot plays barely a role in that game. Yeah, yeah, kicks and punts, but seriously. *Football* is a game about playing the *ball* (only) with the *foot*. Handball is about playing it with your hands. Basketball ist about putting a ball in a basket. Ice hockey is hockey on ice. Even the bases in Baseball have a more integral part then feet have in American Football!
Robin Koch Football, as in "ball game you play on feet". That's why mediaeval village football had practically no kicking. That's also why most footballs have handling, because kicking wasn't an integral part of the game. Association Football is a bit of a rarity as the public schools that formulated the rules had no fields to play on so they dribbled more with their feet. But everywhere else handling was the norm.
Soccer, abbreviation for Association Football. It was used to differenciate from other forms of football such as Rugby Football. The term was originated in Britain.
Plus the UEFA cup/Europa league which is the champions league but for the next best teams across Europe and those who fall out of the champions league. Plus most countries have a league cup on top of their main association cup, and occasionally a further cup like in England there is the charity shield played between the winner of the fa cup and the premier league.
that fourth devision teams playing in national cup, doesn't happen in every country, some countries have more than one cup competion, like france, portugal and englad, where professional and amateur a have the same chances of winning the cup (theoracly)
"Soccer" is a slang for football that originated in England itself in the late 19th century. Before the 1860s football and rugby didn't have much different rules and were under the same association. Then, 2 different lobbies decided to carve out two distinctly different games. One was "Rug"by football or "Rugger" in slang terms, regulated by the Rugby Union. And the other was As"soc"iation Football, or "Soccer" as a slang term, controlled by the Football Association. So that's where the term came from.
Hello from England glad to say you have an.open mind about sports and also English football and American football I am a fan of both and when September comes all football is back!
Football/Soccer: Football has been played in England since Roman times in various guises, mainly with no, or very loose rules. In the 18th and 19th Century, the elite private schools developed their own rules. However, they ran into problems when the scholars went on to university whereby they wanted to continue playing football but encountered people from different schools playing different rules. A standard set of rules was needed and led to the founding of the Football Association (FA for short) in 1862. However, some members left when the rules were decided and the majority opted for a predominantly kicking game that ruled out handling and carrying the ball. Those who were pro handling were inspired by the Rugby School rules. In their own circles both codes were known as Football, but differentiate - Association Football and Rugby Football. In upper class/private school slang they were referred to as ‘Soccer’ (from Association) and ‘Rugger’. As the two codes spread, it was Association Football that appealed more to the working classes, but also to more educated groups like lawyers and teachers. It became the ‘working class game’ with the mass appeal - and therefore in general terms, Football became to refer to Association Football. Rugby generally was the sport of the upper classes - with some anomalies, such as the mining towns of South Wales and the mill towns of Yorkshire and Lancashire (the latter would cause a split in Rugby which led to the present separate versions of Rugby - Union and League). The American Football code derived from Rugby and became the most common code in the US, which is why it’s known as Football - the dominant code in that particular area/country uses the general term Football. (What’s interesting is that Association Football was initially more popular than Rugby amongst most of the Ivy League instutions - Particularly Rutgers and Princeton. Harvard played their own handling game and in search of opponents, turned to Rugby playing McGill University in Canada. Harvard found a taste for Rugby and began lobbying the rest of the Ivy League into adopting Rugby, and then gradually they modified the rules, which morphed in to the American code. Most other countries call Association Football ‘Football’ or a similar name adapted into the local language, because Britain was the major industrial power in the 19th and early 20th century, building railways, factories, mines, electrical networks etc across the world. As the ‘working man’s game,’ British workers, engineers and sailors, as well as professionals such as lawyers and teachers, took Association Football with them, and the locals liked what they saw.
well no its called football for a start and it is played the same anywhere you go not one set of rules for europe and one set of rules for the rest of the world.
It is known as soccer in the US as it is an abbreviation of “Association Football” which are the rules which govern the game. It was also popularly called soccer in Britain early on in it’s conception but has reverted back to being called football.
Football (or as you call it, soccer) is not just a sport, people are really passionate about it, that's why the high numbers of comments. Plus any football related video can increase a channel viewers tenfold, you are the perfect example.
Steve Mcqueen you should you should see how passionate college American football fans are too.I was once at a game in literally the decibel level reached 120
Kinda got the German league relegation thing a bit wrong. The team that finishes 18th in the bundesliga face a relegation play off against the team that finishes 3rd in the 2nd bundesliga
In This Sporting Life,1960s kitchen sink drama starring Richard Harris,football is called soccer,from Association football.It was typicial for rugby players,league and union to call their sports football.Australia rules is commonly called footy,I think.
In England we have called football soccer, it's far, far less common but I remember kids football magazines that used the word soccer. So early on, the US must have seen the choice and chose the name they didn't already use.
Each team in Europe aspire to up to three titles: National League National Cup One European title (only the best few) The best of each nation (and not all of them) go to participate to either Europa League or Champions League. Champions League is the most prestigious by far European system is not based on Franchises, but actual companies. You can set up your own club anywhere, with your stadium, and if you do well enough you go qualfying up the leagues until you get to your top league and then Europe.
Bad example using the German League for Relegation... in Germany the bottom 2 go down and the 3rd bottom goes into a playoff match against 3rd top in the 2nd division. Winner stays/goes into the top division
We get the name "Soccer" from an abbreviated version of the words Association Football and also the Japanese call the sport soccer as well. The sport we call football comes from how long the football is, which is exactly a foot long. American football is very popular here in the states and soccer is starting to gain popularity but we couldnt call soccer the way Europeans because it would interfere with one our most popular sports so we shortened the words "Association Football" which is what it's called but they say football for short.
There is actually another international cup, called the UEFA Europe cup. Remember that national cup? The winners of the national cups play in a different tournament, joined by some of the third teams from the groups in the champions' league. It's not seen as being just as prestigious, but winning the Europe cup is still big for most teams.
Some leagues do have play-offs, some don't. Every league has its own rules. In Belgium we have play-offs with special rules, and it makes it more exciting
It's called soccer in america because when football first started out it split into two different sports Rugby football (Rugby) and Assosciation Football (Soccer for short). When the Game came to america they had already adapted Rugby football as football (Later evolved into American Football) so they kept Soccer! Hope this was helpful
“Football” is called “football” because it’s a sport involving a ball which is played on foot (not necessarily involving kicking it), compared to, for example, ball games played using a horse, like polo. The most popular sport in a country which is played in this way usually gets called “football” - in most of the world it’s “association football” sometimes abbreviated to “soccer”, in the US it’s “American football”, in Ireland it’s “Gaelic football”, in South Africa it’s “rugby union”, in different Australian states it’s either “rugby league” or “Australian Rules football”.
If you win your league (German Bundesliga, Premier League, French Ligue 1, La Liga Santander), your national cup, and intercontinental cup (UEFA Champions League), its known as a treble. Bascially, its a cup sweep.
Americans call it soccer because in the mid 19th century the official name of football was “association football” and it was shortened to “assoc”and then “soccer”, when the British took the sport to America, the Americans kept the name and English changed to “football”
Hey you may find this interesting, but Football (soccer) has been around at least since the 1500s maybe even before that. I'm not sure if there is an older sport.
the league the cup the champions league the super cup the national cup winners cup/ community shield the club world cup The league cup/ caribou cup (only for English football)
Jeff Dredd That's where you're wrong, I grew up in the US and I have relatives that like the sport, I grew up around it and have watched entire games many times.
Soccer is just the short term for Association Football, which is the actual full lenght name of Football/Soccer so basically both cultures refer to the same original name, but they shortened the word differently.
American call it soccer because you use the Oxford method of naming more stringently... it is short form for Association football... so take the middle bit of the first word... as-sociation-er (the er is the verb adfix) then it gets shortened again to Socer (that deosn't make sense so) as an extra c = soccer... America uses the Oxford method of naming more than we do in England... in England we have a version of American football called rugby but we call it Rugby Football league
vox did a video on US scoccer story, it might be a good way for you to understand why americans call it soccer. Short story, it's because of americans like to make their own rules (they really do, basketball is a good example). So they had one devision (Associacion) who played with different rules of the casual european football. And another where they played casual football. WW2 came, and froze up, when it got back again they had to built from scracth, so soccer only got a fair chance at the beging. We also have to remember, people over the other side of the world, have to wake up every early or don't sleep at all. It's the same thing for us if we want to see UFC or other American sports.
Good video, it comes from the word association and no it wasn't around as we know it during the revolutionary war the rules and forms were developed in the mid 1850's in England. If you wouldn't mind reviewing cheese rolling from Cooper's hill in the UK any year, I've done it twice first time I lost 2 teeth second time I dislocated my shoulder. Hoping to go this year.
I wonder why in the U.S. it's called football, even if the kicking part is minimal.
I know why.
In 1863 - the unified rules of association football were drawn up ... the schools wanted to play each other with the same rules.
The game they developed (which I've played in front of 1000 people) ... was the beginnings of two different games.
The game involved a heavy round ball - 4 possessions - the ability to scrummage for the ball - the ability to kick for goal out of your hands - the goal was just two massive long posts, no crossbar.
You also had to tap/bounce the ball once every 10 yards.
This is the version that got transported through the world in the early days - and, rightly, the locals decided to change some of the rules.
So, the Americans liked the 4-possession rule - but they preferred a more carriable ball ... and to be able to throw it forwards (a no-no in Cambridge Rules 1863 football - or its schismatic brother, Rugby)
The Australians couldn't give a XXXX about the 4-possession rule - but liked the tapping the ball every 10 yards thing. They added an extra two long goalposts so that near misses could score just one point.
The Irish Gaelic Football is the closest to the original rules (round ball, that you can carry - but have to tap every few yards) ... but it later fused it with soccer. Crossbar on the goal, 3 points for a goal, 1 point for hoofing it over (but between the massive long goalposts).
After that - the Football Association broke off from those that wanted to carry the ball around all the time, they kept the round ball and made it a strictly "foot" ball game. Being the Football AsSOCciation ... this version was called "soccer", even in England.
Rugby broke away too, only to suffer its own schism between Rugby Union and Rugby League.
All games named themselves "football".
Even rugby.
You'll hear commentators saying "St Helens is a great football team, they really are!" ... they're a superb Rugby League team!
But Rugby teams are often called "Leicester RFC" (Rugby Football Club)
In short - "football" is a term used to describe a wide variety of variations based on the 1863 Cambridge Rules.
Nope the ball is just 1 foot long no joke
It’s called handball but Americans would be in their feelings and would probably shoot up every school
The entire playing part is minimal.
Tropi Cano ~ Handball is a whole different sport.
Hand🖐Egg🏈
Foot👟Ball⚽️
Luke Del Toroski because it's an emotional sport and means a lot to the players and fans
Luke Del Toroski if the ref sees that he dove than he actually gets yellow card and sometimes red card so yeh...kinda do that already
Luke Del Toroski and golie being pulled is ridiculous idea because that means the players from opposing team can score from shooting all the way from the other pitch it wouldnt be fair. I won’t really blame u for it tho cause i know you dont know much about football(soccer)
Luke Del Toroski pulling out a golie is really ridiculous idea the game would be really boring cause the other team would score goals for 10-30 minutes straight, it would be like fucking 30-0 so yeah. Not attacking you just calling the idea stupid
Luke Del Toroski since u dont get it yet. Not. Gonna. Fucking. Happend
3:28 if u love underdog stories, react to Leicester city winning the premier league
Go Cry About it I'll put it on the list
Or Greece won the Euro 2004
Or Portugal winning the final of the Euro 2016 against the home team. ; )
Don't react to that... Even tho they won it, it was just pure anti-football.
salty french is still salty
He should have mentioned Europa League also and the fact that Winner of Europa League and Champions League then play for European Supercup. But it's a good explanation without that too.
SmokeDimi And the winner uf the league and the winner of the cup play for the supercup of the country.
SmokeDimi He also forgot to say that League Champions and The Cup Winner also play each other for a price
SmokeDimi he also forgot the fact that in the second division in England, the teams that finish 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th play in the playoffs for promotion
he also forgot to say that the winner of the champions league plays against 5 other teams (best teams in each continent) for the FIFA Club world cup
Yes their is so much when it comes to football👏🏾💪🏿
you can win an aditional trophy...when a team wins the UEFA Champions League then is something called "Intercontinental cup" in which the european winner of Champions league play against the winner of Copa Libertadores (the latin-american version of uefa champions league)
I'm Brazilian and we have state championships (Carioca, Paulista and etc.), the cup (Copa do Brasil), the league (Brasileirão) where 4 teams are relegated, we have Championships like Copa Verde and Copa do Nordeste too. The Copa Libertadores is the Champions League and the Copa Sudamericana is the Europe League of South America. In the end of year the Champions of each confederation play the World Club Championship.
D Freire yeah, but the Brazilian clubs are really shit
gabriel tenera football noob spotted
eldiego68 he isn't wrong, if the best south american clubs played in Europe they'd probably not even make it to Europe League, it's rare for south american clubs to beat European ones, south america does have good players, but European clubs have better conditions and money, they buy players from south america and develop them cheap to sell at higher price in Europe, with few exceptions.
PVP Tawa that has nothing to do with what the guy said...
gracias por explicarle que hay mas futbol que el europeo!
In South America we have:
Libertadores (Our continental championship just like Champios League)
Each continent has its own championship and in the end of the year the winner of each one play one another to know who's the best football club in the world that year.
A few points:
1 - relegation doesn´t exist in the US because it's a franchise system. The league is a business with a owner. And rich people buy the rights to own a franchise, and the league even decides how many clubs can exist per city, etc. Nobody will buy a franchise if a bad season can put you in second division.
2 - the system is quite different by country, but in many countries, including most of South America, clubs have no owners. They are social clubs dedicated to sport, meaning the fans own the club. You can get associated to your club, and vote for president, councilors, etc.
3 - while the system is more stratified in Europe, in some countries, like Brazil, there were experimentation with different formats. Brazil only adopted the league system in its national competition in 2003. Before that there were play-offs too.
4 - not sure, but I guess the point of the video is soccer in general, not ONLY in Europe. In Brazil, besides the usual national cup, national league and continental cup, there are also STATE leagues (with playoffs) which run in the first 2-3 months of the season/year (it's southern hemisphere, so season start in february and run until end of november)
5 - video forgot to talk about the NATIONAL teams. Unlike american football, in soccer, national football is much more important and so that should also be mentioned.
Ain't nobody got time to read this
See I would love to say that what you said there was perfect. But you kept on calling it soccer when it's a ball that you nearly all the time kick with your foot (apart from headers and when someone is passing it to you kinda high then you let it bounce of York chest). Football m8 it's football
In other words...its a shit system and Soccer is better in every way
Red Bull Leipzig and Salzburg: Are we a joke to you?
@@Leo-S-Ellen i used the word soccer twice.
I wrote that to an US American. I also don't think you have a problem that Italians call it calccio.
European soccer? are you kidding me?
77 k well, it’s about soccer in Europe
@@pic4315 omg you ****. In Europe we call it football not some f***ing soccer
Petr Hájek I’m Spanish a**hole. I said soccer because it’s an american video, in Spain we say Futbol (football) too, so shut up what are you talking about
Americans call it soccer. The rest of the world football.. But americans think they are right.
@@petrhajek4869 You idiot, we don't call it football in Poland (but piłka nożna), nor do they call it football in Germany (but Fußball), in Italy they call it calcio. This is an American video where they call it soccer. How difficult is it to get? Simply said - we DO NOT CALL IT FOOTBALL IN EUROPE. That's what it's called in the UK.
Hi from Portugal! 🇵🇹
Afonso Mendes hey!!!!
Afonso Mendes 🇬🇭
Bro, nunca pensei encontrar um português aqui ahahahah
@@telmopena1366 os tugas estão em todo o lado 😅
this comment is Cringe AF.
Winning the three trophies in one year is called the Treble and is rare, but Man Utd did it in 1999, plus Barcelona in 2015, and I think it’s only happened like 7 times or something
Danny Cheesums Bayern to I think in 2014
@@speedpassat4075 2013
PSV Twice
Inter Milan in 2010
Man City in 2023
Actually, there's only 1 parade, even if you win all 3. Some teams are so used to winning, that they don't do parades at all
English Football is a really old game. It originated during the Mid-Medieval Period and was, in its earliest form, a game without rules or regulations (it was also violent and injuries were fairly common . An entire village would play against another village and the game was won when the ball (either a pigs bladder or stone) was landed into the opponents village (similarly to Rugby), except the distance between the two villages could be 2-3 miles and each team could have up to 100 players. The game gradually evolved into two distinct games over the next few centuries, one was called Rugby and the other was Association Football. American Football is more closely related to Rugby (the two games are very similar in fact) but took the name as Football due to Rugby being referred to as a type of football (Rugby Football).
soccer is a 'pet-name' for 'association foot ball' - You americans are not to blame for calling it soccer. That name came with british people to america
We now call it football because you kick the ball with your foot, honestly are you guys just not in the times or what
I give you sh*t, that doesn't mean you have to eat it.
Da vid WTF are you saying Bruv?
+Leo Ellen Omg... I mean the British invented the word "soccer", but that doesn't mean you Americans have to use it. Don't use that pathetic excuse to justify the way you call the sport.
Leo Ellen Bit that's not what football means. It means it's a ball game you play on foot.
Hey in the US do they call football, football because the egg ball thing is a foot long ?
it was a way to say things in a slang during the late 1800's/early 1900's to add "-er" at the end of words. Soccer is a nickname for asSOCiation football in old timey slang, basically. Idk if anybody commented that clearly enough yet but in case not, here you go lol
The name of football (as I understand it) Football used to be a catch all name for any number of games played in the British Isles - but mostly in England - from at least medieval times. In the mid 19th century Cambridge University codified the rules, so that their undergraduates, who had mostly come from the big, famous, private schools, all of which played a different version of football, could play each other. These rules were adopted by the newly formed English Football Association and this new codified game was called Association Football. As stated, 'Soccer' is a corruption of the word 'association' and was commonly used in the UK for much of the 20th. As mentioned above, the big private boys schools all played their own version of football, this included Rugby School, and their game became what we call Rugby - which is really called Rugby Football but the word ‘football’ has been mostly dropped by both codes. However before that happened, it was taken to America where it morphed into what Americans call Football.
They used the german league for relegation even though german relegation works different
The winner of the champions league trophy also automatically qualifies for the FIFA Club World Cup. there the best club from europe will take on Champions from other continents such as the winner of the Asian champions league etc.
Actually the sport is Egyptian and is from 2500 BC but the earliest name that we know of is Episkyros dating back to around the year 600 BC in Ancient Greece.
The word "soccer" actually originated in England sometime in the 1870's. At the time the primary form of football (soccer) was played in the Football Association. Another form of football (rugby football) was gaining popularity in England, so to distinguish between the two, nicknames were given: "rugger" to rugby football, and "soccer" to association football.
Association football became known by this English nickname in countries that were already pioneering their own game called football. Australia had what we know as "Aussie rules football." America adopted the nickname in the early part of the twentieth century to shorten their sports from American football and association football.
England used the terms interchangeably (often with the hybrid "soccer football") until around the 1980's when the sport grew in popularity in America whilst being known as soccer. England rejected the colloquialism as being associated with Yankee culture.
Apologies for the long comment, but I hope it's proven helpful.
Originally FOOTball wasn’t named for using feet, but differentiating it from rich people ball games like Polo that were played on horseback. It’s a ball game played „on foot“. That’s why people didn’t agree on using hands or not.
In Finnish language we have sports called:
"Jalkapallo" and "Pesäpallo" directly translated as "Football" and "Baseball", but either one doesn't means what americans call football and baseball :D
In Finnish language your "Baseball" is "Baseball" and your "Football" is "Amerikkalainen jalkapallo" but it's too long word to say -.- so in slang it's "Jenkkifutis" meaning "Yankee football"
Leo Partanen
Love it xD
Association football started a very long time ago in England Preston was actually one of the founding teams .A nickname for Association football became soccer.
In bundesliga the club that is 16th in the table is not automatically relegated. They go into a playoff with the 3rd best club from the 2nd division.
in germany the 3rd last place doesn't automatically go down. they have either a one leg or two leg tie against the team that came 3rd in the 2nd division
Actually "soccer" is an English (as in England in the UK) term: when they were defining the rules that basically split football (soccer) from rugby the organisation that did it was Football Association and from that "association" you have soccer... why Americans use this obsolete term... well, you still use miles and gallons, so...
Skerdy that’s very true, but what’s infuriating is that you call American rugby ‘football’ and some Americans refuse to call ‘soccer’ football
@@alexs7028 it shouldn’t be infuriating. American football started before The Football Association and the Rugby Football Union were created (Ruhby dropped the „football“ much later. At the time using hands in football was completely normal.
Football wasn’t even named after kicking the ball with your feet. It’s was named that because it was played „on foot“ as opposed to royal ball games like Polo that were played on horseback. Even the English used the term soccer well into the 1960s. Just because they don’t like it anymore doesn’t give them the right to dictate what to call something on the other side of the world.
One more thing he forgot to mention is that 3rd team in each group of Champions league playoffs play in not so popular competition called Europa League and the winner even if he is not in position in the league allowing him to qualify for the Champions league,he is quallifying thanks to winning the Europa league.And depending ot the position in the league a team can directly qualify for Champions league or Europa league or play playoffs for a spot in either compettion,and as you can guess involvement in one of the tournaments can give a club big income and more popularity.
In England, the worst 3 teams in the First Division (Premier League) are relegated. The top 2 teams in the Second Division (EFL Championship) are promoted at the end of the season. Then the teams that are placed 3-6 in the championship go into what they call the ‘Championship Playoffs’. 3rd v 6th playing Home and away. 4th v 5th playing Home and away. Then the winners of those 2 ties go to the national stadium and play 1 game and the winner of that goes into the First Division.
In germany it’s actually only the bottom 2 teams that automatically gets relegated. The 3 to last team plays against the team that got third in the second divison to decide what team gets relegated
a lot of irish people call football soccer too because they have their own version of 'football' called gaelic football, just like americans have their own football, 'american football'.
Connor Howitt haha great joke
Connor Howitt i have a friend from ireland and he is a celtic fan
I didn't hear him say soccer just 1 time
Connor Howitt irish people do not call it soccer! That's rubbish!
messi lionel
my cousins and their friends do, and I've got over 20 cousins.
don't use yourself as the pool, other places and people will be different, but Ireland calling football, soccer is not uncommon
ken Hudson Irish people do, I’m Irish we sometimes call it soccer
got to this video by just clicking around the youtubes...
no idea who this dude is but im surprised as fuck that he actually listened to the stuff and didnt talk shit.
props
Australians also call it soccer because they have aussie rules football and some countries have 2 cup competitions and the league example England has the FA cup ( in which any team from amateurs to professionals play in) the league cup ( in which only professional teams play) and the league
*World Football*
Also Rugby League in Oz is called Footy mostly
In Australia football fans call it football and non football fans call it soccer
Watch the official interviews/press conference of the Australian national team, the coach and players call the sport football instead of soccer.
Da vid Of course they would. But normal people don't necessarily.
4:55 Well. not only 3 trophies. In total you can win 6 on the same season, as F.C.Barcelona did a few years ago. Apart from the league, the cup and the Champions League, there are 3 more trophies, at least in Spain, that you can win at the same time: The Supercup (played by the former league winner and the former cup winner), the European Super Cup (played by the former Champions League winner and a the former UEFA Cup winner) and the FIFA Club World cup (played by the forner Champions League winner and a team from another continent who won itself their own particular Champions League in that continent).
ya know I was gonna do a reverse to this on my channel trying to understand American Football from a UK man so after watching this yeah deffo got me interested also good video man always good to see people trying to understand football
N5: All champions from their respective continents (confederations) play for the FIFA Club World Cup.
UEFA: Europe / CONCACAF: North&Central America / CONMEBOL: South America / CAF: Africa / OFC: Oceania / AFC: Asia
The club that results to be the world champion gets to wear a golden emblem on their shirt as a reminder for other teams that they are the reingin champs. This is also true for World Cup (countries), Copa America (countries) and Euro Cup (countries) champions. You can see it in Germany, Chilean and Real Madrid shirts for example.
The maximum amount of trophies you could win as a English team is 7. But that is the most extreme case where everything falls into place. Prem, FA cup, EFL Cup, Community shield, Champions League, Super cup, Club world cup.
European Soccer? You know that Football (Soccer) is played world wide and not only in Europe?
IIVGameForceIIV The video explained football in europe not the rest of the world
Derrick Kowalczuk He used European leagues yes, but this is how all the leagues in the world works.
Only European soccer has the Champions League buddy
IIVGameForceIIV not all some leagues have regular season then playoffs like American sports
Rami Mwamba wrong Africa also has champions league and other continents probably too
Point 5: The Europe League: The winner of all national cups in Europe and the runner ups in the national leagues (about place 3-6) play in the Europe League (former UEFA Cup). It's structured exactly like Champions League. The winner gets a trophy and can play in Champions League in the next year.
The word "soccer," which is believed to have originated in Britain some 200 years ago, comes from the official name of the sport, "association football." As other versions of the game evolved to include Rugby Football, it is believed the Brits adopted colloquialisms to distinguish each game.
it’s because they used to give sports nick names by adding -er to the end. rugby football used to be called rugged and association football (football) was soccer
it was actually soccer world wide but was then changed to futball but the USA never changed the naming
It's called soccer because in England It is called association football and was at first shortened to soccer instead football due to rugby also being called rugby football which got shortened to rugby. Then America played rugby which evolved in to gridiron football you shortened that to football and kept soccer as the name for association football and rest of the world switched the name soccer to football. Thats the short answer to why Americans call it soccer.
Andrew Furey wrong
Edith Hernández back yourself with some facts or shut up
That is true as long as you completely ignore the several hundred years before it was association football and was infact just called Football.
Its original name is Football.
Adam Butters i did say it is the short answer to the question
That`s true Except Rugby was shortend to Rugger not Rugby
There used to be a programme on British commercial tv called Midweek Soccer, which showed a match played on that day. Therefore people my age would use the term soccer as much football. The term soccer was invented in 19th century England as a slang word for Association Football. As far as I know. the word was invented by English Victorian Schoolboys.
People who play Rugby, from which American Fooball is derived, will also refer to their game as either rugby football or just football and "football" as soccer, to avoid confusion, if that makes sense.
Most countries also have a second cup competition, in some form or another. There is also a second tier Europe wide competition, for teams ranked just below the top teams in their national leagues and for national cup winners.
P.S. It's football because it's played with your feet... and a ball. ;)
The league in each country can have a total different format as well... (In belgium there is a play off system after regular competition with the top 6 teams. For some strange reason... they half each team's points to create more tension & those 6 teams play eachother twice again and the team with the most points in the end becomes champion. This system is ridiculous, especially the points that get divided in half, but it's basically done to get more TV money, since there aren't many leagues anymore that can compete vs the bigger leagues, just cause of the ridiculous amount of money that goes around in football.)
Next to the champions league, you also have the Europa League (less bigger teams that eventually get combined with the 3rd out of the group stages from the champions league).
In several countries there are also more than 1 cup in a season (premier league as example)
They forgot to mention how play offs work. They mentioned it but you know. In england.
4 divisions (top to bottom)
Premier league
Championship
League 1
League 2
Whoever wins premier league goes to champions league, keep in mind unless you get relegated in the prem, you stay. Winning means you play in both the prem and champions league
Whoever loses each league goes down, whoever loses league 2 goes to semi professional
Whoever wins each league below the premier league goes up to the above league. Basic
Play offs in england work like this:
The teams who come 3rd to 6th at the end of the season are in play off position. The team who came 3rd plays the 6th team and the 4th team plays the 5th. Whoever wins out of those games play at Wembley, the greatest stadium in the UK. Whoever wins overall gets promoted to the next league along with the other 2 who came 1st and 2nd
I’m from Canada and tbh we use the word “football” interchangeably between gridiron football and association football. If we are talking about the association football games we will say football or the same with the NFL or CFL
There are playoffs in lower leagues if they don’t have enough points for automatic promotion it is like a mini competition to get promoted
he forgot the Europe cup league, meaning the team that stays in 3rd place in the group stage of CL, will go the Europe Cup League, where the teams that stayed from 3rd to 6th place in their country league will play, and it is the method than the CL.
Can you please tell me (i legit don't know) what's the difference btw American Football and Rugby? (Beside the armour)
They are basically the same. Our football was very similar to rugby in the early days
LunaWolfMXS they tackle, have goal posts, carry and throw and oblong ball. That’s about it. In reality, the two sports are very different.
I don't really get all the outrage with people saying that Americans are ignorant to all other sports apart from their own. As an Englishman I don't fully understand how the draft picks work, or differentiate between different American football positions. I'm just not bothered about the sport, and that's fine. Some people over here follow American sports and some Americans follow football, but if you don't and it's just not something you're interested in, then who cares? 😂
The point is that it's America vs the world and not England vs America.
Couple of things I want to add: not every european league plays from august to may. You also have the europa league, which is basically the champions league for the 2nd best teams in europe who didn't qualify for champions league.
The english actually came up with the word soccer because the soc of soccer is sort for association because the english used to like to shorten things down
The interesting thing is most of the MLS team are FC.
Seattle Sounders FC.
Los Angeles Football Club.
FC Dallas.
Toronto FC.
Atlanta United FC
New York City Football Club and so on...
Each country usually has more than 1 cup, there are 2 big European competitions, Champions League and Europe League, the 1st in country league is invited to Champions League group phase, 2nd in country league enters the Champions League playoffs and if they win they also join the group phase. The 3rd-4rd in country league join Europe League group phase, the 3rd in each group of the Champions League drop down to Europe League elimination tournament.
At the start of the next season, the winner of the last Europe League faces the winner of the last Champions League in a supercup.
At the end of the league starts the club world cup with the best of Africa, America, Asia and Europe, usually Europe or America wins, mostly Europe.
The american finalist is mostly if not always from South America.
The south american leagues have less resting time, they have twice the ammount of league games per year, and 2 seasons while Europe has 1.
Nationally south america and Europe have the best national teams, If I'm not mistaken Europe has only 1or 2 more world cups, but in terms of clubs Europe has the best leagues, the best south american players play in Europe as well.
Complete name for football is “Association Football” . Association was shortened to Assoc, then to Soccer along the years.
Why does American Football call itself Football anyway? The foot plays barely a role in that game. Yeah, yeah, kicks and punts, but seriously.
*Football* is a game about playing the *ball* (only) with the *foot*.
Handball is about playing it with your hands.
Basketball ist about putting a ball in a basket.
Ice hockey is hockey on ice.
Even the bases in Baseball have a more integral part then feet have in American Football!
Robin Koch It's an abbreviation of American Style Rugby Skill Football.
Robin Koch Football, as in "ball game you play on feet". That's why mediaeval village football had practically no kicking. That's also why most footballs have handling, because kicking wasn't an integral part of the game. Association Football is a bit of a rarity as the public schools that formulated the rules had no fields to play on so they dribbled more with their feet. But everywhere else handling was the norm.
Robin Koch we just grew up calling it that and that’s what sticks in our heads
Because it’s based off Rugby Football. That’s why.
Pretty much how it is over here in Europe, however the relegation/promotion process is slightly more complex
I like your attitude to this topic. You are a great person.
The word 'soccer' was used regularly in England during 50 and 60s. It's a derivative of Association Football.
Soccer, abbreviation for Association Football. It was used to differenciate from other forms of football such as Rugby Football. The term was originated in Britain.
Plus the UEFA cup/Europa league which is the champions league but for the next best teams across Europe and those who fall out of the champions league. Plus most countries have a league cup on top of their main association cup, and occasionally a further cup like in England there is the charity shield played between the winner of the fa cup and the premier league.
that fourth devision teams playing in national cup, doesn't happen in every country, some countries have more than one cup competion, like france, portugal and englad, where professional and amateur a have the same chances of winning the cup (theoracly)
"Soccer" is a slang for football that originated in England itself in the late 19th century. Before the 1860s football and rugby didn't have much different rules and were under the same association. Then, 2 different lobbies decided to carve out two distinctly different games. One was "Rug"by football or "Rugger" in slang terms, regulated by the Rugby Union. And the other was As"soc"iation Football, or "Soccer" as a slang term, controlled by the Football Association. So that's where the term came from.
Hello from England glad to say you have an.open mind about sports and also English football and American football I am a fan of both and when September comes all football is back!
Football/Soccer: Football has been played in England since Roman times in various guises, mainly with no, or very loose rules.
In the 18th and 19th Century, the elite private schools developed their own rules. However, they ran into problems when the scholars went on to university whereby they wanted to continue playing football but encountered people from different schools playing different rules. A standard set of rules was needed and led to the founding of the Football Association (FA for short) in 1862. However, some members left when the rules were decided and the majority opted for a predominantly kicking game that ruled out handling and carrying the ball. Those who were pro handling were inspired by the Rugby School rules. In their own circles both codes were known as Football, but differentiate - Association Football and Rugby Football.
In upper class/private school slang they were referred to as ‘Soccer’ (from Association) and ‘Rugger’.
As the two codes spread, it was Association Football that appealed more to the working classes, but also to more educated groups like lawyers and teachers. It became the ‘working class game’ with the mass appeal - and therefore in general terms, Football became to refer to Association Football. Rugby generally was the sport of the upper classes - with some anomalies, such as the mining towns of South Wales and the mill towns of Yorkshire and Lancashire (the latter would cause a split in Rugby which led to the present separate versions of Rugby - Union and League).
The American Football code derived from Rugby and became the most common code in the US, which is why it’s known as Football - the dominant code in that particular area/country uses the general term Football. (What’s interesting is that Association Football was initially more popular than Rugby amongst most of the Ivy League instutions - Particularly Rutgers and Princeton. Harvard played their own handling game and in search of opponents, turned to Rugby playing McGill University in Canada. Harvard found a taste for Rugby and began lobbying the rest of the Ivy League into adopting Rugby, and then gradually they modified the rules, which morphed in to the American code.
Most other countries call Association Football ‘Football’ or a similar name adapted into the local language, because Britain was the major industrial power in the 19th and early 20th century, building railways, factories, mines, electrical networks etc across the world. As the ‘working man’s game,’ British workers, engineers and sailors, as well as professionals such as lawyers and teachers, took Association Football with them, and the locals liked what they saw.
Some of the oldest football (soccer) clubs in the world were founded and active in the mid-1800’s. So it’s been around for a long time
why is it called european soccer its played throughout the entire world
michael fallon I named it that personally to annoy you
michael fallon just you though
Michael: Maybe the video is called "European soccer" because the video explains the rules of a typical european league...
well no its called football for a start and it is played the same anywhere you go not one set of rules for europe and one set of rules for the rest of the world.
Well it looks like you don't get it, so think what you want.
It is known as soccer in the US as it is an abbreviation of “Association Football” which are the rules which govern the game. It was also popularly called soccer in Britain early on in it’s conception but has reverted back to being called football.
Football (or as you call it, soccer) is not just a sport, people are really passionate about it, that's why the high numbers of comments.
Plus any football related video can increase a channel viewers tenfold, you are the perfect example.
Steve Mcqueen you should you should see how passionate college American football fans are too.I was once at a game in literally the decibel level reached 120
Kinda got the German league relegation thing a bit wrong. The team that finishes 18th in the bundesliga face a relegation play off against the team that finishes 3rd in the 2nd bundesliga
3 trophies! Exactly! It’s called a triple and it’s the pinnacle of club football! Good observation.
In This Sporting Life,1960s kitchen sink drama starring Richard Harris,football is called soccer,from Association football.It was typicial for rugby players,league and union to call their sports football.Australia rules is commonly called footy,I think.
In England we have called football soccer, it's far, far less common but I remember kids football magazines that used the word soccer. So early on, the US must have seen the choice and chose the name they didn't already use.
There is also a World Cup for clubs, aftet each continents cup winner is confirmed, they play against each other to be crowned the World Champion
Each team in Europe aspire to up to three titles:
National League
National Cup
One European title (only the best few)
The best of each nation (and not all of them) go to participate to either Europa League or Champions League.
Champions League is the most prestigious by far
European system is not based on Franchises, but actual companies. You can set up your own club anywhere, with your stadium, and if you do well enough you go qualfying up the leagues until you get to your top league and then Europe.
There are multiple cups in a season for example the league cup and fa cup in england
Any kingcaza videos
Bad example using the German League for Relegation... in Germany the bottom 2 go down and the 3rd bottom goes into a playoff match against 3rd top in the 2nd division. Winner stays/goes into the top division
We get the name "Soccer" from an abbreviated version of the words Association Football and also the Japanese call the sport soccer as well. The sport we call football comes from how long the football is, which is exactly a foot long. American football is very popular here in the states and soccer is starting to gain popularity but we couldnt call soccer the way Europeans because it would interfere with one our most popular sports so we shortened the words "Association Football" which is what it's called but they say football for short.
There is actually another international cup, called the UEFA Europe cup. Remember that national cup? The winners of the national cups play in a different tournament, joined by some of the third teams from the groups in the champions' league. It's not seen as being just as prestigious, but winning the Europe cup is still big for most teams.
Some leagues do have play-offs, some don't. Every league has its own rules. In Belgium we have play-offs with special rules, and it makes it more exciting
It's called soccer in america because when football first started out it split into two different sports Rugby football (Rugby) and Assosciation Football (Soccer for short). When the Game came to america they had already adapted Rugby football as football (Later evolved into American Football) so they kept Soccer! Hope this was helpful
Soccer comes from Association Football and was actually coined by the English to accommodate Gridiron/American Football
“Football” is called “football” because it’s a sport involving a ball which is played on foot (not necessarily involving kicking it), compared to, for example, ball games played using a horse, like polo. The most popular sport in a country which is played in this way usually gets called “football” - in most of the world it’s “association football” sometimes abbreviated to “soccer”, in the US it’s “American football”, in Ireland it’s “Gaelic football”, in South Africa it’s “rugby union”, in different Australian states it’s either “rugby league” or “Australian Rules football”.
If you win your league (German Bundesliga, Premier League, French Ligue 1, La Liga Santander), your national cup, and intercontinental cup (UEFA Champions League), its known as a treble. Bascially, its a cup sweep.
Its football
Americans call it soccer because in the mid 19th century the official name of football was “association football” and it was shortened to “assoc”and then “soccer”, when the British took the sport to America, the Americans kept the name and English changed to “football”
Hey you may find this interesting, but Football (soccer) has been around at least since the 1500s maybe even before that. I'm not sure if there is an older sport.
no you can win up to 6 or 7 trophes depending on the league
the league
the cup
the champions league
the super cup
the national cup winners cup/ community shield
the club world cup
The league cup/ caribou cup (only for English football)
Interesting fact: If a team wins the League , The League Cup, AND the UCL in the same season its reffered to as winning the "Treble".
Yerah, it's called "European soccer" only in murica. For the whole rest of the world it's "football".
Football is football.
American football ( as you call it ) = RUGBY
NFL= National Fake rugby League
watered down gay Rugby
American football came from rugby. Again also from the english
@@mariohds86 You can't call it a bad game because you don't understand the rules, it's just as ignorant as the yanks who say the same about football.
Jeff Dredd That's where you're wrong, I grew up in the US and I have relatives that like the sport, I grew up around it and have watched entire games many times.
Soccer is just the short term for Association Football, which is the actual full lenght name of Football/Soccer so basically both cultures refer to the same original name, but they shortened the word differently.
In Scotland each team plays each other 3 times in their league and some teams in Europe can win 4 or 5 trophies a season
Damn i love this channel already
American call it soccer because you use the Oxford method of naming more stringently... it is short form for Association football... so take the middle bit of the first word... as-sociation-er (the er is the verb adfix) then it gets shortened again to Socer (that deosn't make sense so) as an extra c = soccer... America uses the Oxford method of naming more than we do in England... in England we have a version of American football called rugby but we call it Rugby Football league
vox did a video on US scoccer story, it might be a good way for you to understand why americans call it soccer. Short story, it's because of americans like to make their own rules (they really do, basketball is a good example). So they had one devision (Associacion) who played with different rules of the casual european football. And another where they played casual football. WW2 came, and froze up, when it got back again they had to built from scracth, so soccer only got a fair chance at the beging. We also have to remember, people over the other side of the world, have to wake up every early or don't sleep at all. It's the same thing for us if we want to see UFC or other American sports.
Soccer is an English term. The full name was association football which they shortened to either football or soccer
Good video, it comes from the word association and no it wasn't around as we know it during the revolutionary war the rules and forms were developed in the mid 1850's in England.
If you wouldn't mind reviewing cheese rolling from Cooper's hill in the UK any year, I've done it twice first time I lost 2 teeth second time I dislocated my shoulder. Hoping to go this year.
Not only in USA. Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Japan, South Korea also call it soccer.
Out of 195 nations 10 are calling different, what this says to you