The “well said” from the team captain. Perfect response to motivate a team. Also, he woulda done the same thing. On a side note, this is a perfect set up for next team captain. The difference is the last thing the previous captain (Kent) has to teach is how to control the emotions. It’s good to have fire. Good to be tough. Just, important to know WHEN to drive the emotions and WHEN to hold back the emotions. 👌
Love Dani Rojas being the most wholesome man on earth. He looks at Jamie and says: "Amigo Jamie" with a tone that makes us think he's really missing their friendly competition on the field.
I think Ted seeing Jamie's dad getting abusive made him a bit more forgiving. And I think it paid off. He's friendly with the whole team, especially with Roy and Sam.
one of the things ted is good at is not caring what someone says or does if he understands why they said or did it and that the why of it can be changed. like him forgiving jaime without an apology is similar to him forgiving rebecca with one
Only Jamie could say those things and believe what he is saying is correct. He is (an old comedian that would mix up sayings like they were real and correct) soccer's NORM CROSBY, he would just butcher the English language.
Also chose him because he subtly displayed a push for the other players to participate in group activities You can see an example of it when the team is watching “The Iron Giant”
Oh man. Imagine if Jamie had stayed at Richmond and they had to explain to Ted that because City is Jamie's parent club, he can't play against them. "Wait, they gave him to us to develop him?" "That's right." "But we can't use him this weekend?" "Also right."
It was nice of Ted to forgive Rebecca, but it bothers me that she never confesses to the team. She messed with thier careers and it Jamie's case sent him back to City and let Ted take the blame. I know she didn't know about his father but she knew what she did was wrong and trying to escape his fathers abuse was the reason Jaime did the reality show and sabotaged his career. Yes, Jamie is responsible for his choices but she messed with his and the entire teams careers and just gets away with it without ever apologizing to them. Jaime apologized and tried to make amends for his behavior.
Well to be fair, stuff like that is usually kept very under wraps in actual football clubs so it makes sense that only Ted and Rebecca would know about it
"Yeah, it's dumb." Darn right, Coach Beard! I don't think that you could really have relegation for American football (just because there isn't really a stable second tier), and the farm system pretty much makes that impossible in baseball, but I would love to see it in basketball. If a team wants to tank and put out a Development League-caliber team, make them play in the D-League.
@@mitchrudolph65 No, the owners are the ones who suffer as well under relegation. Take The Process. It was four years of intentionally putting bad teams on the floor in the hope that, just maybe, someday, they would get enough draft picks to get a winner. It only stopped when the NBA had enough. Who knows how long it would have gone on, and you couldn't go a week without stories on WIP about the latest money-grabbing move from the owner. He's the same guy who owns Crystal Palace, and he _never_ tries anything like that with them. When he did it here, he was rewarded with a top draft pick.
@@mitchrudolph65 Coming from Australia, we have the same issue as America with no relegation. One thing to point out is that both countries are very big geographically and the costs of teams traveling for games (in the A-league its a 6.5 hour trip between Perth and Wellington) are too much for it to be viable in a second tier league. After the national leagues at the top most sports, even the really successful spots in Australia have second tier state leagues and given we have 6 states, you can't really have promotion/relegation of 6 teams a year.
@@mitchrudolph65 So, it's better to spend most of your existence playing meaningless games? How is that rewarding for the fans? And European teams aren't _nearly_ as subsidized as our team, so nobody's going bankrupt.
@@mitchrudolph65 For basketball or hockey? Even if you aren't mathematically eliminated, if you are bad enough, you know pretty early on if you don't have it.
@@mitchrudolph65 Did you not see where I said that there aren't enough football teams to set up a pyramid? And, you are aware that only the bottom three get relegated in the Premier League, right? In other words, the really bad teams who were in a league where half the teams make the playoffs would be the ones who would need to shape up or risk relegation if a pyramid existed, but who are playing for nothing and trying to get top draft picks so have more motivation to lose rather than playing for their very survival and having nothing to play for.
Since people argue about the sense of relegation: Please remember the draft and other mechanisms present in US sports. If there was no draft and teams could pick/hire their players like they do in Europe/Football, not having a relegation would suck tremendously. But because the worst teams can pick first, the franchise system works - kind of atleast.
The franchise system is weird because it means there’s no upwards mobility of clubs, so if you want to play to the highest standard you HAVE to live in one of X cities, and no franchise has to worry about its overall record, IE a team could intentionally lose 2 or 3 seasons, earn the first picks, and all of a sudden they could absolutely storm the podium with their new star players
If we had relegation....No more Jets jokes...No more Jaguar jokes...No more Texans jokes... I mean, who would the top tier college teams play against for high profile games? Hell, if your team sucks bad enough, the commissioner takes pity, bribes, and shady tactics, to hand you number one picks in the lottery draft for the NHL. How else do you think Pittsburg got Crosby and the rest?
Even the worst teams in recent NFL history would absolutely slaughter any college teams. Even the 2008 Lions would murder even the best college teams of the past few decades. The game is just different. College teams have way more holes in their lineup, and any NFL team would just exploit it over and over again.
as a fan of a team that got relegated in recent years, if the jokes are entrenched enough they never go away, trust me on that. Bonus jokes, if the team is mediocre even after relegation.
I mean, Crosby wasn’t really a result of the lottery draft. The penguins were the worst team in the league prior to his draft, so another team getting the first pick would have been sketchier.
@@gabe2349 Except there was no season before the Crosby-Draft (04/05 Lockout), with 3 other teams being considered as bad as the Penguins for this Draft and they picked 6th, 12th (after a trade up from 16th) and 13th respectively. Sounds like pure lottery luck to me. People were suspicious because there were rumors of the Pens being sold and relocated and Bettman allegedly trying desperately to keep them in Pittsburgh.
I'm a Canadian who didn't watch football growing up, and really had no idea about how relegation worked. After watching this show, yeah, it's really stupid that teams can't get relegated for being shit in North American sports leagues.
Franchises in North American sports are like the territories of US during expansion. to be accepted u must meet requirements. in europe the system works differently...
Counterpoint: Salary caps and drafts have kept parity (over a long enough timeline) in North American leagues very high compared to the vast majority of promotion/relegation systems. In any given year, there's usually between 1-4 teams in any given top flight that actually has a chance at winning, and turnover in those groups is insanely slow (if it happens at all). Think of RM/Barca, Bayern/Dortmund, the Top 4 in England sloooooowly morphing into a Top 6 over the course of 15 years, and so on. Usually there's only movement if some big money owner comes in and buys their way into success (see: Man City). Meanwhile in the US, salary caps prevent teams in (most) leagues from overspending to create all-star teams. Drafts allow for high-end prospects to help turn around the lowest teams. In the NFL, 29 of the 32 teams have been in the playoffs in the past 5 years. Same can be said of the NHL. 26 of 32 NFL teams have won at least one playoff game in the last 10 years. Only 1 NHL team hasn't won a playoff series in the last 10 years. In the last 10 years of the US's "Big Four" leagues: 14 different teams in the Stanley Cup Finals. 11 different teams in the Super Bowl. 8 different teams in the NBA Finals (which includes 4 consecutive GSW/Cleveland finals and 2 consecutive Spurs/Heat finals). 13 different teams in the World Series. In England, you maaaaaaaybe have the best case for parity in a relegation system: In 10 seasons, 7 teams have made it to the UCL (at least one of which only did so once). A further 6 have made the Europa League. That's it. With all the clubs yo-yoing in and out, hardly anyone can crack into the top, and most of them just go back down a year or two after going up. And it's worse (much worse) everywhere else across Europe.
I think there is just too much of a quality gap between the different levels of mainstream sports in America. For example, if you took the best minor league Baseball team or best College Football team and played them against the worst MLB or NFL team --- they would get slaughtered! At best, maybe 15% of the players on the lower-level team will ever be good enough to play in the higher level.
I think time would fix this nfl reservist would choose rather to play in the second tear then sit on the bench in the first tear. So the talent level get more equal and players get more playing time and more chances to develop.
I love how American sport teams don’t have relegation. NBA is an perfect example. It’s so competitive and each teams has the opportunity to draft future stars and build up its young players. Unlike European teams were your only hope of competing is being bought by a rich owner and your young talents gets bought up. Pretty much all teams sell to the big clubs. Also having a salary cap helps with each team being competitive. Small market teams are able to compete.
But then the amount of teams that exists is limited. There's no option for a new team to rise up from nothing (like Leicester for example). The only "fresh start" you can get is when a team moves cities (like the Rams).
You have teams like Leicester, Leeds, and most recently Brentford who have taken their success in the league as intelligently as possible - Leicester were relegation favourites, and ended up winning the league, Leeds ended up almost getting into European football in their first season back, and Brentford are proving that the moneyball method works. Leicester's in contention for becoming one of the 'Big 6' because they invested in their club, in their recruitment, and their youth academy after winning the PL, and not letting it demand short term success. Having rich owners has its advantages for sure, but they still have to abide by Financial Fair Play rules of roughly spending that what you earn (though FIFA corruption has proven that's flimsy as fuck). Leicester won the league with a striker that downs Red Bulls and chardonnay the night before matches and was signed from a non-league team, so football is truly the sport of 'anything can happen'. Re. relegation, you can be competitive, but there's no real reason to be competitive - it just turns it into a commercial engine with no stakes. With the football pyramid, the stakes are high that you want to avoid relegation, while also competing to get into European football, or even the Champions League, where your team can earn club-changing levels of money. That's seasons worth of competition in my opinion.
Hi guys if anyone wants to watch full episodes of Ted Lasso and more.
Check out instagram.com/_streamline_/.
The 'oops init' made me laugh for like 10 mins
Well said
Easily the best line of that scene.
The “well said” from the team captain. Perfect response to motivate a team. Also, he woulda done the same thing.
On a side note, this is a perfect set up for next team captain. The difference is the last thing the previous captain (Kent) has to teach is how to control the emotions. It’s good to have fire. Good to be tough. Just, important to know WHEN to drive the emotions and WHEN to hold back the emotions. 👌
“Well said.”
Me too it’s one of my favourite moments in the whole show 😂
Love Dani Rojas being the most wholesome man on earth. He looks at Jamie and says: "Amigo Jamie" with a tone that makes us think he's really missing their friendly competition on the field.
It’s the “well said” for me 😂
Gotta love it when a team is on the same page and can agree on common goals. 👌
Best dry sense of humor is Roy Kent.
And just like that Roy knew who needed to be captain
@@Degamer422 When is TED LASSO coming back on?
I thought he said bullshit 😂
He said all that about ted, and Ted still took him back, without even a apology
I think Ted seeing Jamie's dad getting abusive made him a bit more forgiving. And I think it paid off. He's friendly with the whole team, especially with Roy and Sam.
@@CS-er3ib Jaime's character development has been great.
@@iandhr1 one of the best aspect of the show.
one of the things ted is good at is not caring what someone says or does if he understands why they said or did it and that the why of it can be changed. like him forgiving jaime without an apology is similar to him forgiving rebecca with one
@@thomasstone3480 he takes it even further like with nate. Nate wants hil to be the villian of his story so he does just to give hil what he wants.
"Final nail in the ashes" "Instant caramel, it's gonna get ya" lmao
Lol Jamie is the Ricky of the UK trailer park.
Only Jamie could say those things and believe what he is saying is correct. He is (an old comedian that would mix up sayings like they were real and correct) soccer's NORM CROSBY, he would just butcher the English language.
@@stellaroj I think only Canadians will get that. (Trailer Park Boys for those who don't know)
"Get two birds stoned at once." :)
@@thewhitesilence6327 well, worst case Ontario, at least one person got my reference.
Colin - "I got relegated when I was at Cardiff"
Could be said by pretty much any Welsh footballer not named Gareth Bale.
Ryan Giggs too
Did Aaron Ramsey get relegated?
@@aadarshgupta7178 this season, with Juve lol
lol
@@Ash-vm6vy what
And that is why Roy chose Issac to be the new captain.
Also chose him because he subtly displayed a push for the other players to participate in group activities
You can see an example of it when the team is watching “The Iron Giant”
Oops innit
@@crem-crem4070 I love that about this show is when you watch it back you can see all the subtle character moments being planted to be paid off later
@@crem-crem4070 Oh shit I didn’t notice it was him! Such a cool detail
@@aguywithalotofopinions412 He also was the first one to give Nate a spot on the bench with the team. He showed a LOT of natural leadership talent.
I love how they all boo when Jamie comes on screen except for Dani, who says “mi amigo Jamie” 😂
"oops innit" might be one of the best lines from season one
Followed by “well said”
Oops innit
Well said.
Sexy AF.
How many likes?.... 69 dude.
Just noticed Rojas saying “Mi amigo Jamie”
"Never stop breaking TVs"
Are you rich?
Oh man. Imagine if Jamie had stayed at Richmond and they had to explain to Ted that because City is Jamie's parent club, he can't play against them.
"Wait, they gave him to us to develop him?"
"That's right."
"But we can't use him this weekend?"
"Also right."
I love that Jamie said 'instant caramel' instead of instant karma.
“clearly no barbers in Manchester”
Damn Colin predicted Foden’s series of trims.
Love Danny "amigo Jaime"
“Instant caramel” he’s so stupid I want him
"Oops innit"
"well said"
I don’t think it’s ever been made clear to Jamie that it was Rebecca’s decision and not Ted’s even in season 2.
It was nice of Ted to forgive Rebecca, but it bothers me that she never confesses to the team. She messed with thier careers and it Jamie's case sent him back to City and let Ted take the blame. I know she didn't know about his father but she knew what she did was wrong and trying to escape his fathers abuse was the reason Jaime did the reality show and sabotaged his career. Yes, Jamie is responsible for his choices but she messed with his and the entire teams careers and just gets away with it without ever apologizing to them. Jaime apologized and tried to make amends for his behavior.
Well to be fair, stuff like that is usually kept very under wraps in actual football clubs so it makes sense that only Ted and Rebecca would know about it
That is a $200 plasma screen TV that Isaac just killed
Put the final nail in the ashes? What a muppet.
"Yeah, it's dumb." Darn right, Coach Beard!
I don't think that you could really have relegation for American football (just because there isn't really a stable second tier), and the farm system pretty much makes that impossible in baseball, but I would love to see it in basketball. If a team wants to tank and put out a Development League-caliber team, make them play in the D-League.
@@mitchrudolph65 No, the owners are the ones who suffer as well under relegation. Take The Process. It was four years of intentionally putting bad teams on the floor in the hope that, just maybe, someday, they would get enough draft picks to get a winner. It only stopped when the NBA had enough. Who knows how long it would have gone on, and you couldn't go a week without stories on WIP about the latest money-grabbing move from the owner. He's the same guy who owns Crystal Palace, and he _never_ tries anything like that with them. When he did it here, he was rewarded with a top draft pick.
@@mitchrudolph65 Coming from Australia, we have the same issue as America with no relegation. One thing to point out is that both countries are very big geographically and the costs of teams traveling for games (in the A-league its a 6.5 hour trip between Perth and Wellington) are too much for it to be viable in a second tier league. After the national leagues at the top most sports, even the really successful spots in Australia have second tier state leagues and given we have 6 states, you can't really have promotion/relegation of 6 teams a year.
@@mitchrudolph65 So, it's better to spend most of your existence playing meaningless games? How is that rewarding for the fans? And European teams aren't _nearly_ as subsidized as our team, so nobody's going bankrupt.
@@mitchrudolph65 For basketball or hockey? Even if you aren't mathematically eliminated, if you are bad enough, you know pretty early on if you don't have it.
@@mitchrudolph65 Did you not see where I said that there aren't enough football teams to set up a pyramid? And, you are aware that only the bottom three get relegated in the Premier League, right? In other words, the really bad teams who were in a league where half the teams make the playoffs would be the ones who would need to shape up or risk relegation if a pyramid existed, but who are playing for nothing and trying to get top draft picks so have more motivation to lose rather than playing for their very survival and having nothing to play for.
"oops, innit?"
"well said"
I'm dead.
I'm still not over "Instant caramel, it's gonna get 'ya"
Since people argue about the sense of relegation:
Please remember the draft and other mechanisms present in US sports. If there was no draft and teams could pick/hire their players like they do in Europe/Football, not having a relegation would suck tremendously. But because the worst teams can pick first, the franchise system works - kind of atleast.
But it rewards teams for doing worst
The franchise system is weird because it means there’s no upwards mobility of clubs, so if you want to play to the highest standard you HAVE to live in one of X cities, and no franchise has to worry about its overall record, IE a team could intentionally lose 2 or 3 seasons, earn the first picks, and all of a sudden they could absolutely storm the podium with their new star players
1:22 that was when McAdoo earned the arm band
the understated "whoopsie" after a violent outburst ... hilarious!
It's just instant caramel
Isaac is just the younger version of Roy Kent I swear...
Is “innit” one of the most versatile words in the world? I think it might be!
And “cheers” as well
If we had relegation....No more Jets jokes...No more Jaguar jokes...No more Texans jokes... I mean, who would the top tier college teams play against for high profile games? Hell, if your team sucks bad enough, the commissioner takes pity, bribes, and shady tactics, to hand you number one picks in the lottery draft for the NHL. How else do you think Pittsburg got Crosby and the rest?
We should have the USFL as our version of the championship league...or even Canadian football. Having a relegation system would be amazing in the NFL
Even the worst teams in recent NFL history would absolutely slaughter any college teams. Even the 2008 Lions would murder even the best college teams of the past few decades.
The game is just different. College teams have way more holes in their lineup, and any NFL team would just exploit it over and over again.
as a fan of a team that got relegated in recent years, if the jokes are entrenched enough they never go away, trust me on that.
Bonus jokes, if the team is mediocre even after relegation.
I mean, Crosby wasn’t really a result of the lottery draft. The penguins were the worst team in the league prior to his draft, so another team getting the first pick would have been sketchier.
@@gabe2349 Except there was no season before the Crosby-Draft (04/05 Lockout), with 3 other teams being considered as bad as the Penguins for this Draft and they picked 6th, 12th (after a trade up from 16th) and 13th respectively. Sounds like pure lottery luck to me.
People were suspicious because there were rumors of the Pens being sold and relocated and Bettman allegedly trying desperately to keep them in Pittsburgh.
I'm a Canadian who didn't watch football growing up, and really had no idea about how relegation worked.
After watching this show, yeah, it's really stupid that teams can't get relegated for being shit in North American sports leagues.
Franchises in North American sports are like the territories of US during expansion. to be accepted u must meet requirements. in europe the system works differently...
Counterpoint: Salary caps and drafts have kept parity (over a long enough timeline) in North American leagues very high compared to the vast majority of promotion/relegation systems.
In any given year, there's usually between 1-4 teams in any given top flight that actually has a chance at winning, and turnover in those groups is insanely slow (if it happens at all). Think of RM/Barca, Bayern/Dortmund, the Top 4 in England sloooooowly morphing into a Top 6 over the course of 15 years, and so on. Usually there's only movement if some big money owner comes in and buys their way into success (see: Man City).
Meanwhile in the US, salary caps prevent teams in (most) leagues from overspending to create all-star teams. Drafts allow for high-end prospects to help turn around the lowest teams. In the NFL, 29 of the 32 teams have been in the playoffs in the past 5 years. Same can be said of the NHL. 26 of 32 NFL teams have won at least one playoff game in the last 10 years. Only 1 NHL team hasn't won a playoff series in the last 10 years.
In the last 10 years of the US's "Big Four" leagues: 14 different teams in the Stanley Cup Finals. 11 different teams in the Super Bowl. 8 different teams in the NBA Finals (which includes 4 consecutive GSW/Cleveland finals and 2 consecutive Spurs/Heat finals). 13 different teams in the World Series.
In England, you maaaaaaaybe have the best case for parity in a relegation system: In 10 seasons, 7 teams have made it to the UCL (at least one of which only did so once). A further 6 have made the Europa League. That's it. With all the clubs yo-yoing in and out, hardly anyone can crack into the top, and most of them just go back down a year or two after going up. And it's worse (much worse) everywhere else across Europe.
I can understand too since my country also uses relegation. Although I think if the US had relegations, there might be a lot more riots, I think.
I was wondering, why does the club own a tv the size of my kindergarten class? then the chair comes flying.. oh I know now why.. 😂😂😂
"oops innit"
"well said"
I will miss this show
I think there is just too much of a quality gap between the different levels of mainstream sports in America. For example, if you took the best minor league Baseball team or best College Football team and played them against the worst MLB or NFL team --- they would get slaughtered! At best, maybe 15% of the players on the lower-level team will ever be good enough to play in the higher level.
I think time would fix this nfl reservist would choose rather to play in the second tear then sit on the bench in the first tear. So the talent level get more equal and players get more playing time and more chances to develop.
Best scene of the series
"Oops, innit"
Well said
Oops innit well said😂
Speaks about City :D
Oops In it 😂😂😂😂😂
Is it me or do the soccer players in this show cause a lot of property damage?
It's football not soccer
it's football
@@ShreeNation England taught us that word.
1:23 😂
I love how American sport teams don’t have relegation. NBA is an perfect example. It’s so competitive and each teams has the opportunity to draft future stars and build up its young players. Unlike European teams were your only hope of competing is being bought by a rich owner and your young talents gets bought up. Pretty much all teams sell to the big clubs. Also having a salary cap helps with each team being competitive. Small market teams are able to compete.
But then the amount of teams that exists is limited. There's no option for a new team to rise up from nothing (like Leicester for example). The only "fresh start" you can get is when a team moves cities (like the Rams).
You have teams like Leicester, Leeds, and most recently Brentford who have taken their success in the league as intelligently as possible - Leicester were relegation favourites, and ended up winning the league, Leeds ended up almost getting into European football in their first season back, and Brentford are proving that the moneyball method works. Leicester's in contention for becoming one of the 'Big 6' because they invested in their club, in their recruitment, and their youth academy after winning the PL, and not letting it demand short term success. Having rich owners has its advantages for sure, but they still have to abide by Financial Fair Play rules of roughly spending that what you earn (though FIFA corruption has proven that's flimsy as fuck). Leicester won the league with a striker that downs Red Bulls and chardonnay the night before matches and was signed from a non-league team, so football is truly the sport of 'anything can happen'.
Re. relegation, you can be competitive, but there's no real reason to be competitive - it just turns it into a commercial engine with no stakes. With the football pyramid, the stakes are high that you want to avoid relegation, while also competing to get into European football, or even the Champions League, where your team can earn club-changing levels of money. That's seasons worth of competition in my opinion.
@@ave789 ye
And yet several teams have been awful for decades.
inpaindaily
this is awful, just trying to profit off others work, sad
The maga Ted Lasso hat is a complete disrespect to Ted Lasso
yeah it is.
Well said