Just how we say it vs how the yanks say it. Not sure if the interviewer understood that though (fair enough that he can't give clues but surely he can say "Or row zed as you'd pronounce it") - Nick Mohammed wasn't looking for a hint, he was just trying to work out if he meant "row zed" or the word "rosie".
@@anonymes2884 exactly. It was supposed to be premier league terms. But, Row Zee is not a premier league term. Row Zed is. So, Nick was right to ask. The interviewer was wrong. I hope that's one of the ones he got credit for.
As apparent with Nick’s “Row Zed?” question, I bet they would have been a lot more familiar with these terms coming from an actual British person since they’re used to hearing it said the British way
Nobody really says dummy run either, they just say "player x is creating space with his run" The other guys had it right with dummy and the interviewer said he was wrong, hard to watch after that.
Half the refs, linesmen and VARs still can't define offside on a weekly basis in England so that's a question that would be a 30 minute minute video by itself 😂
Although I understand pea roller and dummy run I'd say they're raley used in British football terminology. There are so much better ones he could have used such as - man on, one-two, whip it in, rabona, man-up/mark-up, have a pop/dig, scuff a shot, knock on, hit the woodwork, a screamer etc
@elijahmclaughlin-prosser9002 not sure how to reply to this...I just haven't. I've been watching football for 30 years and I've never heard it. Or maybe I have and I'm just too old to remember
A pea roller is sort of the opposite of a daisy cutter. One is a super weak shot that just rolls and the latter is a shot that's hit very hard along the ground.
Solely because some bellends decided to fill the bottle lids with coins then then throw them at the pitch and the coins would fly everywhere hitting players.
It goes to intent. If you’ve drawn it up for a player to make a run through the box and leave the pass for a player running backpost it is a dummy run. The run pulls the attention of the defenders and opens space in behind. That said, the interviewer had no idea what any of this means
Treble is three trophies, correct (so technically, three domestic trophies would count or three trophies could count). But unless it's the UCL, League Title and Major Domestic Cup, I wouldn't be going around claiming my team won the "treble" (and I'd say majority of fans would think the same).
Indeed. Apropos of nothing, mis-use of "bottled it" took me out of an episode of 'The Boys' way more than Karl Urban's "Cockney" accent ever did. Maybe the meaning is drifting in some parts/among younger people.
It derives from the phrase 'he's lost his bottle' ,meaning the courage and ability to do something, especially under pressure, has gone. That's where bottled it comes from, not from fans chucking beer bottles. bloody seppos! lol
ive seen a couple sources say it could come from the cockney rhyming slang of "bottle and glass" meaning "arse" and so 'to lose your bottle' is literally to lose control of your arse and shit yourself because you are so scared. eventually over the years its been shortened from 'lost your bottle' to just "bottled it"
There are few definitions of Treble. A domestic treble is winning all of the national competitions the League Cup, FA Cup and League A European treble is winning the FA Cup (the higher of the two domestic cups), the League and the Champions League There are minor variants by winning any three competitions also, Side note: England and Scotland are the only countries that can have domestic trebles, because they have the league and two domestic cup competitions, other countries only have one domestic cup competition
Never heard of pea roller so assume this guy was just looking things up 🔝 on line but row z is common. Often heard when defenders try and be clever and instead should have just launched the ball into row z
I have watched a lotttt of football and I don't recall ever hearing the expression, "pea roller". A weak shot, got it. I'm familiar with "hospital ball" meaning a weak pass.
Nobody really says dummy run either, they just say "player x is creating space with his run" The other guys had it right with dummy and the interviewer said he was wrong, hard to watch after that. Pea roller? Fuck says that
That's not where the term 'bottled it' comes from. It comes from the rhyming slang 'bottle and glass' meaning arse (or ass) So if someone's bottle goes, or they have no bottle, or they bottle it, it basically means they've s*** themselves and it applies to many different scenarios (shying away from a fight in particular) and isn't just limited to football.
Brendan and Nathan answered the “dummy run” question correctly LOL, the interviewer himself was reading off a script and didn’t know the answers himself
He was reading the (poorly) worded definition and had no understanding of the concept. Beard’s answer was 100% correct but the Harvard answer to his grade-school question
I wonder if the whole "bottle" thing originated with football. I've become familiar with the general term through various British shows I've watched over the years where "bottle" relates to having the guts or competence to do something: "you've lost your bottle" (lost your courage) or "you've bottled it" (screwed it up). One of the many reasons I've watched BBC shows with the subtitles on...
I'm English and I've just discovered the origin in football, my assumption is that we then used it in these situations too, I doubt we were saying it them ways pre early 1900s. I could be wrong but that's my gut reaction
Winning 3 trophies in a season is great but the proper meaning of a TREBLE is when a team wins their League title (example Premier League or La Liga), the highest cup competition in their country (FA Cup in England or Copa Del Rey in Spain) and the Champions League/European Cup in the Same season. Examples are Manchester United in 1999, Inter Milan 2010, and Bayern Munich 2013.
@@phoenixfire6559 agreed but when the term was first used in football, it was because of THE Treble (the three main/big trophies) won by Man United in 1999. For example even if United won the EFL Cup, Europa League, and FA Cup this season, fans would have called it just winning 3 trophies (or joke that we’ve won the Mickey Mouse treble). A Treble winning season is winning the 3 main trophies.
@@phoenixfire6559 THE TREBLE is the FA cup, Premier League and Champions League. Winning 3 random trophies could be labelled as a treble but no one will call it that seriously
Favourite term? "Bottled it". Would expect nothing less from Tottenham Hotspur's Manager - see the original Ted Lasso Video from 9 years ago if you don't get the reference.
a daisy cutter is a low highpowered shot with no spin (so low and powerful it would cut the heads of daisies in a field) A pea roller is a low rolling shot or pass. the difference being the power.
As Tom said, they're completely different shots. A daisy cutter is actually a good shot. Its as the ball travels to the goal, it travels just above the ground (literally a few cm above i.e. the level of a daisy). To maintain such a level, the ball is usually struck pretty hard and basically rockets in without touching the ground but being very close. A pea roller is a very weak or tame shot that rolls along the ground and just gets to the goal. So you can see the daisy cutter does not touch the ground and is hit hard versus a pea roller which can/ does touch the ground and hit tamely. Both terms are rarely used by commentators these days.
Like "aluminum" in the sense of "That's just how they say it" but _different_ in the sense that "aluminum" and "aluminium" are two different words for the same thing, not just different pronunciations of one word. "Fun" fact: Humphrey Davy initially called it "alumium" then quickly changed it to "aluminum" - so the US way was actually what its discoverer called it FWIW. Later on that same year in the UK the consensus among book/magazine editors etc. became to change it to "aluminium" to make it more consistent with other elements (like lithium, sodium, potassium etc.) so we switched whereas the US just stuck with "aluminum".
I would say this isn't common knowledge (except for nutmeg and treble) unless you live in the UK. I would say these words are more like english football slang than common knowledge. If you want to check how much someone knows. Questions like... Who have won the most CL trophies and how many?` Who has the most goals for a single team in any clubs in the top 5 divisions? etc...
The interviewer is so confidently wrong about so many of these. A dummy run doesn’t have to be away from the ball, every run is off-ball, row zed is thusly pronounced, three goals is nowhere near the same thing as three trophies. Is it too much to ask to get someone who knows about the subject?
The treble is only the Cup (FA, copa del rey, etc...absolutely not the league cup), the league, and the CL. Don't cheapen the significance of the treble.
It's Row Zed, not Row Z. At Fulham we used to sing "When the ball hits your head and you sit in row zed, that's Zamora!"
Just how we say it vs how the yanks say it. Not sure if the interviewer understood that though (fair enough that he can't give clues but surely he can say "Or row zed as you'd pronounce it") - Nick Mohammed wasn't looking for a hint, he was just trying to work out if he meant "row zed" or the word "rosie".
Brighton sang much nicer things about him....cos when Brighton gets a goal, its not Sheringham or Cole, it's Zamora, lol
I loved that chant 👌🏾
@@anonymes2884 exactly. It was supposed to be premier league terms. But, Row Zee is not a premier league term. Row Zed is. So, Nick was right to ask. The interviewer was wrong. I hope that's one of the ones he got credit for.
that‘s hilarious
Jason usually hates doing these types of interviews because they tend to get repetitive, but you can tell he had a lot of fun on this one.
Ha! I love when Nick said “Row Zee; as in Row Z?” and the presenter didn’t even catch what he was saying.
As apparent with Nick’s “Row Zed?” question, I bet they would have been a lot more familiar with these terms coming from an actual British person since they’re used to hearing it said the British way
the clip of Ted having a panic attack while Jason is mumbling his way through the dummy question hahaha
Nobody really says dummy run either, they just say "player x is creating space with his run"
The other guys had it right with dummy and the interviewer said he was wrong, hard to watch after that.
"A Treble" is three major trophies. "THE Treble" is your domestic league, UCL and the highest other domestic cup.
"has no interest" in football.
That explains the West Ham shirt then. 🤣🤣🤣
I would respond to this but that would be spoilers for season 2
@@shadebug it would also ignore/miss the football banter. 🤓😜😇
He’s playing the manager of West Ham
@@fayesouthall6604 I’m aware, but appears you’ve missed the joke…
Tbf he is their manager in the show so probably just wears it to represent that
should've asked Jason to define the Offside Rule - that's what Ted is most known for not grasping the meaning...
Half the refs, linesmen and VARs still can't define offside on a weekly basis in England so that's a question that would be a 30 minute minute video by itself 😂
The interviewer probably didn't know himself
PGMOL could have benefited from an explanation
The interviewer hardly knows the answers himself
seriously, that was cringe how he didnt accept the answer for dummy
How can he say the guys dummy run answer is wrong 😂😂
He doesn't, flat out.
Dummy run he was wrong
Strong cringe sir. Concurred
Although I understand pea roller and dummy run I'd say they're raley used in British football terminology. There are so much better ones he could have used such as - man on, one-two, whip it in, rabona, man-up/mark-up, have a pop/dig, scuff a shot, knock on, hit the woodwork, a screamer etc
Pea roller is used quite a lot in Scotland although daisy cutter is probably more common.
@@ojdtwist1099 daisy cutter refers to a low shot, pea roller refers to a weak low shot
I'm a football fan and I've never heard of a pea roller. A daisy cutter maybe
How have you never heard of a pea roller?
@elijahmclaughlin-prosser9002 not sure how to reply to this...I just haven't. I've been watching football for 30 years and I've never heard it. Or maybe I have and I'm just too old to remember
@@jamesherbie4670 not really a "premier league" term. Our PE teacher in highchool used to use it a lot.
Same.. it's a daisy cutter, not a pea roller.
*Never* heard the term.
A pea roller is sort of the opposite of a daisy cutter. One is a super weak shot that just rolls and the latter is a shot that's hit very hard along the ground.
"treble is kinda of the same as hat trick"
for fuck sake HAUEHAUEHUA
I think bottles might occasionally still get thrown; they don't let you have the cap when you buy a bottle
That’s like the whole reason why in Argentina there was a looong time when bottles weren’t sold in stadiums 😂
Solely because some bellends decided to fill the bottle lids with coins then then throw them at the pitch and the coins would fly everywhere hitting players.
@@TheJollyAlex why would putting the coins in a bottle lid make them easier to throw than just throwing them?
Lol in concacaf they just throw bottles of piss
Then take your own bottle cap from home so you can use it. 😀
"Row Zee as in row Zed?"
"I can't give you any clues on this one..." ....what?? Where did they get this interviewer from?
As an American looking in, my favorite term is "fluffed his lines" ... such a great, old phrase.
Nick's looking great! Or maybe just the effect of how different they've made Nate look now
Dummy run? It's just a run, whether it's played or not. A dummy itself is what the Beard said.
The Beard 😂 I love the respect of it all
It goes to intent. If you’ve drawn it up for a player to make a run through the box and leave the pass for a player running backpost it is a dummy run. The run pulls the attention of the defenders and opens space in behind. That said, the interviewer had no idea what any of this means
Treble is three trophies, correct (so technically, three domestic trophies would count or three trophies could count). But unless it's the UCL, League Title and Major Domestic Cup, I wouldn't be going around claiming my team won the "treble" (and I'd say majority of fans would think the same).
domestic treble - League, FA Cup and League cup. Man City did this a few years ago
i'd claim any 3 trophies as a treble regardless of prestige for the banter.
Papa Johns trophy and the league 1 title is the double
@@stanleybutcher9009 uhhh yeah, it is. and i can imagine thats a big deal for a league 1 club
Man u fans were howling about a Europa, League Cup, FA Cup treble not too long ago lmao
What's soccer?
The world's greatest and most popular sport.
@@thomasschwenke7486 After football.
Sock-Car
I believe it's a Caribbean music sensation.
It's like American football except you play it with your feet.
I love how Brendan takes offense at not getting one.
The absolute disrespect as they continue to pronounce it Row 'Zee' ....Sirs, it is 'Zed' 😉
Nah it’s zee
Zed in the UK and Zee in the US and since it’s an American channel…
The harsh thing was when Nathan just wanted clarification of zee versus zed, he wouldn't.
'Bottled it' means not doing something or doing it badly - because of fear.
Indeed. Apropos of nothing, mis-use of "bottled it" took me out of an episode of 'The Boys' way more than Karl Urban's "Cockney" accent ever did. Maybe the meaning is drifting in some parts/among younger people.
It derives from the phrase 'he's lost his bottle' ,meaning the courage and ability to do something, especially under pressure, has gone. That's where bottled it comes from, not from fans chucking beer bottles. bloody seppos! lol
@@jasondalton1980
Bottle was 19th Century slang for courage or nerve.
ive seen a couple sources say it could come from the cockney rhyming slang of "bottle and glass" meaning "arse" and so 'to lose your bottle' is literally to lose control of your arse and shit yourself because you are so scared. eventually over the years its been shortened from 'lost your bottle' to just "bottled it"
It's more crumbling or collapsing than doing something badly
“Bottled it”
Me, a Spurs fan, after watching today’s match against Liverpool 😭
It seems like there are clips from the show we haven’t seen yet as they have only shown episode 3 yet
"pea roller"?!? Never heard of it!
Jason has actually gotten way better in understand football
There are few definitions of Treble.
A domestic treble is winning all of the national competitions the League Cup, FA Cup and League
A European treble is winning the FA Cup (the higher of the two domestic cups), the League and the Champions League
There are minor variants by winning any three competitions also,
Side note: England and Scotland are the only countries that can have domestic trebles, because they have the league and two domestic cup competitions, other countries only have one domestic cup competition
never heard of pea roller or row z and i’ve been watching football for over 2 decades
Row zed is pretty common, but yeah, never ever known "pea roller" used.
I’d be amazed if anyone has heard it. I could’ve just about accepted ‘daisy cutter’ but that was just a bad entry. Harsh on Brendan, that!
Never heard of pea roller so assume this guy was just looking things up 🔝 on line but row z is common. Often heard when defenders try and be clever and instead should have just launched the ball into row z
@@hellostckhlm1419 maybe its more common in younger people bc i hear pea roller a lot for weak shots that just roll to the keeper
I've heard it from since I was at school in the 1970s - it's a scuffed shot that dribbles along the ground with no power
I have watched a lotttt of football and I don't recall ever hearing the expression, "pea roller". A weak shot, got it. I'm familiar with "hospital ball" meaning a weak pass.
I watched my first City match when Joe Corrigan was in goal and I've never heard of a 'pea roller'.
Nobody really says dummy run either, they just say "player x is creating space with his run"
The other guys had it right with dummy and the interviewer said he was wrong, hard to watch after that.
Pea roller? Fuck says that
Love that Nick is supposed to be a master tactician as Nate and knows nothing at all lmao
Reverse it.
U know nothing Jon Snow
That's not where the term 'bottled it' comes from. It comes from the rhyming slang 'bottle and glass' meaning arse (or ass)
So if someone's bottle goes, or they have no bottle, or they bottle it, it basically means they've s*** themselves and it applies to many different scenarios (shying away from a fight in particular) and isn't just limited to football.
Brendan and Nathan answered the “dummy run” question correctly LOL, the interviewer himself was reading off a script and didn’t know the answers himself
Nick.
He was reading the (poorly) worded definition and had no understanding of the concept. Beard’s answer was 100% correct but the Harvard answer to his grade-school question
Never heard Jason's bottled it description. It comes from the term losing your bottle, i.e losing your nerve. Hence bottled it
row Zee? Think you mean Row Zed!
As a premier league fanatic.. Sometimes referred to as a "fan".
I've heard heard the term "pea roller".
I wonder if the whole "bottle" thing originated with football. I've become familiar with the general term through various British shows I've watched over the years where "bottle" relates to having the guts or competence to do something: "you've lost your bottle" (lost your courage) or "you've bottled it" (screwed it up). One of the many reasons I've watched BBC shows with the subtitles on...
I'm English and I've just discovered the origin in football, my assumption is that we then used it in these situations too, I doubt we were saying it them ways pre early 1900s. I could be wrong but that's my gut reaction
Yeah, Sudeikis is wrong here…and it has become the most overused term in the sport
Winning 3 trophies in a season is great but the proper meaning of a TREBLE is when a team wins their League title (example Premier League or La Liga), the highest cup competition in their country (FA Cup in England or Copa Del Rey in Spain) and the Champions League/European Cup in the Same season.
Examples are Manchester United in 1999, Inter Milan 2010, and Bayern Munich 2013.
A treble is winning any three competitions. Your definition is of a continental treble as oppose to a domestic treble.
@@phoenixfire6559 agreed but when the term was first used in football, it was because of THE Treble (the three main/big trophies) won by Man United in 1999.
For example even if United won the EFL Cup, Europa League, and FA Cup this season, fans would have called it just winning 3 trophies (or joke that we’ve won the Mickey Mouse treble).
A Treble winning season is winning the 3 main trophies.
@@phoenixfire6559 THE TREBLE is the FA cup, Premier League and Champions League. Winning 3 random trophies could be labelled as a treble but no one will call it that seriously
Ted lasso, is truly Ted Lasso
The quizzer looks a little bit like Q from Impractical Jokers
Favourite term? "Bottled it". Would expect nothing less from Tottenham Hotspur's Manager - see the original Ted Lasso Video from 9 years ago if you don't get the reference.
‘’Row Zee as in Row Z?’’
“Can’t give you any clues on this one”
What 😂
I have never heard the term pea roller in my entire life
i don't think the interviewer knows that the brits call the letter Z 'Zed' instead of "Zee'
I've followed football all my life and have never heard of a pea roller
It’s football!!!
I'm a 38-year-old football fan from England and I have never, ever heard a 'Daisy Cutter' described as a 'Pea Roller'
Yeah - I thought that was cricket - a slow bowl along the ground
a daisy cutter is a low highpowered shot with no spin (so low and powerful it would cut the heads of daisies in a field)
A pea roller is a low rolling shot or pass. the difference being the power.
As Tom said, they're completely different shots. A daisy cutter is actually a good shot. Its as the ball travels to the goal, it travels just above the ground (literally a few cm above i.e. the level of a daisy). To maintain such a level, the ball is usually struck pretty hard and basically rockets in without touching the ground but being very close.
A pea roller is a very weak or tame shot that rolls along the ground and just gets to the goal.
So you can see the daisy cutter does not touch the ground and is hit hard versus a pea roller which can/ does touch the ground and hit tamely. Both terms are rarely used by commentators these days.
I've watched football my whole life and I haven't EVER heard of pea roller
Treble kinda like a hat trick?! Wtf
A hattrick of trophies
Just because they both mean 3 things doesn’t mean they’re similar
Favorite English Football term... squeeky bum time
FOOTBALL.
So i assume that nick actor is a tory boy then. His cards marked after these answers
Sudiekis just basically playing himself
I’ve watched football for over 20 years I’ve never heard pea roller
I've never heard the term "dummy run" and I've played and watched the sport for 30 years 😬
🤦🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️🤦🏾♂️
@@sinall7000 genuinely only ever called it a fake run
Can't be
The interviewer is terrible
Yeah, a dummy run is a trial of something - like a test run before the proper one. I don't think I've ever heard in football either.
Why do they say Pruh-muhr league, it's Prem-ee-uhr League
FOOTBALL
Squeeky bum time will always be the best
There are SOOOOO many better questions I’d have cared to hear about
I'm 15 watched football in my life and no one has ever used the term dummy run
We definitely don’t say “pea roller”. We’re much more likely to say “daisy cutter”.
Everyone says pea roller round where I live up north, never heard daisy cutter
Daisy cutter is more just a shot that starts on the ground.
@@o.d4556 that’s crazy.
@@xmaoi it’s a slow shot along the grass. Like the supposed “pea roller”.
Daisy cutter and pea roller are opposite
FFS...Jason Sudeikis' favourite term in football is "bottled it"...he's a Spurs fan -.- At least he gets us
it would help if the interviewer knew what these meant
saw the thumbnail, first and foremost, it's called football. NOT SOCCER
Exactly
Exactly
If Ted finds football confusing, he should move onto cricket at the end. 😂
No one uses the word or phrase PEA ROLLER in football. So that’s wrong. Also we would say scuff shot or miss hit.
pea roller is a fairly common phrase
@@CTD003 no it isn't
Why do Americans pronounce Premier League like premiere? Is it an aluminium/aluminum situation?
"Prem-Ear"... yeah, it's always frustrated me! haha
Like "aluminum" in the sense of "That's just how they say it" but _different_ in the sense that "aluminum" and "aluminium" are two different words for the same thing, not just different pronunciations of one word.
"Fun" fact: Humphrey Davy initially called it "alumium" then quickly changed it to "aluminum" - so the US way was actually what its discoverer called it FWIW. Later on that same year in the UK the consensus among book/magazine editors etc. became to change it to "aluminium" to make it more consistent with other elements (like lithium, sodium, potassium etc.) so we switched whereas the US just stuck with "aluminum".
I mean they do seem to struggle with the language. Look at how they pronounce 'Jaguar', "Jag-warrrr". 😫
What is Soccer?
Following football my whole life never heard anyone say dummy run
4:08 I mean, they were the ones who invented the language.
Absolutely nobody has ever said pea roller. It's scuffed it
People have definitely used the term pea roller
@@jackpriest8170 people have definitely not used the term pea roller
football*
The interviewer doesn't know what Zed is
This interview actually pissed me off
It's football.
It's not "English football", just football. 😄
I would say this isn't common knowledge (except for nutmeg and treble) unless you live in the UK. I would say these words are more like english football slang than common knowledge.
If you want to check how much someone knows. Questions like...
Who have won the most CL trophies and how many?`
Who has the most goals for a single team in any clubs in the top 5 divisions?
etc...
That’s not as fun
the first thing is that the name of the sport is football not sucker
Anyone hear pea roller at their ground? 😅
It’s football
beard guy knew what an actaul dummy is im disapointed he got that "wrong"
Literally it’s just called a dummy mate
"English football terms" and then says " row zee"
Nick Mohammed did not deserve a point for saying a treble was the same as scoring three goals in a game haha
Some say Liverpool is still proud of their fake treble.
I love football never ever heard of pea roller. It’s BS.
Or as Non-Americans like to say ... FOOTBALL !!!
Or as people who are correct like to say ... FOOTBALL!!! Fixed that for you.
Football*
no need to say "english football", it's just football, the other one is "american football"
Don't worry nobody has heard of a pea roller
Football.
Soccer... 😪
The interviewer is so confidently wrong about so many of these. A dummy run doesn’t have to be away from the ball, every run is off-ball, row zed is thusly pronounced, three goals is nowhere near the same thing as three trophies. Is it too much to ask to get someone who knows about the subject?
Bottled it. Could have just said if you did a Tottenham
Treble = hat-trick ? Wtf
The treble is only the Cup (FA, copa del rey, etc...absolutely not the league cup), the league, and the CL. Don't cheapen the significance of the treble.
They know soccer. They don't know football.
Not sure how these are "Premier league" terms, sounds like the person doing the interview also doesn't have a clue about football.
"English" Premier League terms and he insists on calling it Row Zee to the British guy... Americans.