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fingerlickinmathematickin
Is that what Minnesotans call it... I'd say road hockey or hockey-balle.Drewcifer said:... or play boot hockey on the block.
EDIT: by my count, that's 7 for hockey
Is that what Minnesotans call it... I'd say road hockey or hockey-balle.Drewcifer said:... or play boot hockey on the block.
Urederra said:Hockey is only played in Canada, Russia and in the northern states of USA. It shouldn't be in the poll because is not global
Lozzy_Ozzy said:What?
Is your version different to ours?
I play it, and my aunt played on the Scottish team...
And I like to watch drag racing as well.
EDIT: Ahhhh, do you mean ICE hockey?
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Really?Urederra said:Hockey is only played in Canada, Russia and in the northern states of USA. It shouldn't be in the poll because is not global.
Does it really though? I mean, relatively so?Zarn said:How so? That game requires alot of strategy.
Yea, why cant they call it ice hockey? Real hockey played on nice warm ground is called hockey. hockey played on ice that involves alot of trying to kill your opponants, is called ice hockey.Lozzy_Ozzy said:Ahhhh, do you mean ICE hockey?
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phoenix_night said:Does it really though? I mean, relatively so?
Americans always seem to be describe their sport as an immensely strategic game to us admittedly ignorant Europeans, but are you perhaps also not recognising the strategy of the likes of football and rugby?
Some Europeans think American whatever is just throwing and catching, but don't some Americans also think football is just kicking a ball into a net? Do you really think your sport is so strategically advanced?
There are professional rugby players that tall and that heavy (although usually not at the same time). There are many different specialist positions in Rugby (as in Gridiron), but in Rugby a 5'6" 90kg player (halfback or flyhalf) must be prepared to tackle (and be tackled) by someone 6'3" and 130kg (prop) or so (for instance). Can Gridiron boast such disparity?bad_ronald said:2. Since all rugby players need to be somewhat athletic, they don't have to deal with the prospect of being tackled by a 6'9" 375lbs. (206cm 170kg) defensive lineman.
Untrue. In Rugby the entire team must learn many "set plays" which are similar in many ways to your "coaching calls", except that they can't rely on the coach to lead them through it on a whiteboard a minute beforehand, and the team has to orchestrate these plays during general play.3. The fact that there are frequent stoppages in play makes it more exciting, and more intense than other games (there will be no one on the field jogging at all, as in soccer, in fact nearly everyone will either be sprinting or making a hit/blocking one). Furthermore, the plays that a coach calls are more important than in any other major sport.
Yeah, much as Europeans see your sport as throwing and catching. Certainly not true either! But as Europeans are likely to take such a simplistic view of your sport, isn't it just as likely that Americans view football in the same manner?Zarn said:Many Americans see football as just kicking a ball into a net with a pass here or there. It may not be true, but that is the judgement made.