General Football Discussion

Commentary cliches.

29 replies · 6,659 views
about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Commentary cliches.
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Now I'm not just talking about a certain NZer saying "certainly" every fifth word, but others that really piss me off. Some are applicable to other sports;
 
"A hard day at the office". What office?
"Even Stevens". You can guarantee that any moment in the game in which the scores are level, some dimwitted and unoriginal commentator will say this.
"He got too much on it". No, he hit the ball too hard.
"He showed too much of the ball". No, he didn't control the ball very well.
"His partner in crime". Used ad infinitum by one of the Aussies (Cockerill?) to describe any partnership, i.e. Thompson and Allsop, Moore and Ognenovski, Paston and The Bench. and, BTW, what crime?
"Wrap his foot around the ball" Huh? How??
 
And one that really annoys, and is used more in general headline writing than anything, "Back To The Future". Used to headline any article in which something old in style is resurrected. Morons.
 
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
after rabbiting on about possession, shots etc  ... "but of course the only stat that matters is the one on the scoreboard"
 
"early doors"
 
"but there was no malice in it" - after yet another aussie gets sent off for elbowing someone in the head or trying to circumscise them with a size 12 boot  (this attitude is why the south Americans etc wonder about the focus of the A-league game)
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago

When they're 1-0 down with 5 mins to go, "Team X really need a goal here"

NOOOOOOOOO YA THINK?

Three for me, and two for them.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Not a cliche, but I f**king hate the misuse of Pressurize by English commentators in particular.

You pressure someone, not f**king pressurize.  To pressurize someone you need one of these.



f**ksticks.


How's my driving? - Whine here

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Another Haper-ism is "Great tail on the cross"! What the f**k does that mean?!?!
 
Another one, to go with tigers' "there was no malice in it" is "He's not that kind of player". he obviously IS that kind of player if he's just twatted somebody. Usually said after the kind of tackle which results in the game being held up for 20 minutes while a Police dog team try to find the tackled player's leg!

Apparently I'm apathetic, but I couldn't care less.

"Being a Partick Thistle fan sets you apart. It means youre a free thinker. It also means your team has no money." Tim Luckhurst, The Independent, 4th December 2003

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
I love the term "he's got an educated left foot"
You never hear the term "educated right foot" or is it that right feet never graduate from school or something??
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
"no nonsense midfielder"
"takes no prisoners"
"An inch or two either side of the post and that would have been a goal.""
"Just before half time is the perfect time to get a goal"
 
"He's worked his socks off tonight." - How come I can still see them?
dairyflat2008-02-22 14:46:53
Profile pic. Should you be interested. Lakhsen, on the right, lost touch with him.
Mohammed, on the left, I'm still in touch with. He's now living in Agadez, Niger. More focused on his animals now as tourism has dried up. Is active with a co-op promoting local goods, leather work and bijouterie, into Europe. 
20/5/20

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
I love the term "he's got an educated left foot"
You never hear the term "educated right foot" or is it that right feet never graduate from school or something??
 
Right feet are never, ever educated, nor are they "cultured".
 
How about whenever a captain does something, he is "leading by example". No he's not, he's just playing the game just like his other ten teammates.
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
dairyflat wrote:
"no nonsense midfielder"
"takes no prisoners"
"An inch or two either side of the post and that would have been a goal.""
"Just before half time is the perfect time to get a goal"
 
"He's worked his socks off tonight." - How come I can still see them?
 
"No quarter asked nor given". As if one team might ask the other for a "quarter".
 
We really do put up with some inane sh*t from this subspecies of cretins.
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
"He's covered every blade of grass". Been keeping a tally, then?
Likewise "he's covered every inch of ground'. FFS, we switched to metrics thirty years ago!!
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
TheJam wrote:
Likewise "he's covered every inch of ground'. FFS, we switched to metrics thirty years ago!!
 
assuming, of course, the commentator is from a country using that system.... 
Profile pic. Should you be interested. Lakhsen, on the right, lost touch with him.
Mohammed, on the left, I'm still in touch with. He's now living in Agadez, Niger. More focused on his animals now as tourism has dried up. Is active with a co-op promoting local goods, leather work and bijouterie, into Europe. 
20/5/20

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
I don't like the word "Novocastrian", it just pisses me off. Don't know why.
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
tigers wrote:
"early doors"
 
 
What the hell does that actually mean?
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
I forgot "bragging rights".
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
or  "the stuff fairytales are made of "  really ??  fairytales?  how would it start?   Once upon a time a goal was scored...

 
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
s2art wrote:
tigers wrote:
"early doors"
 
 
What the hell does that actually mean?
 
probably relates to their albums before Jim Morrison lost the plot
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Brazilliant. 

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Another one. "2-0 is a dangerous lead". FFS, would they prefer 0-2?
Utter crap, it's only a "dangerous lead" if the holders of it can't defend.
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
BTW, notice how Birmingham management came out with "he's not that sort of player" regarding Martin Taylor. Sorry, but clearly he is, it's there on film. He's the sort of player that breaks a leg with a horrendous challenge.
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Here is my view on some of the terms mentioned here:
 
early doors - I love this phrase and actually use it in the office as often as I can.
 
educated/cultured left foot - My left foot actually has a degree in "opening a can of beans", so I have to argue that this one is ok.
 
the stuff fairytales are made of - when i was growing up, all my fairytales started with "once upon a time at Wembley, the evil Willie Young used to bully young heros like Paul Allen......until Sir Trevor of Brooking arrived........."

All I do is make the stuff I would've liked
Reference things I wanna watch, reference girls I wanna bite
Now I'm firefly like a burning kite
And yousa fake fuck like a fleshlight

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
"educated/cultured left foot - My left foot actually has a degree in "opening a can of beans", so I have to argue that this one is ok."
 
That explains its education Frankie, but what about its culture?. And how come it's always "open a can of beans"? Why not a can of, say, chickpeas, or perhaps creamed rice?
Nix, Leyton Orient and Alloa Athletic supporting schmuck.

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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
TheJam wrote:
And how come it's always "open a can of beans"? Why not a can of, say, chickpeas, or perhaps creamed rice?


Those are advanced degrees.
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
one that is getting trotted around a bit on our DON"T F'IN TAKE GAMES AWAY FROM THE RoF topic
 
 
"The crowd are just like a 12th man for the home side today"
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about 18 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Gus Poyet, translator for Juande (my prince will come) Ramos, came out with "early doors" on Prem Review this week. Must have been watchin A-league to improve his own english.
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over 17 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
just idly trolling sports pages under theguise of loooking after our sick 5 year old
 
these came from gridiron - but quite a few get used in football circles (particulalry enjoyed # 16)

20) �We have to take it one game at a time.�

Great advice!  I wouldn�t recommend playing two games at once. I�m no football wizard, but 22 guys on defense may slow your offense down a bit, coach.

 

19) �Crabtree makes a circus catch.�

I can�t tell you how many times I went to the circus as a child.  I loved the clowns the most.  The trapeze artists were probably my second favorite, and wide receivers catching badly-thrown footballs rounded out the list.

 

18) �The other team just wanted it more.�

It�s a shame that we practice football skills.  We should practice �wanting� skills if that�s what determines the outcome of a game.  I think the height of my �wanting� career was back when I was about 11 and wanted an ice cream sandwich three days before the Schwan�s guy was supposed to come by.  That was a long three days�but I assure you, I wanted it more than most.

In fact, now is a great time to pay homage to the best �wanter� of all time�Little Ralphie Parker back in the 1940s.  That dude wanted a Red Rider BB Gun really bad.  If there was a Hall of Fame for wanting, Ralphie would be the very first inductee despite shooting his eye out.

 

17) �They left it all on the field.�

That would totally suck for the field crew after the game.

Uhhh, can someone please come down to the field and pick up 110 jock straps, please?

 

16) �He�s deceptively quick.�

I�m a deceptively good-looking genius.  Also, I used to be deceptively slow�now I�m just obviously slow.

 

15) �McCoy�s going to feel that one in the morning.�

Well, I think the fact that he�s rolling around on the ground clutching his head with his face contorted in a painful grimace means he�s probably feeling it pretty well right now.

 

14) �They are better than their record indicates.�

This is used by announcers who are trying to say, �Please don�t change the channel,� and by coaches who are trying to say, �Do NOT come out flat against these pansies.�

 

13) �He has a motor that won�t quit.�

I like to call this the David Pollock clich�.  Hey, did you know that he played pee wee football with QB David Greene?  Did you know Hermann Johnson was the biggest baby born in Louisiana?  Did you know Tim Tebow was home schooled where he learned how to save foreign infants from starvation?

Why no, I haven�t watched college football at all in the last few minutes�thanks for the info, college football announcer guy!!

 

12) �He really gives 110 percent.�

No, he REALLY doesn�t.  Why not 105 percent or 115 percent?  It�s physically impossible to give over 100 percent.  So why not 150 percent?  Why is 10 percent over 100 the arbitrary number we pick when someone gives it their all?  Basically 110 percent has become the new 100 percent.  So in all probability this clich� isn�t going anywhere.  From now on I�m just going to say, �He gave 115 percent�...due to inflation.

 

11) �There seemed to be a miscommunication on that play.�

See ladies, it�s not just you.  It happens with other men too.

 

10) �We have to play a full 60 minutes.�

No, you have to play like three and half hours minus TV timeouts, halftime, and the occasional stoppage for a drunk skinny naked guy running onto the field who apparently can�t say no to a dare.

 

9) �Boeckman would like to have that one back.�

Yeah, I have a list of things I�d like to take back as well.

1) Trying baking chocolate thinking it was real chocolate when I was eight.

2) Seeing the movie King Ralph starring John Goodman in the theaters.

3) Three words: convenience store burrito.

I have 94 other ones�how much time does everyone have?

 

8) �They have to take care of the football.�

It�s true.  I�ll never forget the first time a Duke Jr. football followed me home after school one day.  I asked my mom if I could keep it.  She said yes on the stipulation that I had to take care of it.  I did for a while, but honestly, after a few months, my dad ended up feeding it and walking it.

Then about a year later, after an errant pass in a game of three-flies-in, the ball jumped out in front of a car.  There was nothing the driver could�ve done.

Soon after, my parents bought me a Voit to help ease the grieving process.

 

7) �This Mountaineer defense is going to �pin their ears back� on this next play.�

Why would anyone pin their ears back?  Is it because they have big ears and they are afraid that they won�t get asked to the Barn Hill Dance?  Maybe it�s time to teach that defense about self-esteem and the fact that you just have to be happy with who you are on the inside.

 

6) �He has a quick first step.�

After that, he stops cold out of sheer terror.  He was first team All-Freeze Tag back in third grade.

 

5) �The Sooner defense bends but doesn�t break.�

I am so guilty of this one.  I�ll try to do better.  Please offer me alternatives.  What about this defense teases but doesn�t put out?

Too racy?

 

4) �This QB is a real gunslinger.�

I�m pretty sure that�s illegal.  Billy Blanks tried that in the beginning of The Last Boy Scout, and even though he scored I�m pretty sure there was a flag or two on the play.  Unless, of course, the game was played at Auburn.

 

3) �Arenas is a downhill runner.�

Now that�s just unfair.  What a home field advantage that would be!  A stadium with a hill at midfield or at the goal line.  Of course, that would justify, �It�s an uphill battle.�

I would love to see a strong safety get a downhill running start at a WR and knock him 30 yards down an incline.  Thank goodness for forward progress, eh?

 

2) �Sanchez has all day to throw it.�

If the opposing team has all day to throw it, then might I suggest a different defensive strategy?  In fact, I think it would be awesome if one day an announcer got very literal with this one.

�Man, Verne, Snead seemed to have like eight seconds in the pocket on that play.  Maybe it was closer to seven, but it sure seemed like a long time.  Well, not a long time relatively speaking, but in football pocket passing terms a long time.�

My favorite variation of this is, �Stafford has all the time in the world.�

Whoa, is he immortal or something?  I�d be texting my friends, �Gary Danielson just said Matthew Stafford is a Highlander.�

 

1) �That guy�s a throwback.�

Usually referred to when talking about slow white guys who try really hard.  You know, the kind of guy that �brings his lunch pail� to work every day.

I promise you, this guy is not a throwback unless he plays without a facemask, protective padding, and with a half-torn ACL.  If this guy makes it to the NFL and accepts a 1970s NFL salary, then fine, that guy can be a throwback.

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over 17 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
s2art wrote:
I don't like the word "Novocastrian", it just pisses me off. Don't know why.


Because it's spelt incorrectly perhaps?




E + R + O

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over 17 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
I don't want to hear it let alone spell it correctly.
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over 17 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
It's a team game, it's a game of two halves, sport was the winner on the day and we played to the whistle 
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