Tag Archive | "England"

Tags: ,

National Anthem of England (sort of)

Posted on 11 May 2010 by halahuya

This is a little tricky. England doesn’t actually have a national anthem, since “God Save the Queen” is the national anthem of Great Britain. The Scotland and Wales teams sing “The Flower of Scotland” and “Land of my Fathers” respectively before football matches, but the England team sings “God Save the Queen.” It’s all to do with the semi-confusing crossover English people have between “British” and “English” identity, which we definitely don’t have time to get into here.

The two best things about “God Save the Queen” are:

1. When there’s a male monarch the lyrics are switched to “God Save the King”. Otherwise the whole thing would be very embarrassing. Got to love a flexible anthem though.
2. England fans have developed a tradition of singing “Der-der-der-der-der-der!” along with the instrumentation just before “Send her victorious”.

Important: the national anthem veriosn of “God Save the Queen” is not to be confused with the Sex Pistols version, which isn’t quite so enthusiastic about the monarchy:

Lyrics to the British national anthem “God Save the Queen”:

God save our gracious Queen,
Long live our noble Queen,
God save the Queen:
Send her victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over us:
God save the Queen.

O Lord, our God, arise,
Scatter her enemies,
And make them fall.
Confound their politics,
Frustrate their knavish tricks,
On Thee our hopes we fix,
God save us all.

Thy choicest gifts in store,
On her be pleased to pour;
Long may she reign:
May she defend our laws,
And ever give us cause
To sing with heart and voice
God save the Queen

Not in this land alone
But be God’s mercies known
From shore to shore
Lord make the nations see
That men should brothers be
And form one family
The wide world over

From every latent foe
From the assassins blow
God save the Queen
O’er her thine arm extend
For Britain’s sake defend
Our mother, prince, and friend
God save the Queen

Comments Off

Tags: ,

World Cup 2010 Jerseys: England

Posted on 11 May 2010 by halahuya

3408326209_784471eb0bI think it’s fair to say that the new England home kit from Umbro was released with quite a bit of hype in 2009. Probably too much. OK, definitely too much. Overshadowing the national anthems with the big reveal on matchday vs Slovakia was unnecessary.

But now all that hubbub has hushed up, we can take a look at the shirts the England players will wear at World Cup 2010 in South Africa and judge the design on its merits, rather than through the hype-goggles of last year. I’ve been practicing my Tim Gunn impression, so let’s go take a look.

England Home Shirt

england home

What can I say? It’s white. It’s very very white. Even the usually gold star above the crest is white. You could argue that so much white is dull. Or that no thought has gone into it. But this is a radical departure from the last 20 plus years of kits, which were all white with a splash of something else. This is white with a splash of white. But, for me at least, it works.

The FA crest and the red Umbro logo are just enough to prevent this being boring, and the overall feel is – as with many shirts – retro (especially those pop collars.) But definitely in a good way.

England Away Shirt

england-away-soccer-shirt

The away shirt is retro red instead of retro white, and a definite nod to the red shirts worn in the 1966 World Cup final. But somehow it’s not quite as successful.

I think the problem might be the two different shades of red and the absence of the pop collar, both of which which break the retro feel and make you aware that this isn’t really a jersey from the middle of last century. Maybe that’s a good thing if you don’t want to wear a jersey from the middle of last century, but if asked to choose between these two I’d go home every time.

Comments Off

Tags: ,

David Beckham expects to return in November

Posted on 11 May 2010 by halahuya

England midfielder David Beckham has said he does not expect to return to competitive action until November because of the Achilles injury which has already ruled him out of the World Cup.

Speaking backstage to the presenters of ABC show The View, Beckham said: “I won’t be running for another three months so I’ll be playing again in, probably, November.”

He added: “This is an injury that is going to take time to heal. I’m only six weeks in after the surgery. I started therapy 10 days ago and just doing that every day. I kind of want to push it but with this kind of injury you can’t. You just have to wait for it to heal and then move on.

“At the moment it’s just getting the motion back into the ankle, the tendon, because obviously it’s still repairing. I can’t stretch too much, I have to wear a boot every day. If I haven’t got a boot on, which I didn’t today for a few interviews, I have to use crutches – it’s one or the other at the moment. It’s a pain. It’s not easy moving around, but I have to protect it.”

Comments Off

Tags: ,

World Cup 1966

Posted on 10 May 2010 by halahuya

Winner: England

England, the country that invented football, reached the summit of the global game on home soil in 1966 after defeating West Germany in one of the most exciting, and controversial, of all FIFA World Cup™ Finals.

Geoff Hurst was the hero of England’s 4-2 Wembley triumph after completing a unique Final hat-trick with two extra-time goals, although doubts over the legitimacy of his second strike – which cannoned down off the underside of the crossbar and was adjudged by assistant referee Tofik Bakhramov to have landed behind the goalline – remain to this day.

It was not the only controversy of a tournament which the main South American contenders departed complaining bitterly and which featured other notable subplots in Korea DPR’s sensational elimination of Italy and a memorable show of scoring power by Portugal’s Eusebio, the nine-goal winner of the Golden Shoe.

Ramsey’s vision
For England, the 1966 showpiece offered the opportunity to finally make their mark on the FIFA World Cup. Having come to the party late, their debut at the 1950 finals had brought embarrassment with defeat by the United States. Alf Ramsey, a defender in that 1950 team, became manager in 1963 with the aim of taking England into the modern age – which, for a start, meant no more team selection by committee. Ramsey championed unfashionable, hard-working players and his rejection of the 4-2-4 system in favour of 4-4-2 earned his side the sobriquet ‘Wingless wonders’.

Key to their prospects were the two Bobbys, stylish central defender Moore and goalscoring midfielder Charlton, but they made an uninspiring start in a goalless Opening Match against Uruguay. Indeed the biggest talking point of their first-round campaign was a foul by Nobby Stiles on France’s Jacques Simon which led some Football Association officials to request that Ramsey drop the tigerish midfielder – a request he ignored.

There was a false start from the organisers too with the theft of the Jules Rimet Cup. Stolen from an exhibition, it was found by a dog named Pickles under the hedge of a suburban garden in south-east London. Pickles was not the only furry hero of these finals for the FIFA World Cup had its first mascot, a lion called World Cup Willie.

It was in the north of England that the event really caught the imagination in the first round. In Liverpool, Brazil opened the defence of their crown with a 2-0 win over Bulgaria, Pele and Garrincha both scoring – and becoming, in the process, the first players to find the net in three successive FIFA World Cups. Yet that was as good as it would get for the holders.

A victim of some tough Bulgarian tackling, Pele missed Brazil’s subsequent 3-1 loss to a Hungary team who, inspired by Florian Albert, delivered the South Americans’ first defeat on the world stage since 1954. Although he returned for their third match against Portugal, Pele’s threat was neutered by a cynical challenge by Morais and Otto Gloria’s Portuguese took full advantage, Eusebio scoring twice in a 3-1 victory. It was the third straight win for the tournament newcomers yet Eusebio, the reigning European Footballer of the Year, had only just begun.

Koreans provide surprise
Next up for Portugal were the North Koreans, the finals’ surprise package. They had qualified by beating Australia after the other Asian and African nations withdrew, protesting the decision to allow only one qualifier from their continents. A revelation with their skilful, fast-flowing football, they stunned Italy in their concluding group match, Pak Doo Ik’s solitary goal at Ayresome Park catapulting them into the quarter-finals and sending the Azzurri home to a barrage of rotten tomatoes.

In a remarkable quarter-final at Goodison Park, the North Koreans threatened another upset by sweeping into a 3-0 lead inside 25 minutes. Yet remarkably they finished 5-3 losers after Eusebio dragged Portugal up off the floor, turning the game around almost singlehandedly with a virtuoso display that had brought him four goals by the hour mark.

Portugal eventually had to settle for third place after succumbing to two Bobby Charlton efforts in a semi-final against England where Eusebio, despite a late spot-kick, struggled to escape the shackles of Stiles. The hosts had previously won a bad-tempered quarter-final against Argentina – Hurst justifying his selection ahead of Jimmy Greaves by heading the only goal after Argentina captain Antonio Rattin’s dismissal – and now only West Germany stood between them and the prize.

Helmut Schoen’s side featured the 20-year-old Franz Beckenbauer, scorer of four goals en route to the Final – including two on his tournament debut in a 5-0 humbling of Switzerland. After Uwe Seeler’s late winner against Spain had secured them first place in their group, the Mannschaft subsequently overcame Uruguay and Soviet Union sides both reduced to nine men by red cards. Helmut Haller and Beckenbauer beat the great Soviet goalkeeper Lev Yashin in their 2-1 semi-final success and it was Haller who would open the scoring in the Final.

Yet 30 July 1966 proved England’s day. Although Wolfgang Weber silenced Wembley with an 89th-minute equaliser just when the hosts, leading through goals by Hurst and Martin Peters, seemingly had the game won, Ramsey’s men came again, driven on by their youngest player, indefatigable midfielder Alan Ball. Hurst, who had registered only one international goal prior to the finals, netted twice more in extra time and it finally was all over.

Comments Off

Tags: , , , ,

England Soccer Jersey – 2010 World Cup is Around the Corner – How is the New England Jersey?

Posted on 26 April 2010 by admin


Image : http://www.flickr.com

Even though England has not hoisted the World Cup Trophy above their heads since 1966, they are one of the most popular teams anywhere! Every 4 years when the World Cup comes calling again and the perennial red and white contenders take the pitch there is no shortage of passionate fans donning an England soccer Jersey or a St Georges Cross Flag on their back or both! Whether the World Cup is being held in South Africa, South America, or the Far East, the Army of loyal English soccermu.com” title=”football”>football fans grab their England soccer Jersey, hop on a flight, and come out in large numbers to support their fabulous England National Team! England has a rich history of qualifying for every World Cup in recent history, but as rich as their qualification history is for the World Cup they are in the midst of a 44 year drought when it comes to winning the prestigious event, despite, the legions of fans watching them on TV or in person wearing their prized possession, their England Soccer Jersey. The last time they had the pleasure of being anointed champions, they had the double pleasure of doing it on their home turf, in the 1966 World Cup that was hosted in England, and as you can imagine the stadium was filled to the brim with red and white England soccer jerseys!

Looking back in history nearly 1200 men have represented England at the highest level since 1872 wearing their Authentic Umbro England Jersey, but none is as universally revered as the late Bobby Moore. the captain of the England National Team for the famed 1966 World Cup Victory, and duelling so memorably with Pele in Mexico four years later, he also started and finished every single one of his 108 international appearances. It is hard to imagine that he never came off the bench and was never substituted, maybe the power was in the England soccer jersey he was wearing??. His final 90 minutes came in a 1-0 defeat by Italy in November, 1973 on an evening when the winning goal was scored by a midfielder named Fabio Capello. Once and future king of the 2010 England Squad!

Now for the specifics of this years England Soccer Jersey. As always the product is extremely well made, durable and tough, beautiful in its simplicity. With the new England Jersey style meets performance. The new England kit is the proud result. Honouring the past, looking forward to the future. The right shirt at the right time.

Shirt features:

- New Three Lions badge

- New Umbro logo

- Tailored fit

- Underarm gusset cut to move with the body

- Anatomically tailored sleeve

- Underarm zone ventilation

- Climate Control fabric

- Lumbar zone ventilation

If you want to support your team this summer for the 2010 World Cup in S Africa, and you like what you have heard about the new England Jersey, make sure you purchase an authentic one today and become a small part of the official history of England football!

Thanks To : ฟุตบอล livescore

Comments Off

Advertise Here
Advertise Here

INFORMATION