Why don't we like it? A number of reasons. The indeterminate stoppage time is weird - at the end of Italy-Paraguay, they had "3:00 minutes" up on the TV, and no one seemed to play with any urgency. Get the ball back in play, don't writhe, or sit there and make sure the ball is just right before you do. Of course, it went on beyond 3 minutes, too. No one knows, except the ref (and even then, I wonder).
But, that's just a blip ... On Friday, watching France v. whoever in the office, someone (foreign-born, actually) asked if there had been any goals. I jokingly said, "There are goals in this sport?!" I later looked it up, and no, there were no goals in that game. So funny. So, yeah, ties are an issue - play until those **** drop, ya know?!
Not that there aren't scoring opportunities, or excitement, in a 0-0 tie, but, something just seems to be missing from the sport if it's that hard to score a goal.
But, the big epiphany I had was that at a very high level (like the World Cup), it's actually fairly interesting and rewarding to watch. But ... lower quality soccer is just not that interesting. I can watch bad baseball all day, however, because it's still intrinsically interesting somehow.
I also used to think that sports like soccer and cycling (which I do enjoy) aren't interesting unless you actually participate in them, so that you have some inkling of what the athletes are going through, and how difficult it is to be good. On the other hand, you can still enjoy baseball or football without ever having set foot on a diamond or a gridiron.
Oh, and, incomprehensible? That would be the "offsides" penalty. Best explanation I ever saw was probably the beer bottles in Bend It Like Beckham, and I still don't quite get it. Well, maybe I do, but I don't get the rationale behind why it's wrong. Would probably make the game more interesting if it wasn't a penalty.
All that being said, I'll watch it when I can.
_________________ This cold and dark tormented hell Is all I`ll ever know So when you get to heaven May the devil be the judge
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