Where we:
- discuss the merits or otherwise of half & half scarves
- Mount Rushmore of football shocks
Listen on iTunes:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/footyfromthefoot/id1486406462
Listen on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/29suvn5FGvRSoCFbu7q5P9?si=lPdRkRnsTzKMJNhIRWCGAQ
Listen on Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/Iokmel2weszkja2ux3pr73hixf4
LIVE EPL Trivia Night
https://www.facebook.com/groups/SanDiegoEPLSupportersGroup
Bluefoot Self-Isolation shirt and virtual tip jar
www.bluefootbar.com
An article what I wrote about watching Aussie Rules in a time of no live sport
https://medium.com/@intoabrownstudy/the-receptiveness-of-the-undiscerning-sports-fan-418c39ae2358
Show notes:
Faces watching Aarhus https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/52843806
Penenka pen https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ROG4-QPIDgo
Rabona in Spanish means to play hooky, to skip school. The name derives from its first documented performance by Ricardo Infante in a game between Argentinian teams Estudiantes de la Plata and Rosario Central in 1948.[1][2] The football magazine El Gráfico published a front cover showing Infante dressed as a schoolboy with the caption "El infante que se hizo la rabona" (In English: "The infant plays hooky").[3] Another supposed origin for the name is that Rabona is derived from the Spanish word rabo for tail, and that the move resembled the swishing of a cow's tail between or around its legs. In Brazil, the move is also known as the chaleira (kettle) or letra (letter).
The first filmed rabona was performed by Brazilian footballer Pelé in the São Paulo state championship in 1957. Giovanni "Cocò" Roccotelli is credited with popularising the rabona in Italy during the 1970s; at the time, this move was simply called a "crossed-kick" (incrociata, in Italian).
Zaire and the story behind that freekick...https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/gimlet/we-came-to-win/e/54237067