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Hate the South African vuvuzelas? I have good news!

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by CountyClerk, Jun 13, 2010.

  1. REEKO_HTOWN

    REEKO_HTOWN I'm Rich Biiiiaaatch!

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    I fixed it. I cared a little bit about what you thought. ;)
     
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  2. hithereitstim

    hithereitstim Member

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    [​IMG]
     
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  3. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    I just read an article from soccernet that they're not actually gonna ban it. Unless a fan throws the horns on the pitch or does something stupid with it that could effect the game, they're not gonna ban it.

    Here's to hoping a few fans go apeshizz and start going berserk with their vuvuvuuzielieas.
     
  4. Cannonball

    Cannonball Member

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    I think he made the comment about somebody throwing one on the field in hopes that someone would take it as a suggestion.
     
  5. luisantonio1014

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    what I don't understand is how they keep telling and telling the crowd not to blow them, yet they don't listen and still do it ALL THE TIME!!!
     
  6. Aceshigh7

    Aceshigh7 Member

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    Heard on the news today that while they aren't banning them, ESPN is going to be adjusting their crowd mic configs to lessen the incessant noise pollution those things cause.

    So things should be much more tolerable for Friday's broadcast.
     
  7. Cannonball

    Cannonball Member

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    I know they've asked them not to blow them during the national anthems. I would consider that very disrespectful. I haven't caught any national anthems since the USA-England game so I don't know if the crowds have honored that request or not.
     
  8. bladeage

    bladeage Member

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  9. bladeage

    bladeage Member

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    They did, it was really quiet during the Italy and Paraguay anthems. I thought they eliminated them all together. I was kinda happy, then as soon as the anthems ended, here we go again. :(
     
  10. CountyClerk

    CountyClerk Member

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    http://g.sports.yahoo.com/soccer/wo...cup-experience--fbintl_ro-vuvuzela061410.html


    Buzzkill: Vuvuzelas ruining World Cup experience
    Martin Rogers

    By Martin Rogers, Yahoo! Sports 10 hours, 6 minutes ago


    Vuvuzelas have created a constant buzzing sound over games, annoying players, fans and viewers at home. (Photo by Bernat Armangue, AP)

    Follow Martin Rogers on Twitter at @mrogersyahoo

    JOHANNESBURG – They are plastic, noisy and cost no more than a few bucks. And they are, sadly, sabotaging the World Cup.

    The constant droning of the vuvuzela – the traditional South African horn that has been a permanent backdrop to this tournament – is becoming such an annoyance to fans, players and television viewers that soccer’s governing body is considering drastic action.

    According to a source who has regular contact with top World Cup officials, FIFA president Sepp Blatter, FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke and World Cup organizing committee chief Danny Jordaan will hold fresh talks over the next few days to discuss whether to reverse policy and implement a vuvuzela ban.

    They should.

    Remarkably, in a tournament involving the finest, richest and most controversial soccer stars on the planet and a misbehaving soccer ball, the most-discussed issue has revolved around a brightly colored plastic instrument so simple that a child could blow it.


    It takes a lot to distract the world from the event it has waited four years and focus on something so apparently trivial, yet tortured eardrums and pounding headaches have done just that only four days into the month-long World Cup.

    Supporters everywhere have reacted angrily to the continuous use of the horns, which have been heard on television broadcasts every second of the games so far. But the problem for soccer’s loyal fans is not so much the ever-present buzz – enterprising locals have made a small fortune by selling earplugs to help drown out the sound for those in attendance. It is more about what is missing, namely the typical color and atmosphere that is normally seen at top-level matches.

    Because the vuvuzelas create a wall of sound, there has been little of the usual chanting, singing and roaring that are a staple of soccer games everywhere else in the world. Even the fans of the England national team, normally among the loudest in international soccer, could not bring themselves to muster their usual diet of boisterous chants and songs during Saturday’s 1-1 draw with the United States, effectively admitting defeat to the almighty horn.

    Furthermore, players admit they have struggled to concentrate amid the noise and there have been regular communication problems among teammates. Slovenia’s Samir Handanovic and Marko Suler screamed furiously at each other in their team’s victory over Algeria following a mixup that almost led to a goal for their opponent.

    “It is impossible to communicate,” said Argentina’s Lionel Messi, the world’s best player. “It is like being deaf.”

    Some fans might already be thinking that deafness is not such a bad option compared to the incessant aural assault they are currently suffering through. The vuvuzela, which is made to replicate the call of an elephant, comes across as a drone on television. In real life, though, the noise reaches 144 decibels, equivalent to the sound made by a passenger jet.

    Also, vuvuzelas come with only one sound, one pitch. Fans blow them as hard as they can during dead periods of action as they do after a thrilling moment, so there is none of the inspirational roar from fans that urges an attack from their team. None of the imaginative and patriotic chants are sung to light up games. None of the childish yet always amusing crescendo aimed at increasing a goalkeeper’s nerves as he steps up to take a goal kick is heard.

    Portugal plays its first match Tuesday. The team – which played in the Confederation Cup in South Africa last summer – knows what awaits them. And it’s not happy about it.

    “There is something missing,” star Cristiano Ronaldo said. “I like the atmosphere of football; it is beautiful. This is not beautiful.”

    There is an argument that this is South Africa’s event and the rest of the world should adapt. But this is more than a South African event. The World Cup is a truly global spectacle – and the world is making itself heard that it doesn’t want its ears bashed any longer.
     
  11. bladeage

    bladeage Member

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    That's true. I like the chants and crowd noise. It just sounds like there's a bunch of bees swarming around a microphone. It doesn't feel the same.
     
  12. Uprising

    Uprising Member

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  13. arkoe

    arkoe (ง'̀-'́)ง

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    [SwolyBait]Normally I refuse to watch soccer on tv because there's always some guy blabberring nonstop in Spanish until someone yells GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL... and then the blathering in Spanish resumes. I too enjoy the vuvuzelas because they drown out the announcers that I don't undestand.[/SwolyBait]
     
  14. bladeage

    bladeage Member

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    BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ What? BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ I can't hear you BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ Swoly please BZZZZZZ ZZZZZ ZZZZZ ZZZ Re ZZZZZZZZZZ post ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ you ZZZZZZZ r ZZZZZZZZZ comment ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZzz
     
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  15. REEKO_HTOWN

    REEKO_HTOWN I'm Rich Biiiiaaatch!

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    [​IMG]
     
  16. T-Mac1

    T-Mac1 Member

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  17. Mathloom

    Mathloom Shameless Optimist

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    Love the vuvuzelas, they ain't going nowhere.

    They know that it would incite the wrath of South Africans lol.

    Why would you ban something the attendees want?

    Also, it's not true that the chanting and the cheering is muffled out. When Drogba came on for Ivory Coast, it was one of the loudest roars I've ever heard from a crowd.

    Btw, to the people calling each other racist, Africa is not a nation.


    After all this criticism, I can't wait to watch South Africa's next game. The vuvuzela's will be on full blast like never before.
     
  18. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Atomic Playboy
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    Now if they could just get rid of U2.
     
  19. rrj_gamz

    rrj_gamz Member

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    LMAO... :grin:

    the buzzing sound isn't too annoying, but I hate the face I can't hear the chants and crowd noise...
     
  20. g1184

    g1184 Member

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    This is true. The last thing we need in Africa is another unstable nation. The vuvuzela rebellion.
     

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