Big thanks to these channels for the compilations - make sure to show them some love! ⚽ Best Funny Football Chants: ruclips.net/video/X-dWgt6cj1o/видео.htmlsi=yl79L-YoACOvIUO7 FUNNIEST FOOTBALL CHANTS IN ENGLAND: ruclips.net/video/mm62RmV3p_w/видео.htmlsi=pJkuqICY7SwboZdX FUNNIEST CHANTS BY ENGLISH FOOTBALL FANS: ruclips.net/video/BZT7XFkeA48/видео.htmlsi=VHD_zzF473Ky6p8k
The barmy army does a similar thing during ashes cricket tours against the Australian's . Even the afl footy in Australia a lot of the time you spend more time talking to people then watching the game. I can remember at school in Australia we did similar chants at sports days.
This is a classix in the midlands from the coventry and birmingham city to aston villa fans to the tune of terry jacks - seasons in the sun * we had joy we had fun we had villa on the run , but the joy didn't last cause the B&st*rds ran too fast*
I haven't watched football for years and only went once to a live game (with a friend who had a crush on a player), but I love videos which have the chants with subtitles, and _my_ favourite chant is the one to the tune of 'The Addams Family' !! Thanks for sharing this, Alanna.🖖❤️🏴
New Zealander here. Nobody chants like the Brits. They do it in many sports, their cricket fans are worldwide famous, and one of the highlights of their rugby teams coming over is the live game chants.
The barmy army in cricket are the benchmark for travelling a very long way, seeing every game and getting absolutely smashed. But having a great time and being friendly with the opposition fans. We love a party, and the sense of humour is legendary.
He absolutely was not, never, diagnosed with schizophrenia. He pulled out of a Scotland squad because he said he wasn't mentally right. At his next game for his club, Rangers, the Partick Thistle fans chanted "Two Andy Gormans, there's only two Andy Gorams." If they'd done that after he'd actually been diagnosed with schizophrenia it would have been sick, but in the circumstances it was funny enough to make Andy Goram laugh.
i'm danish, once i was to a non-league match in england .. the fans was brutal against eachother, when the pause came, they walked through eachother to shift stand, nothing accured, but when 2nd half started they went against eachother again - its was so delighted to watch
We have a German girl from Bayern who’s mum is English comes from Ashford and she regularly comes to our games and reckons there’s more atmosphere in our little stadium than the Allianz! 🤣
A couple of years ago, Kurt Zouma who plays for West Ham was sent to court after a video of him kicking and slapping a cat circulated around social media. So any time he played, and he touched/kicked the ball the whole stadium would shout out Meow!
I can remember watching a game he was playing in, and he went on a sprint - the opposition fans immediately started chanting "A Cat! A Cat! (etc)" in the same way they chant "Attack!"
From Luxembourg. Attended games in England, NL, Germany, France, Belgium and Spain. Chanting is very common even more intense in Germany (less tourists in football stadiums) than England. And mocking of course, that’s part of the game. I love the cynical aspect in England and Belgium. Prohibition to engage in abusive or racist chanting is now finally seriously taken care of in most places.
From a young age, we have a lot of experience singing together during school assemblies. Often singing rude versions to annoy the teachers. Every British school kid knows these tunes by heart, and they are often used as a base for football chants, too. That and insulting each other is a national tradition. These songs come very naturally!
No, the teachers were not annoyed, just pretending to be annoyed, and immediately after assembly noting down the lyrics for use down the pub on Friday.
I was at a Kent v Middlesex cricket match (a T20 game), and some of the Middlesex fans started chanting "You’re just a point on a compass" at Sam Northeast, who played for Kent.
When Ji Sung Park came from Korea to play (brilliantly) for Man Utd, they chanted 'He shoots, he scores, he'll eat your Labrador, Ji Sung Park, Ji Sung Park!' They loved him but couldn't help teasing him . . .
And the other one too. Park, Park wherever you may be, you eat dogs in your own country. It could be worse, you could be a Scouse, eating rats in your Council House
A mate of mine lived near Park when he was at United, he ran into him a few times, Park's apparently a really top bloke, he also apparently found the dog chants hilarious
To the tune of ‘Amore’, West Ham fans on their famously wayward striker, Bobby Zamorra: “When you're sat in row Z and the ball hits your head, that’s Zamorra”
The crowd is like a huge beast. They all start singing the same chant at once. I took an American friend to Old Trafford once, and when the United Fans started to sing, he nearly c@#$ed himself..
A friend of mine brought a workmate to his first game at OT, he was fondly known as 'Adrian the Canadian' he stood there listening to the chants and after a while he asked "how do you all know the words to the songs, do you go somewhere to learn them?" we all smiled and my friend explained to him how it happens.
Cant beat a big game or a stadium in full swing ,old Wembley celebrating a goal was just epic , 100 k people with no modern building techniques for soundproofing the noise was unreal . Only come close to that one more time & that was the Derby at the Etihad where everyone was doing the Poznan & the stadium was shaking . Thought there was a f*ckin eathquake
Cricket: Barmy Army (England cricket fans) v Australia - "He bowls to the left, he bowls to the right, that Mitchell Johnson, his bowling is shite!" Kind of backfired a year or two later though when he tore through our batting order...
This is a good point, but more than that I think it is time that plays a big part. Some rivalries go farther back in history than the discovery of the Americas. That means something deep. I dont even watch football but I know of the local rivalry between the big teams and the small teams nearby.
Went there with derby last season in league one and some lads missed out on tickets and rented out the bottom apartment for the weekend, lucky bastards could have a pint while watching
Kent. You're officially Millwall. Congrats. Detroiter here, just happened to click the video, good stuff. But don't forget, you're Millwall if you got off the train from London to Kent. Cheers
In Britain, if you support your local football team, no matter what the size of the club, you will have those teams you hate even if they're only 5 miles down the road. Britain is so densely populated compared to America. The distances for us here are doable in 1-5 hours at most plus our league system in the lower leagues are divided regionally too.
You are also required to dispise every player on a team that's not what you support, however if any of them transfer to your club then they are gods gift. Also when they play for England, all bad blood from them being on a different premier league team goes out the window.
The best football chant ever has to be, "Two Andy Gorams, there's only two Andy Gorams........two Andy Gorams, there's only two Andy Gorams", sung to the tune of Guantanamera by Rangers fans after Goram, Rangers' keeper, was diagnosed with schizophrenia. Genius....
5:39 Adam Johnson was a Sunderland player who was found guilty of CSA and grooming a 15 year old. Those fans chanting that support Newcastle United (my home club), who are VERY fierce rivals of Sunderland.
Hey girl we are from North Carolina and one of the millions of things we love about England is English Football. The die hard support of fans not only of their club but their town/city is awesome and the creativity of the insults is endlessly brilliant. Probably going to be trashed for this but we are proud Sunderland supporters (I know I know).
Thank you for including Walsall in this clip (and reacting in the usual way). For an EFL League 2 (Division 4) club, they really punch above their weight in chanting. They seem to feature a lot in these compilations. And some of their best work is ad hoc, reacting to events on the pitch (or off it).
My favourite post on this subject ever is: American Sports fans: "De-fense! De-fense!" British Sports fans: "All right lads, I've just worked up a song to the tune of Debussy's Claire de Lune about an opposing player's drunk driving charge. I'llcount us off!" The best ones are just so easy to pick up once a few fans have kicked them off, and everyone joins in. I also have no interest in footbal (or any sport competition), but a good chant is worth listening to- as long as you can avoid the truly offensive ones.
Lots of football fans put the reduction of singing at football matches down to all seater stadiums. Personally I think the fact kids no longer sing hymns at school assemblies has far more to do with it. There is no longer a set of tunes that everyone knows to set words to which makes the whole thing harder
The best is english fans thinks they are brutal but compared to other european countries they are delicate in case of chants and atmosphere on the stands
Loved the video! As a football fan from the UK each club has their own unique chants, some to the same tune as other clubs, but sometimes times a lot of the chants can be made up on the spot, and everyone else just joins in and it goes from their! I would highly recommend you go to a game even if you don’t like sports! The atmosphere is just incredible 🫶
Most of these songs go along with the tune of a popular song, so thats how you catch on and then its just listening. Many chants will be used for a season or more, so it gives fans a chance to learn them before they go to a game.
Pop songs , Hymns ,adverts ( shake n vac springs to mind & was only used in lower leagues for some daft reason ) Channel 4 showed "The Life of Brian " on TV way back in the 90s ( when it was seen as Blasphemy to show a ridicule of dumb religions ) on a weds night at 11 pm = Saturday Man U fans started singing it at the game & its stuck ever since . Interesting one is ask fans WHERE DO THESE SONGS come from ? most will struggle to name the original tune example "Thierry Henri " = Tom Hark by the Pihranas or however its spelt
My favourite was aimed at Steve Ogrizovic - "You're better at cricket, You're better at cricket, Your name is a million in Scrabble, You're better at cricket". Steve Ogrizovic played Minor Counties cricket for Shropshire in the off season to a fairly good standard.
Being a rugby fan who can't stand football I'm ashamed to admit that I was laughing as much as you were. Keep up the good work of entertaining us, we love your take on things.
The best one i ever heard was when opposing Newcastle fans started chanting when Johnjo Shelvey subbed on. "He's coming for you, He's coming for youuuu. Harry Potter. He's coming for you!" Just Google an image of johnjo shelvey and youll understand the reference.
Two of my favourite football chants are "Lenell John-Lewis, his name is a shop" and one aimed at the very bald and pale Jonjo Shelvey "he's coming for you, he's coming for you, Harry Potter, he's coming for you"
You will notice almost all the chants come from the kop (die hard home supporters) end. We sit in the local pub and come up with them when new players join or we win/lose, those supporters sing the chants in a few games as the loudest fans, and it spreads, there also on the true fans website not the official club website. and the less offensive ones are even in the home teams game programs
Walsall is a football club and a small town in The Black Country in the West Midlands England UK its not far from Birmingham, West Bromwich and Wolverhampton we are probably the smallest team in the west midlands so we like to stick it to our close neighbours lol our local rivals Fun Fact The Black Country and Birmingham are were the Peaky Blinders were from
One of my favourites is when you're losing 3-0 and start singing "we're gonna win 4-3", then they score again and, without missing a beat, you all change to "we're gonna win 5-4"! Great video Alanna. You should definitely go to a game. Maybe start gently with a women's game - not so much chanting but still plenty of humour.
I watched Preston North End get thrashed 5-1 by Luton Town. We'd been singing variants of that all through the match. I started them off singing "We're going to win 6-5", which i'll always remember.
The Steve Gerrard chant is extra good because they’ve taken a chant that Liverpool fans usually sing about him and changed it to include probably the worst moment of his career.
I'm a Bulgarian football fan, we do have some chants with the same vibe as the ones in the video, but most of the time we are just singing about the club. I don't know if you've seen an ultras compilation, but that's basically what we and other European fans do at football games. If you haven't seen an ultras compilation but would like to, i can suggest some.
Bradford City fan here. We quite often make up chants on the spot, like many other clubs. More seagulls than fans wasn't the only one made up at that match. Most chants are known by most clubs already. The fire drill is when the opposing fans leave early. There's, Football in a library, when the home fans are quiet.
On a related tangent (very mildly related :) I was at a Bad Manners concert back in 1990 or thereabouts and as the gig as about to start, the whole audience started chanting "YOU FAT B-" for nearly ten minutes which was a surprise to me. This chant was aimed at Buster Bloodvessel, the lead singer of the band and, turns out he wasn't coming on stage until they'd declared their love for him in this manner for quite a while 😂 I was lucky enough to interview the fat bas- I mean, Buster after the gig, for the volunteer job I had at the time, and he was (and hopefully still is) a great guy 😊
In North America, the chants that occur tend to be of the supportive variety. Unless the refs miss a call, or in hockey a rival teams goalie will have his name sing songed to get under their skin. Or booing an especially disliked player on the visiting team when they touch the ball/puck (which ever is applicable).
Hi Alanna, great video ! I remember there used to be a chant when only a few away fans turned up - "Come in a taxi, you must have come in a taxi...". A while later, a fan told a story of getting to a match far too early and he found he was the only one on a vast terrace, when the chant went up "come on a skateboard...."
Some chants are sung at every game and some are created on the spot due to a random circumstance, the guy next to you begins to sing along, then the next, then your entire row, the row in front, the row behind and then the entire stand is singing it, they pick up on it around the stadium and then, most of the stadium are singing it. There is a common song during a LIVE Sky broadcast, "Sky TV is f**king sh*t" which Sky try to dub during the match, because Sky will rearrange a match for TV coverage without giving a toss if it effects the fans who had tickets for the original date. Its mostly sung at Leeds United games, but its caught on with other clubs who are effected by rearranged games.
Away fans at a small ground where the stand on one side was being demolished, sang "My garden shed is bigger than this, it's got a door and a window, my garden shed is bigger than this. My budgie's cage is bigger than this, it's got a perch and a mirror, my budgie's cage is bigger than this. My boxer shorts are bigger than this, they've got a hole and a skid mark, my boxer shorts are bigger than this."
From my time in the terraces, it's both pre-planned and spontaneous. There are songs that get sung regularly but at other times someone will come up with something quick witted and it will get picked up by the rest of the home end. It helps that there are a few regular tunes that these chants get sung to so everyone knows the 'tune' already and just picks up on the new words being used.
Theres a bunch of melodies that are used (usually from old pop songs or hymns) and people tend to come up with the words during the game. More popular ones stick around and even get adopted by other teams
With chants there are many ways they can come around. You usually have the diehard fans who spend ages together and for the more unique chants they’ll usually be concocted by a group who put it to the fans in the stadium and if it catches on then everyone sings it. There are some chants every team sings and every fan knows as well which any team is allowed to sing at any point. Though you do still have it sometimes where a chant will be made by one person who just starts singing it and everyone picks it up. It’s really a mix of everything and it’s very natural
We sing : my garden shed, my garden shed, is bigger than this, is bigger than this. My garden shed is bigger than this. It's got a door and a window, my garden shed is bigger than this.
1:52 Both. Some chants are just ingrained into you as a fan. Nowadays they have rock cds of them for instance. Others, are on the fly and everyone will know the tune to the chant and can join in.
I've been to quite a few football matches and heard the songs and chants, and then few years ago went to a baseball game in Houston, I was shocked to hear grown adults singing along to take me down to the baseball, along to a giant screen with the words on it and a bouncing ball highlighting each word!
Brilliant!!! 😂 Sadly though, I think you missed the GREATEST CHANT OF ALL TIME! Arsenal fans chant about Spurs manager, Ange Postecoglou. Pure gold 😂😂😂😂
1:54 bit of both! Some are pre-written, shared round the supporters club group chat or pre-match meet up and then everyone starts singing it. Others are old stalwarts that have either been in football fandom generally or that club's fandom for years. And some are innovated at the match, but those will be new words on an existing formula. Sing it a few times at a match and if people like it, they join in.
Here's the thing Alana, many of the chants follow the same set of about 6-7 different base songs, so words can be interchanged as fit. Someone will start a song and even though the words may have been changed, it will still follow the same structure and therefore pretty much everyone will join in regardless because the song tune will remain. Some songs are developed in the foyers of the grounds or the local pubs too. But it's not like someone stands up and says "here my good fellows, what do you think about this ...." someone will say something which will get a huge laugh and a song may be developed
On a couple of occasions I've started a chant on an away terrace. All you have to do is pick your moment (usually just as the previous chant is tailing off/ended), make sure the theme of the chant fits the mood of your fellow supporters, bellow the first line out at the top of your voice (it'll be a tried an trusted chant, one that everyone knows the second line) and grin with satisfaction as it spreads along the terrace.
Great video Alanna. Some chants are specific to a club, either being sung by them or sung by different fans aimed at one club in particular, but '...fire drill?', 'four nil, how s**t must you be' (other score lines are available lol), etc can literally be sung by any fan base - and they are very generally sung with a lot of enthusiasm. A lot of chants are taken from popular songs, aimed at players of their own club or at opposing players. Unfortunately for some there is also 'tragedy chanting' which is totally uncalled for but aside from that, literally anything is fair game...both your own club and whoever they are playing.
It's a mixture of pre-written ones with some improvised ones sprinkled in. You normally set it to a well known tune like a pop song or nursery rhyme so people can pick it up easier if it's their first time hearing it. Club and player chants become well known pretty quickly by their match going fans. If you go to a match you can start a chant yourself and it'll be quickly picked up by the rest of the crowd if it's good or one of the well known ones.
If you go to an England cricket test match The Barmy Army issue a song sheet. At an England vs Australia test match then there are loads of song about all the players, and loads of references to deportation, criminals etc, and they get ruder as more beer is drunk.
@@AdventuresAndNaps, for some reason it seems very hard for lots of people in the North Americas to understand just how fans can knock out a song and others just join in except of course that useless USA chant " I believe that we will win ". 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 It's probably the good old British Humour and of course the ability to make a song out of anything ( except of course the eurovision ) as the music industry proves.
@@AdventuresAndNapsThere's a few cricket chants towards the Aussies on RUclips. 'The Convict Song' and 'We all shagged Matilda' to the tune of one of their national songs.
With 7 pints on board it would make it difficult trying to play darts with two or three dartboards waving back and forth in front of my eyes, trying to decide which one is the real board. .
There's about a dozen or set "tunes" or rhythms (Is there a fire drill is La Donna È Mobile etc) that are commonly used which allows any new chant to be quickly adopted. For new chants, someone will come up with it (or a group will think it up, usually in the pub) and then they'll start bellowing it repeatedly. If its any good other people will join in, and it will quickly be the whole stand doing it. If it's crap it will awkwardly peter out.
The chant at 13:30 is my team Walsall FC (nicknamed The Saddlers). We're about 10 miles north of Birmingham in the West Midlands. All the teams they're making fun out of (West Bromwich Albion, Wolverhampton Wanderers, Birmingham City, Shrewsbury Town and Aston Villa) in the chant are other Midlands teams nearby.
There are a few tunes which are very common so fans know them. Ive also heard one fan trying to start a new chant and failing as no one joined in. Embarrassing! My club, Portsmouth, are known for having one of the best stadium atmospheres in England, and when all four sides of Fratton park are singing as one, it is like nothing else.
Watched these videos a ton they are always so fantastic and we sure can come up with funny stuff over here football banter is the best 🙌 glad you had a right laugh watching this Alanna cheers for sharing it was fantastic
1:20 yes I remember this game Liverpool vs Tottenham 2013/14 season Tottenham were losing 3-0, it would be 4-0 but the fans did that 3 minutes before Liverpool scored the 4th from Jordan Henderson.
Hi Alanna, there's very little chanting at Rugby matches, there's an old saying, Football is a game for gentlemen, played by hooligans, Rugby is a game for hooligans played by gentlemen, to a certain extent that carries over to the fans. If a Football player doesn't like a referees decision he will get into a shouting match with him. In Rugby the referees word is law, Recently retired Welsh referee Nigel Owens is a small, openly gay man who had the absolute respect of players a foot or more taller and twice the weight, he also had the trust of the International Rugby community. To the extent he was picked to referee an International match involving his own country. If you're interested, see "10 minutes of Nigel Owens being Nigel Owens".
Most of the tunes are well known from folk music, pop music, hymns, opera, etc. Sometimes, people will come up with them and start people singing on the coaches/trains, or on the walk towards the stadium. Sometimes people will come up with things on the fly, but they tend to be well-known tunes with easy-to-learn lyrics.
@@AdventuresAndNaps There's a slight clue in the clubs they were insulting, Wolverhampton and Birmingham would be the closest teams to Walsall Shrewsbury is a bit further away but still kinda over that way. On another note there is a US vs UK football chants video but the US part is just cringe.
@@AdventuresAndNaps Walsall is near all them places an is just a odd little area off a the m6 the ground is visable from the motorway . Bescott ground . Flipping lost to these lot years ago in the play offs
Another great video, some of those chants would get people tossed out in North America. I know the Nashville Predators NHL fans have chants but otherwise it's mostly "ref, you suck" when their team gets a penalty they don't agree with.
The English are ruthless lol. I am from the north east of England and the totally nuts at football chants up and down the country, I don’t think anyone else chants they just cheer, as in Canadian and Americans. My girl lives in Canada and I am English 🏴 lol. Funny old story lol 😂 you have a good channel and I like to watch the Canadians and Americans. You are lovely people.
Virtually all will have been improvised at a game originally, a lot will be traditional chants but plenty of modern ones too; they'll also often adapt the chants for player changes, but keeping the main body. They usually use well known tunes, like the 'Steven Gerrard' is sung to the tune of "Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)", some will be based on childhood nursery rhymes. Often it'll probably start will a small group, then as they sing the others around quickly pick up on it, and it spreads for the whole game. That will then spread to other games by the fans, or even the opposition fans taking the chants too. Plus with the televised games the chants can spread further.
The adams family is actually quite specific to Kidderminster Harriers. The town of Kidderminster is known locally as Kiddy hence the kiddie family reference in the chants
Bolton v Newcastle Utd 1990s . At this time Bolton were due to move to a new ground so the away end was sold off and partially built on - a shopping centre no less . Bolton took the lead 1-0 but we triumphed 1-3 and as the 3rd goal went in we started to sing - " Sing when ya shoppin you only sing when ya shoppin " 🤓
I live in Thailand, but am British, and I go to watch football here and the atmosphere is amazing here. They have people with megaphones leading the chants and they do not stop from kickoff to the end. They are nearly always respectful and about loving their team and never usually about criticism of the opposition.
As for people knowing the chants before the game a lot of chants will be well known among the fans particularly ones for players who've been at the club for a long time whereas others are more improvised based on actions in the game and people pick up on what others are chanting and join in. There almost always to the tune of popular songs so its easy to pick up. Stuff like 'is there a fire drill' or 'cheerio" when a player gets sent of are that well known in english football that almost every clubs fans will use them.
To answer your question. Quite a lot are created in advance but equally some are made up on the spot. I've heard some brilliant chants down the years that were off the cuff
Big thanks to these channels for the compilations - make sure to show them some love! ⚽
Best Funny Football Chants: ruclips.net/video/X-dWgt6cj1o/видео.htmlsi=yl79L-YoACOvIUO7
FUNNIEST FOOTBALL CHANTS IN ENGLAND: ruclips.net/video/mm62RmV3p_w/видео.htmlsi=pJkuqICY7SwboZdX
FUNNIEST CHANTS BY ENGLISH FOOTBALL FANS: ruclips.net/video/BZT7XFkeA48/видео.htmlsi=VHD_zzF473Ky6p8k
The barmy army does a similar thing during ashes cricket tours against the Australian's .
Even the afl footy in Australia a lot of the time you spend more time talking to people then watching the game.
I can remember at school in Australia we did similar chants at sports days.
Here in argentina we make literal songs to insult the other teams
@@olakmostas Thats the way👍🏼
Next vile football chants
This is a classix in the midlands from the coventry and birmingham city to aston villa fans to the tune of terry jacks - seasons in the sun * we had joy we had fun we had villa on the run , but the joy didn't last cause the B&st*rds ran too fast*
as a british teen i can tell you we have the ability to instinctively know/go along with football chants from age 12
My nephew started when he was about 4! :D
I did since I was 13. That was 4 years ago.
I did it since I was three… At least I didn’t join in on the swearing but.
Age 9
I haven't watched football for years and only went once to a live game (with a friend who had a crush on a player), but I love videos which have the chants with subtitles, and _my_ favourite chant is the one to the tune of 'The Addams Family' !!
Thanks for sharing this, Alanna.🖖❤️🏴
New Zealander here. Nobody chants like the Brits. They do it in many sports, their cricket fans are worldwide famous, and one of the highlights of their rugby teams coming over is the live game chants.
The Barmy Army love winding the Aussies up. But there again, who doesn't?
Your Haka is pretty impressive.
@dogwithwigwamz.7320 thanks man❤
argentinian chants too
The barmy army in cricket are the benchmark for travelling a very long way, seeing every game and getting absolutely smashed. But having a great time and being friendly with the opposition fans.
We love a party, and the sense of humour is legendary.
Hull Fans away at Bournemouth - "you're practically French, You're practically French, You're so southern, you're practically French"
😂😂 pure class
Well they’re not wrong.
I'm a little surprised Hull fans know what French is.
Haha that's quality
That's brilliant 😂
When Andy Goram (Scottish keeper) was diagnosed with schizophrenia. Next game the chant was "there's only 2 Andy Gorams!" 😂😂
William kidd rangers football club scotland muisc
Savage!!
He absolutely was not, never, diagnosed with schizophrenia. He pulled out of a Scotland squad because he said he wasn't mentally right. At his next game for his club, Rangers, the Partick Thistle fans chanted "Two Andy Gormans, there's only two Andy Gorams." If they'd done that after he'd actually been diagnosed with schizophrenia it would have been sick, but in the circumstances it was funny enough to make Andy Goram laugh.
@gordon1545 ah fair enough, thank you for clarifying. The dangers of repeating something heard in the pub/ seen on Instagram/ dreamt about.
One of my favourites was when (6'7") Peter Crouch joined Liverpool and the fans sang "He's big, he's red, his feet stick out the bed, Peter Crouch!"
@waragainstsleepx2517 Another variation of that was, "He's fat, he's round, he's always on the ground, Peter Reid!"
I remember that as well, brilliant
re' Sammy Lee many moons ago the Kop sang .. He's fat (or short?) , he's round his arse is on the ground
“When the ball hits your head and you’re sat in Row Z, that’s Zamoraaaa”
I think the Italians call Peter Crouch "La Stretta". Which if I am correct means "The Goalpost".
i'm danish, once i was to a non-league match in england .. the fans was brutal against eachother, when the pause came, they walked through eachother to shift stand, nothing accured, but when 2nd half started they went against eachother again - its was so delighted to watch
We have a German girl from Bayern who’s mum is English comes from Ashford and she regularly comes to our games and reckons there’s more atmosphere in our little stadium than the Allianz! 🤣
A couple of years ago, Kurt Zouma who plays for West Ham was sent to court after a video of him kicking and slapping a cat circulated around social media. So any time he played, and he touched/kicked the ball the whole stadium would shout out Meow!
"Heeeeyy, Kurt Zouma! Ooh! Aah! I wanna know, oh-oh-oh, oh-oh-oh, will you kick my cat?"
that is funny
I can remember watching a game he was playing in, and he went on a sprint - the opposition fans immediately started chanting "A Cat! A Cat! (etc)" in the same way they chant "Attack!"
@Afterthoughtbtw
😂😂😂😂😂 That was hilarious!!
From Luxembourg. Attended games in England, NL, Germany, France, Belgium and Spain. Chanting is very common even more intense in Germany (less tourists in football stadiums) than England. And mocking of course, that’s part of the game. I love the cynical aspect in England and Belgium. Prohibition to engage in abusive or racist chanting is now finally seriously taken care of in most places.
The fact a lot of the tunes are from the hymns we had to sing in school adds a bit of extra spice
From a young age, we have a lot of experience singing together during school assemblies. Often singing rude versions to annoy the teachers. Every British school kid knows these tunes by heart, and they are often used as a base for football chants, too. That and insulting each other is a national tradition. These songs come very naturally!
No, the teachers were not annoyed, just pretending to be annoyed, and immediately after assembly noting down the lyrics for use down the pub on Friday.
I was at a Kent v Middlesex cricket match (a T20 game), and some of the Middlesex fans started chanting "You’re just a point on a compass" at Sam Northeast, who played for Kent.
When Ji Sung Park came from Korea to play (brilliantly) for Man Utd, they chanted 'He shoots, he scores, he'll eat your Labrador, Ji Sung Park, Ji Sung Park!' They loved him but couldn't help teasing him . . .
And the other one too. Park, Park wherever you may be, you eat dogs in your own country. It could be worse, you could be a Scouse, eating rats in your Council House
Park, park, wherever you may be. You eat dogs in your home country. Could be worse, you could be scouse, eating rats in your council house
Ji Sung, wherever you may be, you eat the dog in your home country, but it could be worse, you could be scouse, eating rats in a council house
A mate of mine lived near Park when he was at United, he ran into him a few times, Park's apparently a really top bloke, he also apparently found the dog chants hilarious
@@FlatDerrick... damn, I remember chanting that full volume in the Stretford end!! Truly brilliant 😂
I am particularly impressed that your top 5 British things list has 3 items... your assimilation is complete. 👍❤
To the tune of ‘Amore’, West Ham fans on their famously wayward striker, Bobby Zamorra: “When you're sat in row Z and the ball hits your head, that’s Zamorra”
You beat me to it! 😆
one of my faves
Important context required that we pronounce 'Z' as 'zed', for any confused americans
Oh my days I've not heard that one since I was school age! 😂
The crowd is like a huge beast. They all start singing the same chant at once. I took an American friend to Old Trafford once, and when the United Fans started to sing, he nearly c@#$ed himself..
A friend of mine brought a workmate to his first game at OT, he was fondly known as 'Adrian the Canadian' he stood there listening to the chants and after a while he asked "how do you all know the words to the songs, do you go somewhere to learn them?" we all smiled and my friend explained to him how it happens.
How cute , come to souther Europe baby
Cant beat a big game or a stadium in full swing ,old Wembley celebrating a goal was just epic , 100 k people with no modern building techniques for soundproofing the noise was unreal . Only come close to that one more time & that was the Derby at the Etihad where everyone was doing the Poznan & the stadium was shaking . Thought there was a f*ckin eathquake
When Arsenal signed Emmanuel Petit the chant they came up with for him was, "He's blonde, he's quick, his name's a porno flick, Emmanuel, Emmanuel."
I have been lots of Arsenal games and fondly sung the one. As an Arsenal fan. Love it.
Takes me back to being 12 at a friend's house, finding channel 5 and discovering Emmanuelle in Space
A classic 😂
@@TheTomm101I still think about Krista Allen every now and again 🤤
Cricket: Barmy Army (England cricket fans) v Australia - "He bowls to the left, he bowls to the right, that Mitchell Johnson, his bowling is shite!" Kind of backfired a year or two later though when he tore through our batting order...
The difference between the UK and America is the size, UK games always have fans from the away team. So the chanting is rivalry driven.
This is a good point, but more than that I think it is time that plays a big part. Some rivalries go farther back in history than the discovery of the Americas. That means something deep. I dont even watch football but I know of the local rivalry between the big teams and the small teams nearby.
Also helps that away fans are in one section and can make the chants louder and coordinate
Tbf even champions league and the other european tournaments have full away stands, its not just distance, probably helps but not entirely
@@psychobartus There were soccer teams in the 1700's?
@@DaveGlivaMany football rivalries stem from historical and religious hatred, Catholic-Protestant, Lancashire-Yorkshire, Liverpool-Manchester, etc.
I'm Spanish, our chants are translations of the english ones but in my experience, we are very creative with our chanting, as the language allows to.
Ive noticed German swedish french spanish fans do this & Norway too ,recognise all the tunes i just dont know the words
Leyton Orient's stadium has blocks of flats in the corner - Bournemouth fans taunted someone in one of the flats "we can see you washing up!"
Went there with derby last season in league one and some lads missed out on tickets and rented out the bottom apartment for the weekend, lucky bastards could have a pint while watching
Kent. You're officially Millwall. Congrats. Detroiter here, just happened to click the video, good stuff. But don't forget, you're Millwall if you got off the train from London to Kent. Cheers
In Britain, if you support your local football team, no matter what the size of the club, you will have those teams you hate even if they're only 5 miles down the road. Britain is so densely populated compared to America. The distances for us here are doable in 1-5 hours at most plus our league system in the lower leagues are divided regionally too.
*Especially* if they're only five miles down the road, I'd say.
You are also required to dispise every player on a team that's not what you support, however if any of them transfer to your club then they are gods gift. Also when they play for England, all bad blood from them being on a different premier league team goes out the window.
The best football chant ever has to be, "Two Andy Gorams, there's only two Andy Gorams........two Andy Gorams, there's only two Andy Gorams", sung to the tune of Guantanamera by Rangers fans after Goram, Rangers' keeper, was diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Genius....
You have to admit Alanna, only the Brits could be this creative with their football chants. Very funny 11/10 ⚽🥅🤣🤣🤣
nah, the American ones are good too. "DEEEFENNNNSSSEEEE DEEEEFFFEEENNNNSSSEEE"
FIGHT ....AND WIN.... COMEEE OOONNN SEEAAATTTLLLEEE
I get second hand embarrassment even thinking about that one @squareeyes9540
Just a guess. You don't speak other languages but english?
Not creative just filth
@@mcstaal que?
5:39 Adam Johnson was a Sunderland player who was found guilty of CSA and grooming a 15 year old. Those fans chanting that support Newcastle United (my home club), who are VERY fierce rivals of Sunderland.
Hey girl we are from North Carolina and one of the millions of things we love about England is English Football. The die hard support of fans not only of their club but their town/city is awesome and the creativity of the insults is endlessly brilliant. Probably going to be trashed for this but we are proud Sunderland supporters (I know I know).
Hiya Kevin, I'm a Newcastle fan so we don't get along (only kidding)
@@paulguise698 cheers mate any town that is home to Mark Knopfler, the Great North Run, and Geordie culture is a friend of mine.
@@kevinlance1813 Cheers Kevin, no harm meant, I love my American cousins, Mark Knopfler was born in Glasgow, Scotland
Mackem, Makem or Mak'em is a nickname for residents of and people from Sunderland, a city in North East England. My grandad was from Sunderland.
I suppose _someone_ has to be.
Thank you for including Walsall in this clip (and reacting in the usual way). For an EFL League 2 (Division 4) club, they really punch above their weight in chanting. They seem to feature a lot in these compilations. And some of their best work is ad hoc, reacting to events on the pitch (or off it).
My favourite post on this subject ever is:
American Sports fans: "De-fense! De-fense!"
British Sports fans: "All right lads, I've just worked up a song to the tune of Debussy's Claire de Lune about an opposing player's drunk driving charge. I'llcount us off!"
The best ones are just so easy to pick up once a few fans have kicked them off, and everyone joins in.
I also have no interest in footbal (or any sport competition), but a good chant is worth listening to- as long as you can avoid the truly offensive ones.
Lots of football fans put the reduction of singing at football matches down to all seater stadiums. Personally I think the fact kids no longer sing hymns at school assemblies has far more to do with it. There is no longer a set of tunes that everyone knows to set words to which makes the whole thing harder
The best is english fans thinks they are brutal but compared to other european countries they are delicate in case of chants and atmosphere on the stands
A lot is Sloop John B.not original
The truly offensive ones are the best 😂
Loved the video! As a football fan from the UK each club has their own unique chants, some to the same tune as other clubs, but sometimes times a lot of the chants can be made up on the spot, and everyone else just joins in and it goes from their! I would highly recommend you go to a game even if you don’t like sports! The atmosphere is just incredible 🫶
Most of these songs go along with the tune of a popular song, so thats how you catch on and then its just listening. Many chants will be used for a season or more, so it gives fans a chance to learn them before they go to a game.
Interesting!
Most of them to the tune of Hymns
Example: Leeds, Leeds are falling apart... again. Sung to the tune of Joy Division - Love Will Tear Us Apart
@@Obi-J here after the playoff final. Leeds are indeed falling apart again!!! UTS 🔴⚪️
Pop songs , Hymns ,adverts ( shake n vac springs to mind & was only used in lower leagues for some daft reason ) Channel 4 showed "The Life of Brian " on TV way back in the 90s ( when it was seen as Blasphemy to show a ridicule of dumb religions ) on a weds night at 11 pm = Saturday Man U fans started singing it at the game & its stuck ever since . Interesting one is ask fans WHERE DO THESE SONGS come from ? most will struggle to name the original tune
example "Thierry Henri " = Tom Hark by the Pihranas or however its spelt
Another sport where the fans sing and chant is Rugby! 🏈Thanks again, this was hilarious! Hope you have a great day!
Is that Rugby league or Rugby Union
My favourite was aimed at Steve Ogrizovic - "You're better at cricket, You're better at cricket, Your name is a million in Scrabble, You're better at cricket". Steve Ogrizovic played Minor Counties cricket for Shropshire in the off season to a fairly good standard.
"million in Scrabble" love it:)
Being a rugby fan who can't stand football I'm ashamed to admit that I was laughing as much as you were. Keep up the good work of entertaining us, we love your take on things.
Directed at Irish player Robbie Keane (referencing Irish travellers) "The wheels on your house go round and round ..."
The best one i ever heard was when opposing Newcastle fans started chanting when Johnjo Shelvey subbed on. "He's coming for you, He's coming for youuuu. Harry Potter. He's coming for you!"
Just Google an image of johnjo shelvey and youll understand the reference.
Two of my favourite football chants are "Lenell John-Lewis, his name is a shop" and one aimed at the very bald and pale Jonjo Shelvey "he's coming for you, he's coming for you, Harry Potter, he's coming for you"
You will notice almost all the chants come from the kop (die hard home supporters) end. We sit in the local pub and come up with them when new players join or we win/lose, those supporters sing the chants in a few games as the loudest fans, and it spreads, there also on the true fans website not the official club website. and the less offensive ones are even in the home teams game programs
What a great idea for a video - quintessentially British humour. As far as self-deprecation goes, we lead the world! Well done.
Thanks for watching!
Walsall is a football club and a small town in The Black Country in the West Midlands England UK its not far from Birmingham, West Bromwich and Wolverhampton we are probably the smallest team in the west midlands so we like to stick it to our close neighbours lol our local rivals
Fun Fact The Black Country and Birmingham are were the Peaky Blinders were from
One of my favourites is when you're losing 3-0 and start singing "we're gonna win 4-3", then they score again and, without missing a beat, you all change to "we're gonna win 5-4"! Great video Alanna. You should definitely go to a game. Maybe start gently with a women's game - not so much chanting but still plenty of humour.
I watched Preston North End get thrashed 5-1 by Luton Town. We'd been singing variants of that all through the match. I started them off singing "We're going to win 6-5", which i'll always remember.
I was waiting for "his eyes are offiside, his eyes are offside, Mesut Özil, his eyes are offside"
The Steve Gerrard chant is extra good because they’ve taken a chant that Liverpool fans usually sing about him and changed it to include probably the worst moment of his career.
I liked a clip of the Palace fans singing "Sean Derry, Derry, he's better than Stevie G, more faithful than John Terry"
Great to hear some good vibes for England!
I'm a Bulgarian football fan, we do have some chants with the same vibe as the ones in the video, but most of the time we are just singing about the club. I don't know if you've seen an ultras compilation, but that's basically what we and other European fans do at football games.
If you haven't seen an ultras compilation but would like to, i can suggest some.
Obviously you haven't watched darts lately great atmosphere and to hit a nine darter televised you are a legend.
Bradford City fan here. We quite often make up chants on the spot, like many other clubs. More seagulls than fans wasn't the only one made up at that match. Most chants are known by most clubs already. The fire drill is when the opposing fans leave early.
There's, Football in a library, when the home fans are quiet.
On a related tangent (very mildly related :) I was at a Bad Manners concert back in 1990 or thereabouts and as the gig as about to start, the whole audience started chanting "YOU FAT B-" for nearly ten minutes which was a surprise to me. This chant was aimed at Buster Bloodvessel, the lead singer of the band and, turns out he wasn't coming on stage until they'd declared their love for him in this manner for quite a while 😂
I was lucky enough to interview the fat bas- I mean, Buster after the gig, for the volunteer job I had at the time, and he was (and hopefully still is) a great guy 😊
In North America, the chants that occur tend to be of the supportive variety. Unless the refs miss a call, or in hockey a rival teams goalie will have his name sing songed to get under their skin. Or booing an especially disliked player on the visiting team when they touch the ball/puck (which ever is applicable).
Hi Alanna, great video ! I remember there used to be a chant when only a few away fans turned up -
"Come in a taxi, you must have come in a taxi...".
A while later, a fan told a story of getting to a match far too early and he found he was the only one on a vast terrace, when the chant went up "come on a skateboard...."
Some chants are sung at every game and some are created on the spot due to a random circumstance, the guy next to you begins to sing along, then the next, then your entire row, the row in front, the row behind and then the entire stand is singing it, they pick up on it around the stadium and then, most of the stadium are singing it. There is a common song during a LIVE Sky broadcast, "Sky TV is f**king sh*t" which Sky try to dub during the match, because Sky will rearrange a match for TV coverage without giving a toss if it effects the fans who had tickets for the original date. Its mostly sung at Leeds United games, but its caught on with other clubs who are effected by rearranged games.
Away fans at a small ground where the stand on one side was being demolished, sang "My garden shed is bigger than this, it's got a door and a window, my garden shed is bigger than this. My budgie's cage is bigger than this, it's got a perch and a mirror, my budgie's cage is bigger than this. My boxer shorts are bigger than this, they've got a hole and a skid mark, my boxer shorts are bigger than this."
From my time in the terraces, it's both pre-planned and spontaneous. There are songs that get sung regularly but at other times someone will come up with something quick witted and it will get picked up by the rest of the home end. It helps that there are a few regular tunes that these chants get sung to so everyone knows the 'tune' already and just picks up on the new words being used.
Theres a bunch of melodies that are used (usually from old pop songs or hymns) and people tend to come up with the words during the game. More popular ones stick around and even get adopted by other teams
With chants there are many ways they can come around. You usually have the diehard fans who spend ages together and for the more unique chants they’ll usually be concocted by a group who put it to the fans in the stadium and if it catches on then everyone sings it.
There are some chants every team sings and every fan knows as well which any team is allowed to sing at any point.
Though you do still have it sometimes where a chant will be made by one person who just starts singing it and everyone picks it up. It’s really a mix of everything and it’s very natural
We sing : my garden shed, my garden shed, is bigger than this, is bigger than this. My garden shed is bigger than this. It's got a door and a window, my garden shed is bigger than this.
😂
Bit cringey that one
How sad I assume you are Leeds?
Aha! We have a Villa fan in the room!
It's cringey if sung when the away team have failed to sell out their seating allocation.
1:52 Both. Some chants are just ingrained into you as a fan. Nowadays they have rock cds of them for instance.
Others, are on the fly and everyone will know the tune to the chant and can join in.
I've been to quite a few football matches and heard the songs and chants, and then few years ago went to a baseball game in Houston, I was shocked to hear grown adults singing along to take me down to the baseball, along to a giant screen with the words on it and a bouncing ball highlighting each word!
Lovely and organic..
Brilliant!!! 😂 Sadly though, I think you missed the GREATEST CHANT OF ALL TIME! Arsenal fans chant about Spurs manager, Ange Postecoglou. Pure gold 😂😂😂😂
1:54 bit of both! Some are pre-written, shared round the supporters club group chat or pre-match meet up and then everyone starts singing it. Others are old stalwarts that have either been in football fandom generally or that club's fandom for years. And some are innovated at the match, but those will be new words on an existing formula. Sing it a few times at a match and if people like it, they join in.
The way you react then interact is really nice to watch lol. Subbed
Here's the thing Alana, many of the chants follow the same set of about 6-7 different base songs, so words can be interchanged as fit. Someone will start a song and even though the words may have been changed, it will still follow the same structure and therefore pretty much everyone will join in regardless because the song tune will remain. Some songs are developed in the foyers of the grounds or the local pubs too. But it's not like someone stands up and says "here my good fellows, what do you think about this ...." someone will say something which will get a huge laugh and a song may be developed
On a couple of occasions I've started a chant on an away terrace. All you have to do is pick your moment (usually just as the previous chant is tailing off/ended), make sure the theme of the chant fits the mood of your fellow supporters, bellow the first line out at the top of your voice (it'll be a tried an trusted chant, one that everyone knows the second line) and grin with satisfaction as it spreads along the terrace.
Great video Alanna. Some chants are specific to a club, either being sung by them or sung by different fans aimed at one club in particular, but '...fire drill?', 'four nil, how s**t must you be' (other score lines are available lol), etc can literally be sung by any fan base - and they are very generally sung with a lot of enthusiasm. A lot of chants are taken from popular songs, aimed at players of their own club or at opposing players. Unfortunately for some there is also 'tragedy chanting' which is totally uncalled for but aside from that, literally anything is fair game...both your own club and whoever they are playing.
It's a mixture of pre-written ones with some improvised ones sprinkled in. You normally set it to a well known tune like a pop song or nursery rhyme so people can pick it up easier if it's their first time hearing it. Club and player chants become well known pretty quickly by their match going fans.
If you go to a match you can start a chant yourself and it'll be quickly picked up by the rest of the crowd if it's good or one of the well known ones.
If you go to an England cricket test match The Barmy Army issue a song sheet. At an England vs Australia test match then there are loads of song about all the players, and loads of references to deportation, criminals etc, and they get ruder as more beer is drunk.
I sh*gged Matilda is one of my favourites
1:55 bit of both, but mainly created
I remember the England cricket fans in Australia a few years ago singing: “ we’ve got 3 dollars to the pound.”
😂
@@AdventuresAndNaps, for some reason it seems very hard for lots of people in the North Americas to understand just how fans can knock out a song and others just join in except of course that useless USA chant " I believe that we will win ". 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
It's probably the good old British Humour and of course the ability to make a song out of anything ( except of course the eurovision ) as the music industry proves.
@@AdventuresAndNapsThere's a few cricket chants towards the Aussies on RUclips. 'The Convict Song' and 'We all shagged Matilda' to the tune of one of their national songs.
Great Adam Hills Joke this too
There's plenty of chanting in cricket, mostly when England play Australia. Check out the Barmy Army songbook for some examples.
Some are discussed in the pub prior to the game, some of them we come up with on the fly and some of them we have been singing for years.
Sorry Alanna but I've got to disagree with you there. If you can still compete when you're 7 beers deep that's absolutely a sport!
it's a bleeding challenge - that is for sure
With 7 pints on board it would make it difficult trying to play darts with two or three dartboards waving back and forth in front of my eyes, trying to decide which one is the real board. .
I play better drunk then so been but it is a sport
When I played rugby, 3 or 4 pints was called pre-match warm up.
Thank You. This is one of the funniest videos I have ever seen.
There's about a dozen or set "tunes" or rhythms (Is there a fire drill is La Donna È Mobile etc) that are commonly used which allows any new chant to be quickly adopted. For new chants, someone will come up with it (or a group will think it up, usually in the pub) and then they'll start bellowing it repeatedly. If its any good other people will join in, and it will quickly be the whole stand doing it. If it's crap it will awkwardly peter out.
The chant at 13:30 is my team Walsall FC (nicknamed The Saddlers). We're about 10 miles north of Birmingham in the West Midlands.
All the teams they're making fun out of (West Bromwich Albion, Wolverhampton Wanderers, Birmingham City, Shrewsbury Town and Aston Villa) in the chant are other Midlands teams nearby.
There are a few tunes which are very common so fans know them. Ive also heard one fan trying to start a new chant and failing as no one joined in. Embarrassing!
My club, Portsmouth, are known for having one of the best stadium atmospheres in England, and when all four sides of Fratton park are singing as one, it is like nothing else.
And you went up this season!!!
@@jamesbeeching6138Yes! Play up Pompey!
Heard last week at Fratton Park: "We're coming for you, We're coming for you, You dirty Scummers, we're coming for you" 🙂
"Where's the wanker with the bell"
We love ya thanks for bigging up the uk
Watched these videos a ton they are always so fantastic and we sure can come up with funny stuff over here football banter is the best 🙌 glad you had a right laugh watching this Alanna cheers for sharing it was fantastic
1:20 yes I remember this game Liverpool vs Tottenham 2013/14 season Tottenham were losing 3-0, it would be 4-0 but the fans did that 3 minutes before Liverpool scored the 4th from Jordan Henderson.
Hi Alanna, there's very little chanting at Rugby matches, there's an old saying, Football is a game for gentlemen, played by hooligans, Rugby is a game for hooligans played by gentlemen, to a certain extent that carries over to the fans. If a Football player doesn't like a referees decision he will get into a shouting match with him. In Rugby the referees word is law, Recently retired Welsh referee Nigel Owens is a small, openly gay man who had the absolute respect of players a foot or more taller and twice the weight, he also had the trust of the International Rugby community. To the extent he was picked to referee an International match involving his own country. If you're interested, see "10 minutes of Nigel Owens being Nigel Owens".
I.e rugby is an upper middle class sport
that is not true, certainly in league at least.. Union.... well thats just union
Most of the tunes are well known from folk music, pop music, hymns, opera, etc. Sometimes, people will come up with them and start people singing on the coaches/trains, or on the walk towards the stadium. Sometimes people will come up with things on the fly, but they tend to be well-known tunes with easy-to-learn lyrics.
I'm from Walsall and I don't know where it is either. 😂
😂 omg
@@AdventuresAndNaps There's a slight clue in the clubs they were insulting, Wolverhampton and Birmingham would be the closest teams to Walsall Shrewsbury is a bit further away but still kinda over that way.
On another note there is a US vs UK football chants video but the US part is just cringe.
@@usgreth King Boomer really crucified it
Dowern Bescot, ay it?
@@AdventuresAndNaps
Walsall is near all them places an is just a odd little area off a the m6 the ground is visable from the motorway . Bescott ground .
Flipping lost to these lot years ago in the play offs
Loved your video. Have a look at the st James’ park chants.
HAWAY THE LADS!! 😊
Jason Lee..."Hes got a pineapple on his head!!"
Jan Mølby... "Who ate all the pies?" The original target for this one! 😂
He reckoned the stick he got from Skinner and Baddiel ended his career....
@@nedeast6845 well.....Don't have a stupid haircut then!!
The whole ground erupted as one, it’s amazing how chants start.
Now this day and age players have their hair any crazy style they want...it doesn’t matter ..IF YOU ARE GOOD...⚽️
Thats actually so incredible that they all Collectively sing together and there's No EGO or anything..... Just sing what he is singing.
Another great video, some of those chants would get people tossed out in North America. I know the Nashville Predators NHL fans have chants but otherwise it's mostly "ref, you suck" when their team gets a penalty they don't agree with.
Or the classic "de-fence!! de-fence!!" lol not very offensive, though!
@@AdventuresAndNapshow do I become a member
A RUclips Member? This should be work:
ruclips.net/channel/UCkJrZ_GpGyrbQZ7YtdjKT7Qjoin
Otherwise there's a "Join" button under this video! 🙏🏻
Detroit's "You got Kronwalled" have always been a fave of mine. Not really a chant, but at least it gets the audience joining in.
With cricket, we’re so drunk that we won’t be talking/ chanting. As alcohol is allowed in the stands, where as it’s banned in football stadiums.
Laugh out loud funny! Great video idea Alanna...😂⚽️🇬🇧
The English are ruthless lol. I am from the north east of England and the totally nuts at football chants up and down the country, I don’t think anyone else chants they just cheer, as in Canadian and Americans. My girl lives in Canada and I am English 🏴 lol. Funny old story lol 😂 you have a good channel and I like to watch the Canadians and Americans. You are lovely people.
Cricket chants are very much like this. One Australian player got roasted after getting caught cheating with "We saw you crying on TV"
Virtually all will have been improvised at a game originally, a lot will be traditional chants but plenty of modern ones too; they'll also often adapt the chants for player changes, but keeping the main body.
They usually use well known tunes, like the 'Steven Gerrard' is sung to the tune of "Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be)", some will be based on childhood nursery rhymes. Often it'll probably start will a small group, then as they sing the others around quickly pick up on it, and it spreads for the whole game. That will then spread to other games by the fans, or even the opposition fans taking the chants too. Plus with the televised games the chants can spread further.
Great video Alanna. Cricket does have chanting. England have a fan group called the barmy army who like to chant :-)
And have their own band!!!
Some songs are well known, others are started by individuals or small groups, all usually follow a few common song tunes
The adams family is actually quite specific to Kidderminster Harriers. The town of Kidderminster is known locally as Kiddy hence the kiddie family reference in the chants
But you can change "Kiddy" to another team name (or nickname). That's why they had the [insert team name] thing in there.
Next video react to the hardest rugby hits as its brutal and not what you would expect. Love the video keep it up
Bolton v Newcastle Utd 1990s .
At this time Bolton were due to move to a new ground so the away end was sold off and partially built on - a shopping centre no less . Bolton took the lead 1-0 but we triumphed 1-3 and as the 3rd goal went in we started to sing -
" Sing when ya shoppin you only sing when ya shoppin " 🤓
I live in Thailand, but am British, and I go to watch football here and the atmosphere is amazing here. They have people with megaphones leading the chants and they do not stop from kickoff to the end. They are nearly always respectful and about loving their team and never usually about criticism of the opposition.
As a life long chess player, I feel the need to state that darts is a sport 😜😂. We non-movers have to stick together.
When I use to go Old Trafford, you would hear new songs in one of the pubs near the stadium before the game
Alanna saying "imagine me being a professional athlete " my first thought was why have they made eating cheese a professional sport ?????
💀💀💀
Wait ...its not already?😂
Eating cheese not to my knowledge. Throw a cheese down a hill, run after and catch it. Yes!
As for people knowing the chants before the game a lot of chants will be well known among the fans particularly ones for players who've been at the club for a long time whereas others are more improvised based on actions in the game and people pick up on what others are chanting and join in. There almost always to the tune of popular songs so its easy to pick up. Stuff like 'is there a fire drill' or 'cheerio" when a player gets sent of are that well known in english football that almost every clubs fans will use them.
To answer your question. Quite a lot are created in advance but equally some are made up on the spot. I've heard some brilliant chants down the years that were off the cuff
There is a catalog of standard chants that can be adapted to the situation and sometimes they make up new ones on the fly.