American reacts to Germany's Most Popular Sports!

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  • Опубликовано: 4 сен 2022
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to sports in Germany. Thank you for watching and subscribe for more German reactions!

Комментарии • 496

  • @artaiosangelus8904
    @artaiosangelus8904 Год назад +234

    most ping pong tables have sharp corners. i belive this one is rounded because its in a public park and head hight for small kids

    • @sefribu4159
      @sefribu4159 Год назад +45

      other than that there is a popular game called "rundlauf" that´s played on a pingpongtable. and it hurts a lot less if you hit your hip on a rounded corner than on an angled one...

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta Год назад +9

      Don't remind me of "Rundlauf" 🙄🤣

    • @aepfelchenapfelbaum9536
      @aepfelchenapfelbaum9536 Год назад +9

      ping pong tables in public areas are often made from concrete, cause they are outside all over the year ... so hitting the edge of it can be very painful ... to avoid injuries it´s better to make the edges round ... and (honestly) it doesn´t change the game too much

    • @Warentester
      @Warentester Год назад

      And to play rounders...

    • @chintex_
      @chintex_ Год назад +1

      @@sefribu4159 Rundlauf ist einfach der beste Weg Pingpong zu spielen!

  • @vankroenen2145
    @vankroenen2145 Год назад +174

    "You guys play ice hockey?"
    Yeah.... we also drive cars and eat bread.

    • @gaminghuntress
      @gaminghuntress Год назад

      fr T_T

    • @rmamon2554
      @rmamon2554 9 месяцев назад

      Americans eat no bread. They eat a mix of sawdust with motoroil and bleach. The bleach is there to get there bread-replacement white again after frying it in motoroil.

    • @sniggles05
      @sniggles05 6 месяцев назад

      And we have REAL bread. Not this Crap the americans call bread.

  • @Mike8827
    @Mike8827 Год назад +136

    It amazes me how the words „Bayern Munich“ don’t ring any bell with you . I’m confident that on every other continent on this planet this club is known to at least the majority of people , just like Real Madrid, ManU, or Milan.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +6

      And not only other countries, but basically every at least moderately football interested person has an opinion on the club.

    • @DerJuvens
      @DerJuvens Год назад +2

      @@HappyBeezerStudios even me, who hasn’t had any interest in soccer kinda gets tribalistic when it is about FCBM 😹

    • @timefliesaway999
      @timefliesaway999 Год назад

      I guess every country that calls the sport football :D

    • @rickylein1581
      @rickylein1581 Год назад

      Its probably a first for all of the Bayern fans - i certainly enjoyed that satisfying little moment 😂😂

    • @misterbotanica
      @misterbotanica Год назад +1

      I believe Bayern is nowadays more known than Milan but still a little less than Real Madrid and Manchester United. Although United doesn’t deserve to be more known when taking into account how poorly the club performs 😂 But people in Asia still love them, so I assume they’re still mote known than Bayern.
      Bayern on the other hand is probably together with Real Madrid the most popular soccer club in North America that is from outside the US. I think they have the biggest number of fan clubs in the US compared to any other soccer club.

  • @forkless
    @forkless Год назад +138

    Two things that contribute to the US having a more obese population. Car dependent sprawl, hardly anyone walks or uses bicycles but more importantly the food in the US is severely over-processed.

    • @strange144
      @strange144 Год назад +11

      As they say, you can't outrun a bad diet :D

    • @Elunam88
      @Elunam88 Год назад +9

      to much sugar in everything

    • @forkless
      @forkless Год назад

      @@Elunam88 and sodium

    • @forkless
      @forkless Год назад +5

      @@strange144 While true, bad diet choices in the US aren't always a choice. Even if you believe you are getting healthier food.
      Getting 20+ ingredient bread isn't my idea of healthy. It might be shelf stable, but so will be the person who eats that shit long enough.

    • @fabiansaerve
      @fabiansaerve Год назад

      @@Elunam88 Even their bread is sweat

  • @Felix-st2ue
    @Felix-st2ue Год назад +261

    The fact abouts germans not doing enough sports in school is really misleading. Typically Sport in Germany is centered around sports clubs. There are nearly no school or university linked sports Teams whatsoever. If you want to do a sport and compete in it, you join a club. There is no link to the school or university you're attending. That also means next to no sport based scholarships etc.

    • @IceBro
      @IceBro Год назад +1

      But there are still waaay less people who go to school and do sports in their free time than over in the States.

    • @kleinshui9082
      @kleinshui9082 Год назад +12

      Any statistics for that claim? Are we only weighting in club sports activities or active activity time like bicycling, swimming, running, playgeound etc. alltogether?
      If your claim was true, wouldn't child obesity tendency rates in Germany be way higher than in the US?

    • @okkietrooy6841
      @okkietrooy6841 Год назад

      Because of the club culture everyone who wants to can play a sport on their level. You pay contribution (a fee) abdvyou are assigned to a team. And you can enter eith that team a competition. If your team hs the champignons at the end of the season, the team gets promotion to ths bwxt level of competition and if you end last the team will go to a lower level competition.
      The winner of the highest level of competition will be the National champion.
      In this way anyone can compete and competitive are not limited to schools. You also do not need to try out for a team in order to be able to play sports.

    • @DerJuvens
      @DerJuvens Год назад +7

      @@IceBro *looks at obesity charts*
      Sure buddy, sure.

    • @IceBro
      @IceBro Год назад

      @@DerJuvens well, its a fact that less high schoolers in Germany do sports than in the States. The difference is the food lmao

  • @bobopro1628
    @bobopro1628 Год назад +87

    The lack of sports programs in Germany needs to be put into context. We have an incredible number of sport clubs that fill the gaps. It's a totally different system with less streamlined goal oriented programs but maybe a greater variety.

    • @petouser
      @petouser Год назад +1

      I see two issues though, compared to school sports clubs:
      1) It usually costs money to enter
      2) Even if fees are waived, it's still a pain in the ass to get to a different place to participate.
      That's why I'm a big supporter of school sports clubs, as we usually see in countries like the US and Japan. It massively drops the hurdle to enter a club or try different kinds of sports.
      Of course, there are also disadvantages. It makes it harder to establish amateur adult sports clubs, since state-sponsored sports facilities focus on schools which are usually not available for working adult people (maybe they should make it available though for special times of the day and week.)

  • @sushi777300
    @sushi777300 Год назад +51

    Sometimes it's super ridiculous and borderline insulting that Americans think they're the only ones on the planet that figured out life 🤣

    • @irgendeinname9256
      @irgendeinname9256 Год назад +1

      Borderline insulting? It's insulting to people with borderline disorder?

  • @anthonysmith6413
    @anthonysmith6413 Год назад +49

    Some people here would say calling FCBM "just a team" is like saying Michael Jordan is just a Basketball player"

    • @DerJuvens
      @DerJuvens Год назад +7

      I was kind of shocked at the statement, lol.

    • @Syndur
      @Syndur Год назад +1

      @@DerJuvens but then again, would we know the top US football or basketball teams?

    • @DerJuvens
      @DerJuvens Год назад +2

      @@Syndur Most likely we'd have heard of them, yeah actually. Even though those sports are much smaller in popularity.

    • @davidmat4264
      @davidmat4264 Год назад

      @@Syndur yes

    • @danielhopkins2277
      @danielhopkins2277 Год назад

      @@Syndur NFL is a bit difficult... but I'm pretty sure everyone heard about the Chicago Bulls and maybe the L.A. Lakers.
      The 90s Bulls with Jordan, Rodman and Pippen are worldwide like the 70s Bayern with Beckenbauer, Müller and Maier in Germany.

  • @martinaklee-webster1276
    @martinaklee-webster1276 Год назад +184

    Biathlon is a mix of skiing and schooting. It has a Military history and is practised all over Europe.
    Also, Fußball is as important to us, as football 🏈 is for you.
    Greetings from Germany

    • @Marco-zt6fz
      @Marco-zt6fz Год назад +18

      Fussball is not only a sport, is culture and a lifestyle. its not only in germany so, its all over Europe.

    • @u.p.1038
      @u.p.1038 Год назад +15

      Fußball in Germany is more like Football, Baseball and Basketball in the US combined. It is waaaay more popular than any other sport that comes second.

    • @shinyhappyrem8728
      @shinyhappyrem8728 Год назад +2

      *shooting

    • @oliboy6204
      @oliboy6204 Год назад +6

      Biathlon is really big in Germany, i think mostly east germany, but there are also athletes from USA, or Korea, Japan, Canada etc

    • @olivierdk2
      @olivierdk2 Год назад +2

      Norwegians and Finnish are great at Biathlon, if wouldn' t want try to invade them, especially in Winter.
      понял ?

  • @Pattosch
    @Pattosch Год назад +58

    6:49 The table tennis table has rounded corners because it is on a children's playground. Simply to minimize injuries...The official tables are classic with sharp corners

    • @morton2596
      @morton2596 Год назад

      Especially if you consider, how kids are playing - in a group with bigger balls and bare hands - and running to the other side in a circle after hit the ball once. This way, all of them can play together without waiting to much or (at breaks in school with therefore very limited time) haven't being able to play at all

  • @pietg.6249
    @pietg.6249 Год назад +57

    It's shocking how little Americans know about other countries! But as soon as they hear "USA" they cheer. Oh well.

    • @Marina_-_-
      @Marina_-_- Год назад +25

      Croatian /Italian here. I finished my last year of high school in the US and you can only imagine the questions I was asked (along with three other exchange students from Europe-a Dutch, a Ukrainian and a German girl) . I remember standing with the German girl in the hallway and some guys came up to us and asked us if you could buy a Mercedes in Germany. I think her soul left her body and I couldn't stop laughing. They are really focused on their country and think it's the only thing that exists but we could be focused on European stuff also and not know anything about America but we still do. 🤷‍♀️

    • @marcomobson
      @marcomobson Год назад +4

      @@Marina_-_- Willful ignorance (united with arrogance, self-righteousness and egomania) is a great problem in the US, but of course also in other countries...

  • @Enhaneunzig
    @Enhaneunzig Год назад +25

    Fun fact: Your favorite german sportsman Simon Lizotte dont even has a article in the german wikipedia. I think 99% of the Germans never heard of him or of disc golf.

    • @karinamoraru8289
      @karinamoraru8289 Год назад +7

      I agree! Ich kenn den net!

    • @Sonnenbogen_Henni
      @Sonnenbogen_Henni Год назад +1

      I do, but I play discgolf myself and am super into it :D Makes me a little sad though

    • @mixlllllll
      @mixlllllll Год назад

      How can you not have heard of disc golf? :d

  • @MrFlo5787
    @MrFlo5787 Год назад +27

    Lets wait until Ryan finds out how big american football has become here recently...and that we've been playing it for decades.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +3

      Or basketball. I'm pretty sure he has heard of Dirk Nowitzki before.

    • @domib2896
      @domib2896 Год назад +1

      He knows. He mentioned and featured NALF in his videos. It''s an American guy who came to the south of Germany to play for one of the top american football teams in Germany. He also does videos about living in Germany.

  • @AlexandraVioletta
    @AlexandraVioletta Год назад +17

    "... A set of coffee cups"
    And you showed absolutely no reaction.
    I laughed so hard. 🤣

    • @Finsternis..
      @Finsternis.. Год назад +3

      It seemed like a nice looking set.

  • @klamin_original
    @klamin_original Год назад +20

    The channel DW (Deutsche Welle) is actually the public foreigners' channel of Germany financed by taxes from the tax budget.
    But it's not the same as other public channels in Germany, the other public stations don't get financed by taxes but by a monthly fee every household in Germany has to pay directly to the public stations.
    Just so you know why that channel provides so much information about Germany, that's the purpose of it.

  • @spongebobschwammkopf3489
    @spongebobschwammkopf3489 Год назад +8

    Don't forget! The German Ice Hockey Team won the Silver Medal 2018 at the Olympic Games,it was sensational!The Gold Medal won Russia 2018 in Pyeongchang,South Korea!

  • @ja_u
    @ja_u Год назад +44

    As Germany is usually among the top nations for bob sledding, skeleton etc. I think becoming German will probably hinder you more than anything.
    Look up the Jamaican Bob Sled team of Calgary 1988
    That was the first time they competed and they (understandably so as a tropical nation) had little skill in bob sledding. They didn’t even finish bc they crashed so much and had to walk to the finish line.
    So I suggest becoming Jamaican or some other tropical island and competing for them, your chances of making it to the national team there are probably the highest lmao

    • @alinadornieden8411
      @alinadornieden8411 Год назад +5

      Das geht über eure Vorstellungskraft...

    • @tiyangina3571
      @tiyangina3571 Год назад +6

      Jamaika hat ne Bobmannschaft....

    • @mayawessely3037
      @mayawessely3037 Год назад

      The Calgary Bob sled team is so cool and I used to live in Calgary lol 😂 now I’m in Germany!! Hockey all day!!

  • @archangel357
    @archangel357 Год назад +10

    In words an American could understand: Bayern Munich are to the Bundesliga what the New York Yankees are to Major League Baseball.
    The difference being that unlike the Yankees, who have won almost 30 World Championships, but none in the past 10 years, Bayern Munich have now won the German football championship ten times in a row. In fact, the Bundesliga ("Federal League") is not even 60 years old, yet Bayern have won the title an astonishing 32 times - basically, you expect them to win before the season even starts, and they usually do.
    The biggest difference in sports between the US and Germany (or really, the US and everywhere else) is that in the US, high schools and colleges have sports teams, and some schools can basically be called sports franchises with a few books thrown in - nobody knows much about the academic achievements of, say, Duke or Alabama, but everyone in the US knows Coach K and Nick Saban, right?
    In Europe, we have PE at school, but that's it. If you want to play football or basketball or do gymnastics, you don't do it at school, you join a club. And in fact, Bayern Munich is the biggest club of its kind, with 300.000 (!!!) members.

    • @vurmitza
      @vurmitza Год назад

      A Bundesliga without Bayern-München would be much more interesting though! 🙂

    • @DerJuvens
      @DerJuvens Год назад +1

      @@vurmitza I don't think so. It's about the best against the best. That other teams don't cut it, is hardly the problem of FCBM. It's about seeing top performance to then determine the ultimate team of them all. Without a leviathan like FCBM, the others wouldn't have this high bar for skill, this way they will be more motivated to be even better next time.

    • @KaiHenningsen
      @KaiHenningsen Год назад +2

      @@DerJuvens The problem is money. The more successful clubs get more of it, which enables them to buy better players - which is *why* FCBM wins so often. Capitalism at work.

    • @DerJuvens
      @DerJuvens Год назад +1

      @@KaiHenningsen You can always claim money, but then there's plenty of other clubs with plenty of money and they are not keeping up either. FCBM has been successfull and investing in new talent since many decades, so although your argument is true, it also ignores long term planning and investing, which many other clubs try but usually fail at.

  • @raenfox
    @raenfox Год назад +41

    Yes, we play ice hockey. And, you're not gonna believe it, we've even figured out a way to play it during the SUMMER! Ain't that amazing? :)

    • @squidcaps4308
      @squidcaps4308 Год назад +3

      German icehockey team has been for years one that you can not underestimate, no matter how good your team has been in recent games.

  • @spielpfan7067
    @spielpfan7067 Год назад +7

    What makes the difference is probably that Americans never walk anywhere. Here in Europe we need to walk more often to go shopping or meet friends. That's definetely because cars are more dominant in the US. Many people here live without a car, sometimes even on the countryside just because of much better public transport and bicycle opportunities. You should check out Peter Davies RUclips channel, he exposes the US car culture and compares it to Europe.

  • @sbeyer17
    @sbeyer17 Год назад +14

    8:20 because a calory input of 4000kcal is normal for US Americans.
    In Germany the recommended energy input is 2200 kcal.
    That's one of some reasons.
    Also there are also oberweight people in Germany too.

    • @PiratePawsLive
      @PiratePawsLive Год назад +6

      Yep I've become overweight since last year, sitting at home because of the pandemic wrecked me. Not walking as much everyday cause I did have less work days in the office caught up with me while keeping the same caloric intake xD.

    • @cherrypi_b
      @cherrypi_b Год назад +2

      @@PiratePawsLive Same. But to add to it - at home I constantly open the fridge to find something to much on 😂 I have no discipline.

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta Год назад

      4000? REALLY? Holy moly! 😳

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta Год назад +1

      We've rented a Schrebergarten at the beginning of the pandemic and I lost 50 kilograms 😁
      Search for a garden. If you can't rent one, ask an old member of your community if they need help with gardening and when it's come to harvest, you part it 60:40 for you.

  • @marcomobson
    @marcomobson Год назад +11

    Maybe your confusion derives from the US being the only country where people associate 'foot'ball with some kind of armored field wrestling with a ball...! 🤔😜😂

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv Год назад +35

    I grew up in a German ice hockey town, where about a third of the kids played soccer and another third street hockey in the summer and ice hockey in the winter. (The latter could be difficult, having only one small open-air stadium at that time.) Nowadays the town's team is playing in the profi league.
    6:07 It is a .22 rifle. Biathlon originates in Scandinavia and the military traditions of ski-soldiers esp. in Norway and Finland.
    7:05 Some public ping-pong tables in German parks have rounded corners to minimize risk of injury (even if that is against the rules).

  • @SilverScroll
    @SilverScroll Год назад +12

    The obesity in the U.S. comes down to food (food quality standards, local availability of food, deliberate misinformation about healthy eating by the food industry) and lack of incidental physical activity (infrastructure and city planning actively hostile to walking/cycling as a means of transportation) - at least that's my guess.

    • @TheRockkickass
      @TheRockkickass Год назад

      Yet we still have the most Olympic medals, by far. 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @cherrypi_b
      @cherrypi_b Год назад

      @@TheRockkickass There is much more money and effort put into development and careers of US sportsmen and sportswomen I think. In Germany you find that maybe in football but not so much in all the other sport types.

  • @julienmarschall7518
    @julienmarschall7518 Год назад +5

    Why are we fatter in the US he said 😂😂
    Thats because you have like 10 times the sugar in bread and other stuff

  • @CocoLicious
    @CocoLicious Год назад +7

    I grew up in a very ice hockey centric German town and my parents were actually a sort of ice hockey hooligans in the 80s 😂 think my dad got imprisoned once for a night and my mom left him there because he was so drunk.

  • @PropperNaughtyGeezer
    @PropperNaughtyGeezer Год назад +2

    Eishockey? Minimum 4 Player in NHL. Marco Sturm, Boston - Uwe Krupp, Atlanta - Olaf Kölzig, Toronto - Jochen Hecht, Buffalo.
    Here is not Eishockey with heated seats. Some stadiums are open and heat comes only from "Glühwein" oder "Grog".

  • @AnciusDuccius
    @AnciusDuccius Год назад +7

    Next year there will be again Women's World Cup in soccer.
    I recommend that you watch it. If it's like the European Championship that just ended a few weeks ago in terms of the level of play (and I assume it is), you'll really have fun!

  • @violam_orca
    @violam_orca Год назад +2

    Ice hockey has a long tradition in Germany.

  • @ralfoverbeck5127
    @ralfoverbeck5127 Год назад +3

    She forgot a little thing about German football! With 7.1 million members of the affiliated clubs, the DFB is the largest national sports association in the world. The non-profit organization is based in Frankfurt. The DFB is the umbrella organization of five regional and 21 state associations, which in turn consist of around 24,500 football clubs.

    • @rudolfgernd8760
      @rudolfgernd8760 Год назад

      Non-profit xD

    • @ralfoverbeck5127
      @ralfoverbeck5127 Год назад

      @@rudolfgernd8760 naja so stehts geschrieben xd

    • @njordholm
      @njordholm Год назад

      Das ist der Grund, warum ich keinen Fussball mehr verfolge. Die Kommerzialisierung ist abartig.
      Man kommt auch einfach nicht drum herum. Die Sport News sind quasi Fussball News mit ein bisschen Beiwerk aus den anderen Sportarten.
      Ich habe mal probiert Google News beizubringen, dass ich keine Fussball News möchte. Unmöglich!
      Zunächst bekam ich Bundesliga News (Ergebnisse und Spielberichte) angezeigt -> weniger Meldungen wie diese angeklickt.
      Dann wandelten sich die Meldungen zu Transfer News, Trainer und Spieler Diskussionen (Wer wird wann und wie rausgeschmissen, oder performt gut/schlecht -> weniger Meldungen wie diese angeklickt.
      Dann bekam ich Champions League Berichterstattung -> weniger Meldungen wie diese angeklickt.
      Gefolgt von Transfer News, Trainer und Spieler Diskussionen auf der Ebene -> weniger Meldungen wie diese angeklickt.
      Dann kam 3. und teils 4. Liga auf Regional-Ebene, anstatt andere Sportarten... dann hab ich nach stundenlangem Wegklicken frustriert aufgegeben.
      Selbst das liken und gezielt Suchen anderer Sportarten bewirkt nix. Es ist zum verzweifeln!

  • @simongunkel7457
    @simongunkel7457 Год назад +6

    5:30 A lot of Americans have german roots, but the main waves of migration happened before association football was a thing, the same ist true for Italy and Great Britain. Association football proper starts in 1863, American Football rules start being codified in 1867. It takes about 50 years for Association football to really spread in Europe, with most countries having regular games in the early 20th century, the first professional league starting in the 1920s. In South America the sport spreads a bit later, gaining popularity in the early 20th century. Association fottball was introduced to the Summer Olympics in 1900, but it took until 1924 for any non-european teams to compete (Uruguay, Egypt, Turkey and the USA) and Uruguay actually won the tournament.

  • @gudrunasche9124
    @gudrunasche9124 Год назад +3

    There is a Channel called „NALF“. It‘s a Footballplayer, he live in a german Town called „Schwäbisch Hall“.

  • @elsabooknerd8502
    @elsabooknerd8502 Год назад +3

    In northern Germany (Hamburg) many people also play field hockey and tennis and since the land in the north is super flat we get an extra two weeks holiday dedicated to skiing (Skiholiday) every march

    • @Mimicat51
      @Mimicat51 Год назад +1

      And wie proportionally have most skiers of all federal states of germany (15% of the population)

    • @meinich5488
      @meinich5488 9 месяцев назад

      More in the north,Kiel and Flensburg and of course HSV Handball are very popular as well, Handball is the sort of the north.

  • @pixelbartus
    @pixelbartus Год назад +13

    Your question about how to become a bobsleder remembered me somehow on the legendary jamaican bobsled team. Maybe you know the disney movie "cool runnings". It is about a real story.
    An other interesting story, you maybe want to look up and maybe react to is the story about Kurt Landauer. He has been president of the football club Bayern Munich as the nazis came to power. He was a jew and got in an concentation camp. He managed to get out and flew to switzerland. After the war he came back for a visit, but he already had a ticket to the USA in his pocket, where he wanted to live. But he stayed, became president of bayern Munich again and campained for the germans to be allowed to play football again in the american sector. He even managed to rebuild the destroyed stadium together with the rival and former nazi supporting club 1860 Munich.
    ruclips.net/video/0C3dFiVBbXw/видео.html

  • @aesthetic97
    @aesthetic97 Год назад +3

    I loved Simon Lizotte the moment I saw him for the first time, He did the Simon-thing and took a route nobody else did and just crushed every hole. Didn't knew he was German for like a few month, obviously he is my favorite Player rn.

  • @belegur8108
    @belegur8108 Год назад +4

    our "Ping Pong" tabels in public parks often have round corners, because there is a popular variety of play called "Rundlauf/Running Around" where on one side there is one player and on the other side every other one in a line, doesn't matter how many. The first player of the line starts to play the ball to the single one and starts running to the place of the single player, while that one returns and runns to the end of the line. Then the second player in the line, now number one returs to the single player side and so on. every time a player misses his/her shot he/she is eliminated and the game starts again without the eliminated, till only 2 remain. these play a little final of who wins 2( sometimes 3) balls first. then reset with all players.
    hope you get the picture and greetings from Germany
    And your question of where to go to learn bob sled driving or most of winter sports in general, there are several sport academies (mostly federal sponsored) for that in the mountainous federal states of Germany, where one can join in a club.

    • @marcomobson
      @marcomobson Год назад

      "Rules" for Rundlauf seem to have slightly changed over the years. When I played it at school over 30 years ago with half of my class mates we usually spread more to both sides of the table tennis table at the beginning. Otherwise player one has hardly a chance of catching the ball when he doesn't play a "slow game" and player 2 & 3 play a good/mean game.
      Btw "every other" means "jeder zweite" (and this doesn't make any sense to me) whereas "alle anderen" (what I think you meant to say) translates as "all the rest of (them)". 😉

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 Год назад +1

    There was also German culture in the US.
    German immigrants founded Turnvereine (Turner) to practice gymnastics.
    In addition, beer was brewed and the German language was cultivated.
    But with the two world wars it was no longer possible to live German culture in the US.
    Only English was spoken in public and the German language was no longer passed on to the children.
    Alcohol was also banned as a heavy drug.
    Today some remember that their grandfathers and grandmothers were German, Dutch or from Austria or Swiss.
    Germans (Deutsche) and Dutch are often confused abroad because it was similar up until the 1500s.
    Austrians and many Swiss speak German, but politically different.
    Switzerland has been independent since around 1291.

  • @kaypirinha1982
    @kaypirinha1982 Год назад +3

    06:00 maybe you've heard the names Kölzig, Sturm, Krupp(Stanley Cup winner), Hecht, Seidenberg(Stanley Cup winner), Draisaitl(2020 regular season mvp), Greiss and some more like Grubauer or Künhackl (both are Stanley Cup winners).

    • @dirrak1780
      @dirrak1780 Год назад +1

      remember the 2018 Silvermedal at the olympic wintergames

  • @tosa2522
    @tosa2522 Год назад +3

    Are there any "Breitensport" mass sports clubs in the U.S. where you can play sports with other people as an adult without professional ambitions? ...excluding the local tennis and golf club.
    In Germany, you can go to one of the local sports clubs and see if the sports they offer suit you. Even my mom has been doing gymnastics for the elderly for over 10 years.

  • @heha6984
    @heha6984 Год назад +8

    Why we are here in Germany not more fat? First: There ARE a LOT of FAT children (and adults, of course). Second: Perhaps the German food might be healthier ..... 😉

    • @etherealicer
      @etherealicer Год назад +1

      Yeah, but despite the numbers mentioned in the video, less than the US. I think Germans are on average moving more in their daily life (cycling, public transport etc). So, while not much sport, still some exercise.

  • @Yurgin764
    @Yurgin764 Год назад +21

    The round pingpong tables are for safety. Some kindergardens or elementary school have them because a overprotective mother prolly complaint about it. Most parents i know hate them, here in germany and always rant about them. In my old school they put cushions on the edges because some stupid kid ran into it and got hurt. Football/Soccer is really really huge in germany the stadiums are almost everytime sold out, depending on the club.

    • @Kordanor
      @Kordanor Год назад +1

      And still, wehen I went to school 30-20 years ago 4 out of 5 times we had to play Basketball instead, which nobody played in private. Felt so stupid.

    • @benjaminconrad3674
      @benjaminconrad3674 Год назад

      @@Kordanor in my school we played basketball because we wanted too :D

  • @ungerongt6033
    @ungerongt6033 Год назад +4

    Please react to european Fan singing in football (soccer) games. This will be fun for you and you will recognize how big it is in Europe.
    German kids get less of offers in sports than US Kids, but they mostly (obesity is also a problem in Germany!) eat healthier(Portion size and vegetables)than kids in the USA and walk more per day(for example to school or the local playgrounds). So even, if they are not able to join a local sports group after school, they can be more active.

  • @ChRW123
    @ChRW123 Год назад +1

    5:30 well actually... from wikipedia:
    "German Americans (German: Deutschamerikaner, pronounced [ˈdɔʏtʃʔameʁiˌkaːnɐ]) are Americans who have full or partial German ancestry. With an estimated size of approximately 43 million in 2019, German Americans are the largest of the self-reported ancestry groups by the United States Census Bureau in its American Community Survey.[1] German Americans account for about one third of the total population of people of German ancestry in the world."

  • @adventure-phil8339
    @adventure-phil8339 Год назад +1

    When I was in the US I showed my host familiy a video of a Handball game. They have never seen it and didnt even know that this sport exists. 😳

  • @denisdrumm971
    @denisdrumm971 Год назад +2

    Don't mean to flex on anyone, but Germany won the silver medal in Ice hockey at the 2018 winter Olympics!

  • @janpracht6662
    @janpracht6662 Год назад +1

    German bobsleders closely work together with institutes and experts for material research. So in the competition they always have the most modern sleds helping for the decisive tenth-second.

  • @evelinebroza4857
    @evelinebroza4857 Год назад +1

    Tischtennis table is round on the corners in the parks, to avoid small children banging their heads or worse.

  • @susella646
    @susella646 Год назад +1

    You might have heard about Dirk Nowitzki, who used to play for the Dallas Mavericks.
    He's from my hometown of Würzburg.

  • @Al69BfR
    @Al69BfR Год назад +3

    You obviously missed the last four world championships where Adidas introduced a new ball with new fancy seams and prints each time. 😉
    And if you want to see how people can make what’s seem impossible come true, I recommend two movies: Cool Runnings and Eddie the Eagle.

  • @biloaffe
    @biloaffe 8 месяцев назад

    The Germans were unprepared for the 1972 Olympic Games attack. We had no police special forces and no anti-terror units. In response to these terrible events, GSG 9 was founded. Other special units were added later.

  • @sebastianderien5823
    @sebastianderien5823 Год назад +1

    I think the ping pong table was a public one in a park, and they often have rounded corner so you minimize the danger of serious injuries if you hit the corner. Normal ping pong tables in Germany also have pointy corners :D

  • @uplex2716
    @uplex2716 Год назад +5

    Can’t believe they don’t talk more about handball. Germanys national sport after footbal

    • @maja-kehn9130
      @maja-kehn9130 Год назад +1

      I can´t believe they didn´t talk about tennis and motorsports.

  • @ian.blackwoodgwent.walesgb5668
    @ian.blackwoodgwent.walesgb5668 Год назад +1

    You'll be able to take your son to the football World Cup in 2026 ⚽️... the tournament is being hosted by Canada, Mexico and the USA ..
    Final in Dallas, I think..
    My German 🇩🇪 sporting favourites
    ..Steffi Graf 🎾 and Sebastian Vettel 🏎 amongst others...

  • @d-docnemesis7925
    @d-docnemesis7925 Год назад +2

    In my experience, a lot of people in Germany also do various kinds of combat sports. I live practically in the middle of nowhere, so here we only have the "classics" like judo, karate, boxing, kickboxing and an inofficial private medieval sword fighting club in my area. Once you come to a biggest city, you get flooded with combat sports that you probably never even heard of.

    • @gwendolynsnyder463
      @gwendolynsnyder463 Год назад

      I'm thinking of practicing Aikido, the Martial Arts of dodging.
      If I accidentally kill an attacker while having the black belt in Karate or Taek Won Do, I will be fucked juristically because a person actually died.
      But if I am doing a martial arts of dodging, I can hardly accidentally kill someone. Also, I'm a runner when something's dangerous anyway, but it'd be nice to know how to defend myself, because I'm a woman, and scared of going to work during winter because it's still dark outsidd.

    • @d-docnemesis7925
      @d-docnemesis7925 Год назад

      @@gwendolynsnyder463 I'm familiar with Aikido. It's a pretty cool sport but I'm not quite sure about its effectiveness in a street fight (unless you trained it like forever). No offence, it's pretty similar with Judo. Also I think it doesn't matter which combat sport you do, by German law it is classified as attack with a weapon when you ever attack anyone. However if you act in self defense it doesn't matter as long as you stay within the range of "reasonable force". I guess it's pretty hard to actually kill someone anyway.
      Btw I'm a woman too, and a pretty awful runner. I totally get it. But I count on defense spray and the fact that most people tend to run when they realize that you will put up a fight.

  • @blablamann2973
    @blablamann2973 Год назад +1

    What she didnt mentioned is the amount of people going to the gym in germany. In 2022 around 11 Million men visited the gym regularly or from time to time(which is 31 percent of the male population in germany) and 26 percent of the women. There are also over 1.3 Million active members over 70 years(around 7 percent). And the industry is growing anf growing, many gyms of way too crowded and have more members than they could handle(especially the cheap ones). You also see a lot of people doing yoga and other sports in parks.
    So almost every second to third person in germany is going to the gym from time to time(or regularly) or is doing some Kind of other sports :)

  • @anunearthlychild8569
    @anunearthlychild8569 Год назад

    Especially in winter sports, there were some weird things during the Olympics.
    In 1988 there were two of them.
    1. Eddie the Eagle - an English ski jumper who qualified for the Olympics only because he was the only ski jumper in England.
    He finished last everywhere, but the public loved him.
    2. And you don't even need snow and ice in the country to learn and train bobsleigh. 🤣
    Check out the movie "Cool Runnings" and see how the Jamaican bobsled team made it to the Olympics.
    They weren't good but hey everyone was rooting for them just because of their will to make it.
    What you find so interesting in the movie with the prone shooters is biathlon. A mixture of cross country skiing and shooting.

  • @dksilber9500
    @dksilber9500 Год назад +2

    Oh, you mentioned discgolf - nice 🙂. I'm playing discgolf with my son (he's nearly 16) on a regular basis. And of cf course we know Simon Lizotte. A fantastic player from Germany. My son's favorite is Paige Pierce... just for your information: discgolf is quite a new sport in Germany, but slowly it gets more popular. We currently have roundabout 200 courses for discgolf here... 😉

  • @Kivas_Fajo
    @Kivas_Fajo Год назад +2

    Not only do we play ice hockey. The Dutch seem to kind of have invented having metal bars below the shoes to go quickly and safe on ice. Frozen oven waterways are abundant in the Netherlands in Winter...or used to be, now it's Global Warming aera and we have no real winters anymore in vast regions of Europe. The Mediterrenean is starting to turn from sub tropical to tropical...and so on.

  • @rewelke
    @rewelke Год назад

    The shown table tennis table is made of concrete in the outdoors. Very thick (10cm) and immobile. Rounded corners are a good idea on that.

  • @yasch3696
    @yasch3696 Год назад +1

    7:00
    I think as the questions were asked at public places this is a playing ground and its rounded so the kids wont hurt themselves

  • @2kReels
    @2kReels Год назад +1

    Funny thing is: almost no one here knows who Simon Lizotte is, because Disc-Golf is not a thing in germany. I had to look him up (or the sport). I thought it was a fictional creationfor wii sports (or was is the sony variant)

  • @brittches
    @brittches Год назад +1

    If you wanna do luge, you'll find most of the world's ice canals in Germany ;)

  • @noobster4779
    @noobster4779 Год назад

    One big sport in germany that was shown but not mentioned in the video is: Swimming
    While only few people do it competetively swimming is really big in the country. Going to the "public swimming pool" is seen as a compleatly normal free time activity and basically every mid sized town (20.000+) has at least one all year public swimming pool facility. Additionally there are smaller public swimming pools in a lot of mid sized villages that are open during the summer season.
    This is partly a legacy from the german empire, because the swimming culture got a massive boom when germany started to build a major navy. As you might have noticed even before WW1 most germans were not exactly living near the coastline so the navy needed more people able to swimm for to become naval personal. Also the navy was a huge nationalism and prestige thing and the only military force that was truly "german"/federal until 1918 and not state based (The "German army" in 1914 was more several state armies under unified command).
    The swimming culture survived the end of the german empire becuase the nazis later on also massively funded it because swimming is arguably the best sport to keep a population "fit" do to it training basically all body parts at the same time. The nazis were really hardcore into sports as part of their racial superiority bullshit.
    So even today most schools include swimming classes (eather at a school swimming pool or a city one) so the population doesnt drown and going to public swimming pools in general is still a big thing, although most see it more as a leizure activity like going to the beach nowadays :)

  • @janzumstein8241
    @janzumstein8241 Год назад +1

    To get into these sports, you have to join to a team or a club that does this sport. You grow into it really quickly after that.

  • @CynderNeko
    @CynderNeko Год назад

    You'd be astounded... my hometown is quite proud of it's local ice hockey team.

  • @arnodobler1096
    @arnodobler1096 Год назад +2

    Fußball (Soccer) will probably never become so popular, because it is uninteresting for US TV - too few possibilities for commercial breaks!

  • @y00shin7
    @y00shin7 Год назад

    What a coincidence. Today, the day this video is uploaded, is exactly 50 years from the terrorist attack on the Olympics in Munich. They held a memorial ceremony today.

  • @kamikazeratte
    @kamikazeratte Год назад

    6:59 no. This is a public table tennis table, with a bit rounded corners so that it's not that painful if you bumb on the corner (they're often made from concrete)

  • @caraira1909
    @caraira1909 Год назад

    My husband used to play ice hockey when he was younger, he was pretty good at it too.

  • @olli1068
    @olli1068 Год назад

    Thanks for telling me about Simon Lizotte! I didn't even know that sport before.

  • @wolfgangfroehlich7786
    @wolfgangfroehlich7786 Год назад

    You, being a fan of Simon Lizzotte, earned yourself an upvote.

  • @t.naradasx1158
    @t.naradasx1158 Год назад

    The moment when you recognize you are number one and no one knows it ^^

  • @tomsun3159
    @tomsun3159 Год назад +1

    If the GDR was the university of doping, russia remained kindergarden of doping.

  • @biloaffe
    @biloaffe 8 месяцев назад

    East Germany only won more Olympic medals because doping was systematically used in the GDR (East Germany), as was the case in the USSR.

  • @ghjklo5152
    @ghjklo5152 Год назад +1

    Discgolf isn't a big thing in german, but it's growing. Simon Lizotte isn't a celebrity in germany. Only people with discgolf background may know him.
    I saw in one of your other videos your RUclips suggestions with Jomezpro etc.. So i had a clue, you are a discgolf guy :-)

  • @Eurograph
    @Eurograph Год назад

    Known sports clubs from the region I come from are (known because they play in big stadiums and there is a lot of noise around them):
    Soccer: TSG 1899 Hoffenheim or Karlsruher SC (KSC).
    Handball: Rhein-Neckar Löwen
    Ice hockey: Adler Mannheim
    However, I have to expose myself. I am not a big sports fan. I've been to a game at all the clubs I mentioned at most once. Otherwise I have hardly any contact points. For a couple of years now, I even actively don't do sports anymore, which also shows in my figure. However, before that I had chronologically practiced the following sports: track and field, soccer, competitive swimming, standard dancing, Viet-Vo-Dao martial arts, circuit training and flag soccer.

  • @magnustool
    @magnustool Год назад

    😯😯😯😯
    Brave woman. With a Bayern jersey at the stadium of 1.FC Köln (Cologne)...
    🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @AntonGudenus
    @AntonGudenus Год назад

    American sees a gun -> instant "what was that" "I want to play this!". Shooting seems to really be engrained in the US culture.
    But in all honesty, Biathlon is a very interesting shooting sport, that combines cross country skiing and shooting. It's basically the granddaddy of practical shooting and has its roots in military use of skis and guns for engagements in snowy theatres.
    Edit:
    And the main reason why the US is so obese, is the prevalent unhealthy and extremely high caloric diet there. There is tons of sugar and fat in everything. And the portion sizes are huge.
    White bread from the US would be classified as cake in some parts of Europe for instance.

  • @Why-D
    @Why-D 11 месяцев назад

    The FC Bayern München is just a team, that won the championship (I think) twelve times in a row now and is one of the few teams, that advanced to the erste Bundesliga / first league and did not relegated since then.
    In Germany you have a football club in nealry every village and several in any city.
    And you have different teams in sports, from kids to teens, adults and even seniors. So germans do a lot of amateur sports, when the are adult up to retirement.

  • @pumbaandtimon
    @pumbaandtimon Год назад

    Simon Lizotte 👍 Unfortunately we don’t have many disc golf courses. But it’s growing.

  • @gowest19
    @gowest19 Год назад

    The round corner at the tennistable mostly on puplic playgrounds, it´s for safty

  • @stevenvanhulle7242
    @stevenvanhulle7242 6 месяцев назад

    In Belgium football is by far the ballsport which is most on tv, say like 99%. I once asked a tv producer why they didn't report on other ballsports, like handball, or korffball. Answer: because football is the most popular.
    Meaning: football is most on tv, because it is the most popular, because it is most on tv.

  • @stephaniechbakingtraveler4262
    @stephaniechbakingtraveler4262 10 месяцев назад

    Bayern München is the german football(soccer) team from Munich, Germany and it is the most strongest team in Germany and also in Europe.

  • @klotz__
    @klotz__ Год назад

    American football also is quiet popular in many areas. In my city thetre are several amateur teams ranging from Flag Football to Junior and Adult Tackle Football.

  • @IroAppe
    @IroAppe Год назад

    I guess that Germans just get more exercise regularly, by walking, cycling, doing something with friends. Instead of having that hard split of people who do absolutely nothing about health and weight, and those who are extremely into fitness, I feel that in Germany there's more a middle. Most people do a little bit here and there all the time. Based on the individual physiology, we still get normal people and a bit overweight people, but that's most of them. Because of the regular walking, cycling and an activity here and there, most people don't get to completely omit exercise. And if you become mindful of your nutrition at one point, that's all you need. Well, actively doing sports is still more healthy, prolonging the expected lifespan. But the other level that most people are, they will be fine until a senior age.
    And then, it's that. We have many seniors that have difficulties moving and a lot of health effects etc. If you only do a bit, you're mostly fine until you hit 60+, 65 or so. That's then where it differs if you have kept at it, actively doing sports regularly, or not. Your senior quality of life depends on it to some degree.

  • @bjorngrundey5695
    @bjorngrundey5695 Год назад

    Simon is great, I love to see him play. Though he gave up his Simon lines to win tournaments ;). I stayed up until 4:30 am watching his second tournament win this year live...
    Discgolf is growing here in germany, but still most people haven't even heard of it.

  • @MrStubbs8157
    @MrStubbs8157 Год назад

    Simon Lizotte Fan here as well :) I am german and love watching discgolf....sadly there isnt really any interest near my home for discgolf. Organizing courses to play, etc. for fun sports is something that we in Germany are super bad, I guess. We have so many woodland everywhere and yet noone picked up discgolf as a fun activity here. Kinda sad and I sometimes wish that germany would take on such sports in parks and woods far more quickly to encourage such stuff. It is something you dont need a club and people simply could go for it. Such sports never take off here.

  • @moonshot242
    @moonshot242 Год назад

    The rounded corners at the table tennis plate are not common, in this case it is a fixed installed concrete table at a kids playground...just for small kids safety

  • @rileyxxxx
    @rileyxxxx Год назад

    we also invented the WOK Wm, where you slide down ice tracks sitting on a kitchen wok.

  • @Cologne.1948
    @Cologne.1948 Год назад

    Im literally living in Bergisch Gladbach and never heard about the women's win. What a shame but hey, I learned something new today.

  • @jan-lukas
    @jan-lukas Год назад

    As someone from cologne I always recognize the places in these videos, it's so strange!

  • @pn7954
    @pn7954 Год назад

    I still wonder why the winner of the Super Bowl is called world champion when it's played nationally.

  • @jannesdreier2181
    @jannesdreier2181 Год назад

    Public table tennis plates are mostly round at the corners as (yes we germans are crazy about public security stuff sometimes) they could hurt someone running/falling in them... yeah... thats how we are...

  • @helmuthschultes9243
    @helmuthschultes9243 Год назад

    The Bob sled activities are by nature in the southern German regions leading into yhe Alps of Switzerland and Austria. Thus Bavaria Algau and Swabian/Black Forest sections. All the northern parts are too flat for Bob sled. Also Ski Jumps and extensive down hill skiing. Algau is centre of much such activity it is the border region with Austria and Switzerland living between Bavaria and Swabian regions, largely a tongue picking southerly into mostly Austria.

  • @fynnlang3011
    @fynnlang3011 Год назад

    This "ping pong table" is called table tennis in Germany and these round corners are very unusual
    And for your „Bob plans” pretty sure you can do that in the US to but in Germany there are places called „Bobbahn” where you can try it (there are most in the south or middle of Germany like „Oberhof” for example)

  • @Tapzi030
    @Tapzi030 Год назад

    The rounded corners on a outside tabletennis are for safty reasons that children dont run against the corners if they playing games where u have to run around the plate.

  • @hinekde
    @hinekde Год назад

    If you like to play Disc Golf yourself and visit northern Germany, check out the Disc Golf parcours in Hamburg - City Nord. They are right in the city, spread around multiple small parks and small meadows and free for public, you just have to bring your discs, get out of subway and start ...

  • @RZ-ey9jk
    @RZ-ey9jk Год назад

    Simon rules!
    Discgolf isn't such of a big deal here in Germany, but growing.

  • @Mangafan47
    @Mangafan47 Год назад

    public ping pong tables often have rounded corners, because they usually are near play grounds and therefore on the same height of the head from small children. So if they run into a table they don't get hurt. Also children who run a round the table. A very common game in Germany is called "Umlauf" (lit. run around"), where round corners are also preventing injuries while running around the table.
    For Umlauf you need 3+ player and use a small ball (usually the size of an adult palm, but could be any ball). One half of the group is on one side, the other is on the other side of the table in a line. You hit the ball and then have to get to the other side of the table (usually clockwise, so noone pumps into each other) at the end of the line, before you hit again. If you miss (same rules like getting/missing a point in ping pong) you're out, until just two are standing (and don't have to run around anymore). These two are than usually playing up to three or five points. whoever wins gets an extra life, so if you miss once during the run around phase you'll can continue. We played it all the time during elementary school. And sometimes you'll see young drunk adults playing it at night at the playground.
    Also Germans are less obsessed, because you don't get obsessed from a lack of sport, but from eating more calories than you need. So the reason for the obesity crisis in the USA is you're (lack of) food quality, rather than you're physical activity level.

  • @nommh
    @nommh Год назад

    Soccer is THE game practically everywhere outside the USA and perhaps canada.