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An oversized football is pictured beside an official fan shop ahead of the UEFA EURO 2024 Germany

Euro 2024

Euro 2024

Welcome to This Week from Premier Skills English, a weekly review of football action for learners of English from across the globe. In This Week, Jack talks about stories from this week in the Premier League and there are lots of football English words and phrases for you to learn.

Transcript

If the listening was difficult, you can listen and read the transcript at the same time.
Read the transcript and listen at the same time.

Hello, my name’s Jack and welcome to This Week on Premier Skills English. In This Week, we’ve got lots of interesting words and phrases to help you talk about football in English.

If you are listening to this podcast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify you can also visit the Premier Skills English website at premierskillsenglish.britishcouncil.org where you’ll be able to download the podcast.

On the Premier Skills English website, you can read the transcript and join the Premier Skills English community by completing a language task in the comments section. This will really help you remember the new words and phrases from the stories from the Premier League.

This week, I’m following the advice of a few listeners and making a podcast about the Euro 2024 championship that kicks off on Friday. This is going to be a longer podcast than usual because there is a lot to talk about so I’ve broken the story part into 4 sections and I’ll stop and talk about the interesting vocabulary as I go.

After the story, there will be a language focus to test you to see if you have understood all the new vocabulary and then at the end of the podcast, there will be two new football phrases: a regular football phrase and a fiendish football phrase. Before I get to the story, I want to look back at the last football phrases. If you didn’t hear them last time, here’s one more chance to guess now.

Last time, the first regular football phrase was ******* **** or ******* ****. This is an acrobatic strike that involves the player leaping in the air to shoot with their feet above their head. It’s a very hard move to pull off, and it’s not something that I would try as I’m pretty convinced I’d injure myself, but the young athletes of the Premier League sometimes score sensational goals with this type of strike.

The fiendish football phrase was to *** **. This is an interesting phrasal verb that means to provide an assist. Remember, this is the fiendish football phrase so I’m not looking for the obvious phrasal verb that means to provide an assist. The phrase I’m looking for comes from a different sport. I got this phrase from a match report on the Premier League website that described Rodri’s goal when he side-footed the ball “beyond the dive of Areola after being **** ** by Bernardo Silva on the edge of the area.

I’m really happy that so many of you managed to get these football phrases. Lots of people got the regular football phrase and way more of you than I had expected got the fiendish football phrase as well so congratulations to Alejandro Garmido from Indonesia, Hasan from Turkey who expressed his lack of answer very elegantly. Well done to Hermosillo Moreno from Mexico, Leo Fabiano from Brazil, Strong from Vietnam, I’ve not seen you for a while Strong, welcome back, Well done and welcome to Emil Paul from India, and Congratulations to Ryohei from Japan. You all managed to work out that the football phrase was bicycle kick or scissor kick. You could have also said overhead kick as these three terms are all used to describe this athletic move.

And even more congratulations to Lukáš from Czechia who inspired the fiendish football phrase. Well done to AndreTorre From Brazil, Vietnguyenngo from Vietnam, Ken from Japan, Gapa from Korea, Alex from Ukraine, ElChueco from Argentina, Denis2000 from Belarus, MoBeckham from Turkey and Jacob Burns from Poland. As well as the football phrase, you all managed to work out the fiendish football phrase as well which comes from golf and is to tee up, meaning in this football context to set up or provide an assist.

Keep listening till the end of the podcast for a new football phrase and a new fiendish football phrase!

Now it’s time for today’s story.

The UEFA European Football Championship 2024 kicks off on Friday

On the 14th of June next Friday at 8 o'clock Scotland and Germany kick off the UEFA European Football Championship which is more commonly known as Euro 2024. 24 national sides will travel to Germany to compete in the second largest international football competition, after the World Cup.

The first European Football Championship was held in France in 1960 and the championship has been held every four years, in between the World Cups, ever since. The first competition was won by the Soviet Union. Since then, the most successful teams have been the Spanish and German sides. The Spanish team first won in 1964 and then had back to back wins in 2008 and 2012. The German side first won in 1972 and 1980, though back then they were West Germany. They won again in 1996. France has won the competition twice, as has Italy who are the current champions. England has never won the European Football Championship, though did make the final last time.

In the early years of the tournament, only 4 teams took part. There were lots of qualification matches, in 1964,  29 teams took part in the qualification rounds, but only four teams played in the finals matches. In 1980, this increased to 8 and then in 1996, 16 teams competed; this number increased again in 2016 and now, 24 teams take place, playing 51 matches. In Germany, the teams are divided into 6 groups of 4. The winners and second place of each group and the four best third places will progress to the knockout stages, starting with a round of 16, and then the quarter finals, semifinals and ultimately the final to decide the winner.

The Euros have been hosted across Europe; starting in France, and then four years later, the tournament was held in Spain, then Italy, Belgium, then Yugoslavia and so on. In 2000, the hosting duties were shared by Belgium and the Netherlands and have been shared by Austria and Switzerland and Poland and Ukraine. The 2020 UEFA European Football Championship celebrated the tournament’s 60th year and to mark the occasion, the competition was held in 11 countries across Europe. This summer, all the action will happen in Germany and matches will be played in 10 cities around the country.

The vocabulary from this part of the story that I’m going to talk about is:

  • Back-to-back wins
  • To make the final
  • Knockout stages
  • Hosting duties

Back-to-back wins
The phrase back to back means consecutive, or in a row, without a break. I think you can use the phrase for more than two events in a row, but it’s most commonly used to talk about two events. In the story, I said that the Spanish team had back-to-back wins. They won in 2008 and then again at the next tournament in 2012. There was no other winner between their wins so they won back to back tournaments. I looked up the phrase to see if the origins were interesting, but there’s no clear etymology. The only other use of the phrase that I know of is the phrase back to back houses. These are houses, normally small houses for poor people, that are built so that they share a back wall, so there is no gap between the houses. Back-to-back houses are quite famous in some cities, and there is even a kind of museum with a restored street of back-to-back houses in Birmingham. So, this might be where the phrase comes from,

To make the final
The verb make has lots of uses. In this case, to make it somewhere means to arrive somewhere or at something successfully. You can also say make it to somewhere.
So you might hear someone say: do you think they will make the final? Meaning, do you think the team will progress all the way to the final. England has only made it to the final once. I thinbk we usually use the phrase “make it to” when we’re travelling. What time will you make it to the office tomorrow? If the traffic isn’t too bad, I should make it there by five.

Knockout stages
The knockout stages of a football competition are when if a team loses, they are out of the competition. So in the Euros, there is the group stage, where each team plays three matches and then if they progress through to the knockout stages, they start in the round of 16. In this round, there are 8 matches. The winners make it through to the quarter finals and the losers are knocked out, they are out of the competition completely.

Hosting duties
Normally, if a team is playing in their home stadium, they are the hosts. The noun host describes the person that provides the location and whatever else is required for an event. On the smallest scale, you might be a host if you invite a friend to stay at your house. In football English, the home side are the hosts and the visiting side are guests. In an international tournament, it’s a bit more complicated because whole country is the host country and the host country will need to organise matches and transport and all the other facilities that are required for a major tournament. I described these as the hosting duties. The noun duty describes something that you have to do, that you have an obligation to do. Sometimes, you have a legal duty to do something, if you don’t do it, it’s against the law. Sometimes you have a contractual duty, so you have signed a contract and might get sued if you don’t do it. Most commonly, I think, duties are moral and it would be considered wrong if you don’t do your duty.

Time to move on to the next part of the story.

Welcome to Germany

The opening match will see the hosts take on Scotland. The Tartan Army have been made to feel welcome in Bavaria. There’s a lovely video online of Aston Villa’s John McGinn joining in some athletic folk dancing. For added drama, when Germany and Scotland face off in the opening match at the Allianz Arena in Munich, the Brighton and Hove Albion midfielder Pascal Groß will be taking on his teammate Billy Gilmore.

A question I have been asked a few times by students in my English classes is why there isn’t a UK national team. The main reason for this is the long history of the national teams in the UK and that the four nations that make up the UK have distinct national identities. The first international football tournament was the British Home Championship that was started in 1883 and contested by the United Kingdom’s four national teams, at the time, England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. By 1960, when the first European football championship was held, the UK national teams were well established and wanted to play in their national colours. In the Olympics, the UK is represented by team GB and there used to be a GB football team, but since the 1970s, the UK has only sent one men’s team and that was in 2012 when the games were held in London.

The vocabulary from this part of the story that I’m going to talk about is:

  • Athletic
  • Drama
  • Distinct
  • National colours

Athletic
The adjective athletic refers to athletes. The word athlete derives from a Greek word that means someone who competes in a competition, but today, it’s used to describe someone who competes in a physical competition and is physically fit and strong. You might describe a person as athletic, if they have a good physique and are slim and have visible muscles. Footballers are athletes. All professional sports people are athletes. In the story, I said that John McGinn joined in some athletic folk dancing. I was being a bit silly, because normally, you wouldn’t describe folk dancing as athletic, but some of the moves that the other dancers were performing were quite athletic, in that they demonstrated physical strength and training.

Drama
The noun drama usually refers to a type of TV programme or film that is about the real problems that people face. However, the noun can also be used to talk about the excitement and worries and strong emotions that are felt about and during an event or situation. Often, when people get together, perhaps for a party, or a holiday celebration like Christmas, they start arguing and fighting. If this happens, these people are causing drama. Some people seem to generate a lot of drama wherever they go. At the opening match in Germany, Pascal Groß will be taking on his teammate Billy Gilmore. I don’t know how well Billy and Pascal get on, but they are both midfielders and I like to think that Billy looks up to the more experienced Pascal. So when they are on opposite sides, there will be a bit more feeling about the encounter; there will be added drama.

Distinct
If something is distinct, it is clearly different and not part of the things around it. This adjective is related to the verb to distinguish which means to be able to notice the difference between two or more things. The things that a person can distinguish, that they can tell the difference between are distinct. We also use the adjective distinctive which means that something is different from everything else. So when I was at school I had a friend who had a really distinctive laugh. Even when the whole school got together for assembly, you would always know where he was because nobody laughed like him.
In the story, I said that the four nations that make up the UK have distinct national identities. People in England feel English and identify as English and people in Scotland identify as Scottish and the same is true for Wales and Northern Ireland.

National colours
A team’s national colours refers to the colours that are part of the country’s national symbols. For some countries, the national colours are a strong part of their national symbols. I live in Scotland now and the Scottish flag which is called the Saltire is white and blue. You can see these colours all over the place especially in the summer when there are international sporting events. There is actually a wikipedia page that lists the national colours of lots of different countries. Interestingly, they don’t include the nations that make up the UK and only have colours for Great Britain.
When someone is said to be wearing their national colours, it normally refers to the
uniform they wear when they are representing their country. It means they are playing for their national team, they are wearing the team uniform of their national team.

Time to move on to the next part of the story

Fan favourites at the tournament

One of my favourite Euro stories was of Paul the Psychic Octopus. Paul was a common octopus who lived in Oberhausen in Germany. Paul demonstrated high levels of intelligence and so the staff at the aquarium where he lived tried various ways of testing him. During the Euro 2008 tournament, Paul was presented with food in containers with flags representing the teams that Germany was set to play against and predicted the winner of the matches by selecting the food from the container with the right flag. Paul correctly predicted 4 out of 6 of the outcomes for the German side in 2008 and did even better for the following World Cup. Unfortunately, octopuses don’t live very long so German fans will have to look elsewhere this time for clues about their team’s chances of victory.

When these big international tournaments happen, large groups of fans often drink too much and behave badly at and around the matches. Tales of hooligans have embarrassed the English national side for years. However, in 2012, when the tournament was held in Poland and Ukraine, the Irish fans earned a reputation for being the best fans for their good humour and friendly behaviour. On one occasion, a group of fans fixed a dent in a car and on another, when fans were on a train with a nun, they burst into song and serenaded the nun with a heartfelt rendition of Our Father.

In 2016, fans from Iceland enjoyed special attention because of their signature Viking Thunderclap which was a particularly impressive way of supporting their team. The fans started with a synchronised slow clap and low yells that gradually gets faster and louder until erupting into cheers and applause. Sadly, Iceland have not qualified for this year’s tournament, but there are other Viking nations that may adopt the thunderclap.

The vocabulary from this part of the story that I’m going to talk about is:

  • Psychic
  • Hooligan
  • To serenade
  • Synchronised

Psychic
The adjective psychic describes someone who has a special ability that enables them to know things that are beyond the range of normal experience. So a psychic might be able to know what another person is thinking or in the case of Paul the Octopus, might know what is going to happen in the future, before it has happened. Personally, I am very sceptical about anyone claiming to have psychic powers that has not already won the lottery or been banned from every casino in Las Vegas.

Hooligan
The noun hooligan describes a violent person that attacks people physically and starts fights or vandalises things and causes damage in public places. There are several different explanations for the origin of this noun. The one I like best is that there was a man called Patrick Hooligan who worked as a very badly behaved security guard. In 1899, a writer called Clarence Rook wrote about Patrick Hooligan’s life claiming that it was that one man who gave the word its meaning. For a long time, the word just meant a young rowdy person who would get up to trouble, breaking things and starting fights, but in the 1970s, the word began to be associated with violence in sports. Football clubs used to have unofficial supporters clubs that would follow their team just to start fights with rival fans. This was reported as football hooliganism and was a real problem for football in the UK. There are still problems between groups of supporters, but the clubs have worked really hard to make match day a fun and safe experience for everyone and have a zero tolerance policy for any violent or threatening behaviour.

To serenade
The verb to serenade means to sing or play an instrument to someone, usually as a romantic gesture. I'm not sure if it would still be considered acceptable, but in the past, people would visit the person they were in love with and stand under their window at night to sing or play music for them. These days, we use the verb in a slightly silly way to say that someone sang to someone else. So in the story, I spoke about the Irish fans that sang Our Father to a nun on a train. This wasn't a romantic gesture, but you can still use the verb to serenade to describe this sort of dramatic act. When I was first teaching English, I used to take my guitar into class all the time and I would serenade my students with pop songs they liked to help them learn English. I’m not sure it was a very effective teaching technique.

Synchronised
The adjective synchronised means at the same time. There's a sport called synchronised swimming that involves a team of dancing swimmers who perform moves that are tightly choreographed so that all of the swimmers do things at exactly the same time. We also use the phrase in sync to say that a team is working well together. If people are in sync with each other, they don’t necessarily do things at the same time, but they work efficiently so that when one person finishes their role, the person that takes over from them is ready to go, there's no waiting around.

Now it's time to move on to the final part of the story.

The big question

The big question is: who is going to win? Until recently, the English team were the bookmakers’ favourites to win the championship in Germany, but then they lost against Iceland and I’m not sure if they are still the leading contenders. The English squad does have the most valuable players, with a combined value of £1.2 billion pounds. Close behind England, both in terms of the bookmakers odds and the combined value is the French side. France has had more international success than England so that might give them the edge. In third place in terms of value is Portugal and they have the added advantage of Cristiano Ronaldo, the all-time leading goal scorer in European Championship history, who is playing in his sixth tournament. And then there’s Germany who have the home advantage and the opportunity to secure a 4th title and become the most successful UEFA European Football Championship team.

Whatever the score next Friday, the following four weeks of matches will be a summer sporting treat that will see us through till the middle of July and then there will just be a few short weeks till the start of the new Premier League season.

The vocabulary from the final part of the story that I’m going to talk about is:

  • Bookmakers’ favourite
  • Contender

Bookmakers’ favourite
This is something that has come up a few times. A bookmaker is a person who runs a betting business. They offer odds on events happening. This means, they offer deals that say if you give them £10, they will give you back £30, for example if something happens. So I’ve just looked at a bookmakers website to see what the odds are for different teams to win Euro 2024. They are offering odds of 5/1 for Germany to win, which means if you bet £10, they would pay you back £60, that’s five times your original bet plus your stake, or the money you originally paid. The longest odds are for Georgia, Albania and Slovakia. They are offering 500/1. The shortest odds are 7/2 and that’s for England to win so the bookmaker thinks that England are going to win. The phrase bookmakers’ favourite means the result, the team or horse or whatever else you might place a bet on that the bookmaker thinks is going to win and so offers the shortest odds on.

Contender
A contender is someone who is competing in a competition. We talk about strong contenders when we want to talk about competitors that we think have a good chance of winning. If you don’t think that someone has a chance of winning, you could say that you don’t think they are a serious contender. There is a famous scene from an old film called On the Waterfront about a boxer who threw away his chance of becoming a champion because his brother wanted to make money betting against him. When the boxer looks back at his career and realises that he wasted his chance, he tells his brother: You don't understand. I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender.

Today, I’ve spoken about 14 useful words and phrases.

The words and phrases were:

  • Back to back wins
  • To make the final
  • Knockout stages
  • Hosting duties
  • Athletic
  • Drama
  • Distinct
  • National colours
  • Psychic
  • Hooligan
  • To serenade
  • Synchronised
  • Bookmakers’ favourite
  • Contender

Listen to the whole story one more time to hear this language in context.

The UEFA European Football Championship 2024 kicks off on Friday

On the 14th of June next Friday at 8 o'clock Scotland and Germany kick off the UEFA European Football Championship which is more commonly known as Euro 2024. 24 national sides will travel to Germany to compete in the second largest international football competition, after the World Cup.

The first European Football Championship was held in France in 1960 and the championship has been held every four years, in between the World Cups, ever since. The first competition was won by the Soviet Union. Since then, the most successful teams have been the Spanish and German sides. The Spanish team first won in 1964 and then had back to back wins in 2008 and 2012. The German side first won in 1972 and 1980, though back then they were West Germany. They won again in 1996. France has won the competition twice, as has Italy who are the current champions. England has never won the European Football Championship, though did make the final last time.

In the early years of the tournament, only 4 teams took part. There were lots of qualification matches, in 1964,  29 teams took part in the qualification rounds, but only four teams played in the finals matches. In 1980, this increased to 8 and then in 1996, 16 teams competed; this number increased again in 2016 and now, 24 teams take place, playing 51 matches. In Germany, the teams are divided into 6 groups of 4. The winners and second place of each group and the four best third places will progress to the knockout stages, starting with a round of 16, and then the quarter finals, semifinals and ultimately the final to decide the winner.

The Euros have been hosted across Europe; starting in France, and then four years later, the tournament was held in Spain, then Italy, Belgium, then Yugoslavia and so on. In 2000, the hosting duties were shared by Belgium and the Netherlands and have been shared by Austria and Switzerland and Poland and Ukraine. The 2020 UEFA European Football Championship celebrated the tournament’s 60th year and to mark the occasion, the competition was held in 11 countries across Europe. This summer, all the action will happen in Germany and matches will be played in 10 cities around the country.

Welcome to Germany

The opening match will see the hosts take on Scotland. The Tartan Army have been made to feel welcome in Bavaria. There’s a lovely video online of Aston Villa’s John McGinn joining in some athletic folk dancing. For added drama, when Germany and Scotland face off in the opening match at the Allianz Arena in Munich, the Brighton and Hove Albion midfielder Pascal Groß will be taking on his teammate Billy Gilmore.

A question I have been asked a few times by students in my English classes is why there isn’t a UK national team. The main reason for this is the long history of the national teams in the UK and that the four nations that make up the UK have distinct national identities. The first international football tournament was the British Home Championship that was started in 1883 and contested by the United Kingdom’s four national teams, at the time, England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. By 1960, when the first European football championship was held, the UK national teams were well established and wanted to play in their national colours. In the Olympics, the UK is represented by team GB and there used to be a GB football team, but since the 1970s, the UK has only sent one men’s team and that was in 2012 when the games were held in London.

Fan favourites at the tournament

One of my favourite Euro stories was of Paul the Psychic Octopus. Paul was a common octopus who lived in Oberhausen in Germany. Paul demonstrated high levels of intelligence and so the staff at the aquarium where he lived tried various ways of testing him. During the Euro 2008 tournament, Paul was presented with food in containers with flags representing the teams that Germany was set to play against and predicted the winner of the matches by selecting the food from the container with the right flag. Paul correctly predicted 4 out of 6 of the outcomes for the German side in 2008 and did even better for the following World Cup. Unfortunately, octopuses don’t live very long so German fans will have to look elsewhere this time for clues about their team’s chances of victory.

When these big international tournaments happen, large groups of fans often drink too much and behave badly at and around the matches. Tales of hooligans have embarrassed the English national side for years. However, in 2012, when the tournament was held in Poland and Ukraine, the Irish fans earned a reputation for being the best fans for their good humour and friendly behaviour. On one occasion, a group of fans fixed a dent in a car and on another, when fans were on a train with a nun, they burst into song and serenaded the nun with a heartfelt rendition of Our Father.

In 2016, fans from Iceland enjoyed special attention because of their signature Viking Thunderclap which was a particularly impressive way of supporting their team. The fans started with a synchronised slow clap and low yells that gradually gets faster and louder until erupting into cheers and applause. Sadly, Iceland have not qualified for this year’s tournament, but there are other Viking nations that may adopt the thunderclap.

The big question

The big question is: who is going to win? Until recently, the English team were the bookmakers’ favourites to win the championship in Germany, but then they lost against Iceland and I’m not sure if they are still the leading contenders. The English squad does have the most valuable players, with a combined value of £1.2 billion pounds. Close behind England, both in terms of the bookmakers odds and the combined value is the French side. France has had more international success than England so that might give them the edge. In third place in terms of value is Portugal and they have the added advantage of Cristiano Ronaldo, the all-time leading goal scorer in European Championship history, who is playing in his sixth tournament. And then there’s Germany who have the home advantage and the opportunity to secure a 4th title and become the most successful UEFA European Football Championship team.

Whatever the score next Friday, the following four weeks of matches will be a summer sporting treat that will see us through till the middle of July and then there will just be a few short weeks till the start of the new Premier League season.

Language challenge

Right, now it’s time for you to think about this language again. I’ve spoken about too much vocabulary today to test it all in this section of the podcast. If you want to check that you have understood it all, visit the page for this podcast on Premier Skills English and you’ll be able to find a series of interactive tasks. For now, I’m going to challenge you to fill in the gaps in the following sentences with six of the items I have described in the podcast. As usual, I have used AI to come up with examples of the words and phrases that I want to challenge you with. I have removed the vocabulary from the story, so I want you to fill in the gaps with the correct forms of the language from the podcast.

Question 1: He visited a ________ to get insights into his future and love life.

Question 2: Her _________ performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very _________ personalities.

Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to _______ the campsite before dark.

Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to __________ his bride on their wedding day.

Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading ____________ in the election.

Leave your answers to this language challenge in the comments section on the Premier Skills English website.

Football phrase

Now it’s time for this week's football phrases.

The regular football phrase this time is ******. The clue this time is: the winning team at the Euro 2024 championship will be inscribed on the back of the Henri Delaunay *****.

The fiendish football phrase comes from a profile of the Scottish midfielder Billy Gilmour. In the profile, Gilmour is described as having been a ***** ******* at Rangers. This phrase is used to describe someone who demonstrates an incredible talent for something at a very young age. It’s not really football English, but quite often, footballers are described in this way as they all start so young.

If you know the answer to the football phrase or the fiendish football phrase, be sure to leave them in a comment on the page for this podcast on Premier Skills English.

Before I finish, I am going to go through the answers to the last language challenge.

Question 1. The movie is about a group of friends who team up to rob a casino.

Question 2. The team’s groundbreaking research in medicine made history and saved countless lives.

Question 3. The lack of sleep over several days left him feeling delirious and disoriented.

Question 4. She told her team to leave it all on the field and have no regrets after the game.

Question 5. His consecutive victories in the tournament made him the top contender.

Question 6. I need to keep an eye on my plants to make sure they get enough water.

And that’s all I have time for today. Before I finish, I just wanted to say that I hope you found this podcast useful, and I hope everyone stays fit and healthy and safe.

Bye for now and enjoy your football.

Part 1

The UEFA European Football Championship 2024 kicks off on Friday

The trophy for the UEFA Euro 2024 European Football Championship in display inside the Allianz Arena

On the 14th of June next Friday at 8 o'clock Scotland and Germany kick off the UEFA European Football Championship which is more commonly known as Euro 2024. 24 national sides will travel to Germany to compete in the second largest international football competition, after the World Cup.

The first European Football Championship was held in France in 1960 and the championship has been held every four years, in between the World Cups, ever since. The first competition was won by the Soviet Union. Since then, the most successful teams have been the Spanish and German sides. The Spanish team first won in 1964 and then had back to back wins in 2008 and 2012. The German side first won in 1972 and 1980, though back then they were West Germany. They won again in 1996. France has won the competition twice, as has Italy who are the current champions. England has never won the European Football Championship, though did make the final last time.

In the early years of the tournament, only 4 teams took part. There were lots of qualification matches, in 1964,  29 teams took part in the qualification rounds, but only four teams played in the finals matches. In 1980, this increased to 8 and then in 1996, 16 teams competed; this number increased again in 2016 and now, 24 teams take place, playing 51 matches. In Germany, the teams are divided into 6 groups of 4. The winners and second place of each group and the four best third places will progress to the knockout stages, starting with a round of 16, and then the quarter finals, semifinals and ultimately the final to decide the winner.

The Euros have been hosted across Europe; starting in France, and then four years later, the tournament was held in Spain, then Italy, Belgium, then Yugoslavia and so on. In 2000, the hosting duties were shared by Belgium and the Netherlands and have been shared by Austria and Switzerland and Poland and Ukraine. The 2020 UEFA European Football Championship celebrated the tournament’s 60th year and to mark the occasion, the competition was held in 11 countries across Europe. This summer, all the action will happen in Germany and matches will be played in 10 cities around the country.

The vocabulary from this part of the story that I’m going to talk about is:

  • Back-to-back wins
  • To make the final
  • Knockout stages
  • Hosting duties

Back-to-back wins

The phrase back to back means consecutive, or in a row, without a break. I think you can use the phrase for more than two events in a row, but it’s most commonly used to talk about two events. In the story, I said that the Spanish team had back-to-back wins. They won in 2008 and then again at the next tournament in 2012. There was no other winner between their wins so they won back to back tournaments. I looked up the phrase to see if the origins were interesting, but there’s no clear etymology. The only other use of the phrase that I know of is the phrase back to back houses. These are houses, normally small houses for poor people, that are built so that they share a back wall, so there is no gap between the houses. Back-to-back houses are quite famous in some cities, and there is even a kind of museum with a restored street of back-to-back houses in Birmingham. So, this might be where the phrase comes from,

To make the final

The verb make has lots of uses. In this case, to make it somewhere means to arrive somewhere or at something successfully. You can also say make it to somewhere.
So you might hear someone say: do you think they will make the final? Meaning, do you think the team will progress all the way to the final. England has only made it to the final once. I thinbk we usually use the phrase “make it to” when we’re travelling. What time will you make it to the office tomorrow? If the traffic isn’t too bad, I should make it there by five.

Knockout stages

The knockout stages of a football competition are when if a team loses, they are out of the competition. So in the Euros, there is the group stage, where each team plays three matches and then if they progress through to the knockout stages, they start in the round of 16. In this round, there are 8 matches. The winners make it through to the quarter finals and the losers are knocked out, they are out of the competition completely.

Hosting duties

Normally, if a team is playing in their home stadium, they are the hosts. The noun host describes the person that provides the location and whatever else is required for an event. On the smallest scale, you might be a host if you invite a friend to stay at your house. In football English, the home side are the hosts and the visiting side are guests. In an international tournament, it’s a bit more complicated because whole country is the host country and the host country will need to organise matches and transport and all the other facilities that are required for a major tournament. I described these as the hosting duties. The noun duty describes something that you have to do, that you have an obligation to do. Sometimes, you have a legal duty to do something, if you don’t do it, it’s against the law. Sometimes you have a contractual duty, so you have signed a contract and might get sued if you don’t do it. Most commonly, I think, duties are moral and it would be considered wrong if you don’t do your duty.

Part 2

Welcome to Germany

The Allianz stadium in Munich ahead of the football UEFA Euro 2024

The opening match will see the hosts take on Scotland. The Tartan Army have been made to feel welcome in Bavaria. There’s a lovely video online of Aston Villa’s John McGinn joining in some athletic folk dancing. For added drama, when Germany and Scotland face off in the opening match at the Allianz Arena in Munich, the Brighton and Hove Albion midfielder Pascal Groß will be taking on his teammate Billy Gilmore.

A question I have been asked a few times by students in my English classes is why there isn’t a UK national team. The main reason for this is the long history of the national teams in the UK and that the four nations that make up the UK have distinct national identities. The first international football tournament was the British Home Championship that was started in 1883 and contested by the United Kingdom’s four national teams, at the time, England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. By 1960, when the first European football championship was held, the UK national teams were well established and wanted to play in their national colours. In the Olympics, the UK is represented by team GB and there used to be a GB football team, but since the 1970s, the UK has only sent one men’s team and that was in 2012 when the games were held in London.

Athletic

The adjective athletic refers to athletes. The word athlete derives from a Greek word that means someone who competes in a competition, but today, it’s used to describe someone who competes in a physical competition and is physically fit and strong. You might describe a person as athletic, if they have a good physique and are slim and have visible muscles. Footballers are athletes. All professional sports people are athletes. In the story, I said that John McGinn joined in some athletic folk dancing. I was being a bit silly, because normally, you wouldn’t describe folk dancing as athletic, but some of the moves that the other dancers were performing were quite athletic, in that they demonstrated physical strength and training.

Drama

The noun drama usually refers to a type of TV programme or film that is about the real problems that people face. However, the noun can also be used to talk about the excitement and worries and strong emotions that are felt about and during an event or situation. Often, when people get together, perhaps for a party, or a holiday celebration like Christmas, they start arguing and fighting. If this happens, these people are causing drama. Some people seem to generate a lot of drama wherever they go. At the opening match in Germany, Pascal Groß will be taking on his teammate Billy Gilmore. I don’t know how well Billy and Pascal get on, but they are both midfielders and I like to think that Billy looks up to the more experienced Pascal. So when they are on opposite sides, there will be a bit more feeling about the encounter; there will be added drama.

Distinct

If something is distinct, it is clearly different and not part of the things around it. This adjective is related to the verb to distinguish which means to be able to notice the difference between two or more things. The things that a person can distinguish, that they can tell the difference between are distinct. We also use the adjective distinctive which means that something is different from everything else. So when I was at school I had a friend who had a really distinctive laugh. Even when the whole school got together for assembly, you would always know where he was because nobody laughed like him.
In the story, I said that the four nations that make up the UK have distinct national identities. People in England feel English and identify as English and people in Scotland identify as Scottish and the same is true for Wales and Northern Ireland.

National colours

A team’s national colours refers to the colours that are part of the country’s national symbols. For some countries, the national colours are a strong part of their national symbols. I live in Scotland now and the Scottish flag which is called the Saltire is white and blue. You can see these colours all over the place especially in the summer when there are international sporting events. There is actually a wikipedia page that lists the national colours of lots of different countries. Interestingly, they don’t include the nations that make up the UK and only have colours for Great Britain.
When someone is said to be wearing their national colours, it normally refers to the uniform they wear when they are representing their country. It means they are playing for their national team, they are wearing the team uniform of their national team.

Part 3

Fan favourites at the tournament

An octopus named Paul opens a box with decorated with a Spanish flag and a shell inside

One of my favourite Euro stories was of Paul the Psychic Octopus. Paul was a common octopus who lived in Oberhausen in Germany. Paul demonstrated high levels of intelligence and so the staff at the aquarium where he lived tried various ways of testing him. During the Euro 2008 tournament, Paul was presented with food in containers with flags representing the teams that Germany was set to play against and predicted the winner of the matches by selecting the food from the container with the right flag. Paul correctly predicted 4 out of 6 of the outcomes for the German side in 2008 and did even better for the following World Cup. Unfortunately, octopuses don’t live very long so German fans will have to look elsewhere this time for clues about their team’s chances of victory.

When these big international tournaments happen, large groups of fans often drink too much and behave badly at and around the matches. Tales of hooligans have embarrassed the English national side for years. However, in 2012, when the tournament was held in Poland and Ukraine, the Irish fans earned a reputation for being the best fans for their good humour and friendly behaviour. On one occasion, a group of fans fixed a dent in a car and on another, when fans were on a train with a nun, they burst into song and serenaded the nun with a heartfelt rendition of Our Father.

In 2016, fans from Iceland enjoyed special attention because of their signature Viking Thunderclap which was a particularly impressive way of supporting their team. The fans started with a synchronised slow clap and low yells that gradually gets faster and louder until erupting into cheers and applause. Sadly, Iceland have not qualified for this year’s tournament, but there are other Viking nations that may adopt the thunderclap.

Psychic

The adjective psychic describes someone who has a special ability that enables them to know things that are beyond the range of normal experience. So a psychic might be able to know what another person is thinking or in the case of Paul the Octopus, might know what is going to happen in the future, before it has happened. Personally, I am very sceptical about anyone claiming to have psychic powers that has not already won the lottery or been banned from every casino in Las Vegas.

Hooligan

The noun hooligan describes a violent person that attacks people physically and starts fights or vandalises things and causes damage in public places. There are several different explanations for the origin of this noun. The one I like best is that there was a man called Patrick Hooligan who worked as a very badly behaved security guard. In 1899, a writer called Clarence Rook wrote about Patrick Hooligan’s life claiming that it was that one man who gave the word its meaning. For a long time, the word just meant a young rowdy person who would get up to trouble, breaking things and starting fights, but in the 1970s, the word began to be associated with violence in sports. Football clubs used to have unofficial supporters clubs that would follow their team just to start fights with rival fans. This was reported as football hooliganism and was a real problem for football in the UK. There are still problems between groups of supporters, but the clubs have worked really hard to make match day a fun and safe experience for everyone and have a zero tolerance policy for any violent or threatening behaviour.

To serenade

The verb to serenade means to sing or play an instrument to someone, usually as a romantic gesture. I'm not sure if it would still be considered acceptable, but in the past, people would visit the person they were in love with and stand under their window at night to sing or play music for them. These days, we use the verb in a slightly silly way to say that someone sang to someone else. So in the story, I spoke about the Irish fans that sang Our Father to a nun on a train. This wasn't a romantic gesture, but you can still use the verb to serenade to describe this sort of dramatic act. When I was first teaching English, I used to take my guitar into class all the time and I would serenade my students with pop songs they liked to help them learn English. I’m not sure it was a very effective teaching technique.

Synchronised

The adjective synchronised means at the same time. There's a sport called synchronised swimming that involves a team of dancing swimmers who perform moves that are tightly choreographed so that all of the swimmers do things at exactly the same time. We also use the phrase in sync to say that a team is working well together. If people are in sync with each other, they don’t necessarily do things at the same time, but they work efficiently so that when one person finishes their role, the person that takes over from them is ready to go, there's no waiting around.

Part 4

The big question

Lewis Dunk and Ivan Toney of England look on upon arrival ahead of the UEFA EURO 2024 Germany at Erfurt airport

The big question is: who is going to win? Until recently, the English team were the bookmakers’ favourites to win the championship in Germany, but then they lost against Iceland and I’m not sure if they are still the leading contenders. The English squad does have the most valuable players, with a combined value of £1.2 billion pounds. Close behind England, both in terms of the bookmakers odds and the combined value is the French side. France has had more international success than England so that might give them the edge. In third place in terms of value is Portugal and they have the added advantage of Cristiano Ronaldo, the all-time leading goal scorer in European Championship history, who is playing in his sixth tournament. And then there’s Germany who have the home advantage and the opportunity to secure a 4th title and become the most successful UEFA European Football Championship team.

Whatever the score next Friday, the following four weeks of matches will be a summer sporting treat that will see us through till the middle of July and then there will just be a few short weeks till the start of the new Premier League season.

Bookmakers’ favourite

This is something that has come up a few times. A bookmaker is a person who runs a betting business. They offer odds on events happening. This means, they offer deals that say if you give them £10, they will give you back £30, for example if something happens. So I’ve just looked at a bookmakers website to see what the odds are for different teams to win Euro 2024. They are offering odds of 5/1 for Germany to win, which means if you bet £10, they would pay you back £60, that’s five times your original bet plus your stake, or the money you originally paid. The longest odds are for Georgia, Albania and Slovakia. They are offering 500/1. The shortest odds are 7/2 and that’s for England to win so the bookmaker thinks that England are going to win. The phrase bookmakers’ favourite means the result, the team or horse or whatever else you might place a bet on that the bookmaker thinks is going to win and so offers the shortest odds on.

Contender

A contender is someone who is competing in a competition. We talk about strong contenders when we want to talk about competitors that we think have a good chance of winning. If you don’t think that someone has a chance of winning, you could say that you don’t think they are a serious contender. There is a famous scene from an old film called On the Waterfront about a boxer who threw away his chance of becoming a champion because his brother wanted to make money betting against him. When the boxer looks back at his career and realises that he wasted his chance, he tells his brother: You don't understand. I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender.

Vocabulary

Language challenge

Now it’s time for you to think about this language again. I have used AI to come up with examples of today’s words and phrases. I have removed the vocabulary from the stories so I want you to fill in the gaps with the correct forms of the language from the podcast.

Question 1: He visited a ________ to get insights into his future and love life.

Question 2: Her _________ performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very _________ personalities.

Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to _______ the campsite before dark.

Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to __________ his bride on their wedding day.

Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading ____________ in the election.

Leave your answers to this language challenge in the comments section at the bottom of the page

Football phrase

Football phrase

Now it’s time for this week's football phrase.

The regular football phrase this time is ******. The clue this time is: the winning team at the Euro 2024 championship will be inscribed on the back of the Henri Delaunay *****.

The fiendish football phrase comes from a profile of the Scottish midfielder Billy Gilmour. In the profile, Gilmour is described as having been a ***** ******* at Rangers. This phrase is used to describe someone who demonstrates an incredible talent for something at a very young age. It’s not really football English, but quite often, footballers are described in this way as they all start so young.

If you know the answer, be sure to leave it in a comment at the bottom of this page.

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Comments

Ryohei
18/06/2024
JP
39
points

Hi, Jack. The regular football phrase is ****** and the fiendish phrase is a young *******.


Ryohei
18/06/2024 16:02
Japan
Brighton and Hove Albion
39

Hi, Jack. The regular football phrase is ****** and the fiendish phrase is a young *******.

Lukáš
18/06/2024
CZ
32
points

Hi, in my opinion RFP is a ****** and FFP is young promise


Lukáš
18/06/2024 09:57
Czech Republic
Liverpool
32

Hi, in my opinion RFP is a ****** and FFP is young promise

kwesimanifest's picture
kwesimanifest
17/06/2024
GH
4779
points

This week's football phrase is ******


kwesimanifest's picture
kwesimanifest
17/06/2024 21:04
Ghana
Manchester United
4779

This week's football phrase is ******

hsn's picture
hsn
17/06/2024
TR
5560
points

Second gueass for FFP; Young ******.


hsn's picture
hsn
17/06/2024 13:55
Turkey
Tottenham Hotspur
5560

Second gueass for FFP; Young ******.

Hermosillo Moreno
15/06/2024
MX
74
points

Hi Jack. How´s going?
The fiendish football phrase: a *******

the regular phrase this time is Henri delaunay cup, ******


Hermosillo Moreno
15/06/2024 00:26
Mexico
Chelsea
74

Hi Jack. How´s going?
The fiendish football phrase: a *******

the regular phrase this time is Henri delaunay cup, ******

Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
14/06/2024
UA
6578
points

Btw, this Euro's mascot is smiling Bear Albert.


Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
14/06/2024 18:53
Ukraine
Liverpool
6578

Btw, this Euro's mascot is smiling Bear Albert.

hsn's picture
hsn
14/06/2024
TR
5560
points

Language challenge
1: He visited a Psychic to get insights into his future and love life.
2: Her Athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.
3: Despite being twins, they have very Distinct personalities.
4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the final the campsite before dark.
5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.
6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading Contender in the election.
Football phrases: Fiendish: Billy Balboa.-Regular: ******
Notes
• Happy Eid-al-Adha:-) I hope and wish it brings peace,wellness and happiness all over the world:-)
• I think the final match in Euro 2024 will be played between France and Germany.
• Lots of modern stadium have been constructed in Türkiye (≠Not Turkey).It was confirmed that my country will host Euro 2032 tournament for the first time with Italy.
• "Being fired" or "To go bunkrupt" is a knock out stage in the business life :-)
• Nobody knows future events, what psychics are correctly predicted is just a coincedence.They knows it by chance.
• Viking Thunderclap performance is good but not better than NewZeland haka:-)


hsn's picture
hsn
14/06/2024 18:18
Turkey
Tottenham Hotspur
5560

Language challenge
1: He visited a Psychic to get insights into his future and love life.
2: Her Athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.
3: Despite being twins, they have very Distinct personalities.
4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the final the campsite before dark.
5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.
6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading Contender in the election.
Football phrases: Fiendish: Billy Balboa.-Regular: ******
Notes
• Happy Eid-al-Adha:-) I hope and wish it brings peace,wellness and happiness all over the world:-)
• I think the final match in Euro 2024 will be played between France and Germany.
• Lots of modern stadium have been constructed in Türkiye (≠Not Turkey).It was confirmed that my country will host Euro 2032 tournament for the first time with Italy.
• "Being fired" or "To go bunkrupt" is a knock out stage in the business life :-)
• Nobody knows future events, what psychics are correctly predicted is just a coincedence.They knows it by chance.
• Viking Thunderclap performance is good but not better than NewZeland haka:-)

Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
14/06/2024
UA
6578
points

I will root for Ukraine, Italy and England, although, in my humble opinion, France, Spain, Italy or Croatia will be the European Champion.


Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
14/06/2024 10:39
Ukraine
Liverpool
6578

I will root for Ukraine, Italy and England, although, in my humble opinion, France, Spain, Italy or Croatia will be the European Champion.

leofabiano's picture
leofabiano
13/06/2024
BR
24
points

Hello Jack!

Here are my answers for the Language Challenge.

Question 1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.
Question 2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.
Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.
Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the campsite before dark.
Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.
Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.

The regular football phrase is ******.
My guess for the fiendish football phrase is young *******


leofabiano's picture
leofabiano
13/06/2024 16:48
Brazil
Tottenham Hotspur
24

Hello Jack!

Here are my answers for the Language Challenge.

Question 1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.
Question 2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.
Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.
Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the campsite before dark.
Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.
Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.

The regular football phrase is ******.
My guess for the fiendish football phrase is young *******

Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
13/06/2024
UA
6578
points

***** ****** is the FFP.


Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
13/06/2024 15:05
Ukraine
Liverpool
6578

***** ****** is the FFP.

Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
13/06/2024
UA
6578
points

****** is the FP.


Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
13/06/2024 14:59
Ukraine
Liverpool
6578

****** is the FP.

Denis2000's picture
Denis2000
13/06/2024
BY
714
points

Hello Jack. The regular football phrase is ******.
The fiendish football phrase i think is ***** *******.

Language challenge
Question 1: He visited a psychik to get insights into his future and love life.

Question 2: Her drama performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.

Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the campsite before dark.

Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.

Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.


Denis2000's picture
Denis2000
13/06/2024 13:03
Belarus
Tottenham Hotspur
714

Hello Jack. The regular football phrase is ******.
The fiendish football phrase i think is ***** *******.

Language challenge
Question 1: He visited a psychik to get insights into his future and love life.

Question 2: Her drama performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.

Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the campsite before dark.

Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.

Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.

Liubomyr's picture
Liubomyr
12/06/2024
UA
4417
points

I think that the regular football phrase ****** and the fiendish phrase is driving influence.


Liubomyr's picture
Liubomyr
12/06/2024 14:56
Ukraine
Watford
4417

I think that the regular football phrase ****** and the fiendish phrase is driving influence.

Jack Radford's picture
Jack Radford
12/06/2024
GB
22
points

Hi Liubomyr! Long time no see.

I hope you are well.

Jack

p.s. good try on the fiendish football phrase, but that's not what I am looking for


Jack Radford's picture
Jack Radford
12/06/2024 19:07
United Kingdom
Arsenal
22

Hi Liubomyr! Long time no see.

I hope you are well.

Jack

p.s. good try on the fiendish football phrase, but that's not what I am looking for

Liubomyr's picture
Liubomyr
13/06/2024
UA
4417
points

Yeah, there were tough years since my last visit here.

my second attempt on the on the fiendish football phrase is ***** *******


Liubomyr's picture
Liubomyr
13/06/2024 11:31
Ukraine
Watford
4417

Yeah, there were tough years since my last visit here.

my second attempt on the on the fiendish football phrase is ***** *******

Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
13/06/2024
UA
6578
points

Hi Liubomyr, glad to see you alive&kicking, keep picking up points for Ukraine!


Alex_from_Ukraine's picture
Alex_from_Ukraine
13/06/2024 14:57
Ukraine
Liverpool
6578

Hi Liubomyr, glad to see you alive&kicking, keep picking up points for Ukraine!

Jack Radford's picture
Jack Radford
13/06/2024
GB
22
points

I'm so sad to hear that. 

I don't think that there's anything I can say. Just that it's really good to see you back here. 

 

 


Jack Radford's picture
Jack Radford
13/06/2024 14:20
United Kingdom
Arsenal
22

I'm so sad to hear that. 

I don't think that there's anything I can say. Just that it's really good to see you back here. 

 

 

Liubomyr's picture
Liubomyr
14/06/2024
UA
4417
points

Alex and Jack, thank you for your kind words.
Alex, I hope you and your family are safe.


Liubomyr's picture
Liubomyr
14/06/2024 17:37
Ukraine
Watford
4417

Alex and Jack, thank you for your kind words.
Alex, I hope you and your family are safe.

Djanjop90
12/06/2024
CO
3
points

Question 1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.

Question 2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.

Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make it the campsite before dark.

Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.

Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading bookmarker in the election.

The fiendish football phrase is revelation player.


Djanjop90
12/06/2024 06:52
Colombia
West Ham United
3

Question 1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.

Question 2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.

Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make it the campsite before dark.

Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.

Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading bookmarker in the election.

The fiendish football phrase is revelation player.

Djanjop90
12/06/2024
CO
3
points

I'm so sorry Jack,

I forgot to say Hello.

I really love your podcast mate.


Djanjop90
12/06/2024 20:53
Colombia
West Ham United
3

I'm so sorry Jack,

I forgot to say Hello.

I really love your podcast mate.

Jack Radford's picture
Jack Radford
13/06/2024
GB
22
points

Hi Djanjop90

Nice to meet you. Thanks for commenting - it's really lovely to hear that people appreciate the podcast.

Thanks again

Jack


Jack Radford's picture
Jack Radford
13/06/2024 09:39
United Kingdom
Arsenal
22

Hi Djanjop90

Nice to meet you. Thanks for commenting - it's really lovely to hear that people appreciate the podcast.

Thanks again

Jack

gapa
12/06/2024
KR
12
points

Hi, Jack!
I've been waiting for your new article!
The longer the article, the better!
more long, more helpful to learning English!
I think the champion of Euro 2024 would be France. Because nobody is stoppable Mbappe!
Thanks for good article)

[Language Challenge]
Question 1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.
Question 2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.
Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.
Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the final campsite before dark.
Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.
Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.

[Football Phrases]
regular: ******
fiendish: ***** *******


gapa
12/06/2024 06:38
South Korea
Liverpool
12

Hi, Jack!
I've been waiting for your new article!
The longer the article, the better!
more long, more helpful to learning English!
I think the champion of Euro 2024 would be France. Because nobody is stoppable Mbappe!
Thanks for good article)

[Language Challenge]
Question 1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.
Question 2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.
Question 3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.
Question 4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the final campsite before dark.
Question 5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.
Question 6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.

[Football Phrases]
regular: ******
fiendish: ***** *******

andretorre102
12/06/2024
BR
223
points

Hello Jack,

This episode was fascinating. We learned about the history of the championship, the first game between Germany and Scotland (I wonder if I am the only one who noticed that you are rooting for Scotland), curiosities about hooligans and well-behaved fans... Even Paul the Octopus was mentioned! By the way, what will be the next psychic animal?"

Here are my answers to the Language Challenge:

1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.

2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.

4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the campsite before dark.

5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.

6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.

Regular Football Phrase: "*****";

Fiendish Football Phrase: I guess it's "***** *******" (There is the same expression with a literal translation to Portuguese and it is often used in Brazilian football context).


andretorre102
12/06/2024 04:13
Brazil
Nottingham Forest
223

Hello Jack,

This episode was fascinating. We learned about the history of the championship, the first game between Germany and Scotland (I wonder if I am the only one who noticed that you are rooting for Scotland), curiosities about hooligans and well-behaved fans... Even Paul the Octopus was mentioned! By the way, what will be the next psychic animal?"

Here are my answers to the Language Challenge:

1: He visited a psychic to get insights into his future and love life.

2: Her athletic performance in the last game was nothing short of spectacular.

3: Despite being twins, they have very distinct personalities.

4: The hikers set off at a fast pace to make the campsite before dark.

5: The young man hired a violinist to serenade his bride on their wedding day.

6: Despite the tough competition, she remains a leading contender in the election.

Regular Football Phrase: "*****";

Fiendish Football Phrase: I guess it's "***** *******" (There is the same expression with a literal translation to Portuguese and it is often used in Brazilian football context).

Leaderboard

Top Scorers
RankNameScore
1Alex_from_Ukraine6578
2mobeckham6539
3hsn5560
4wsanta5086
5kwesimanifest4779
6Liubomyr4417
7elghoul3988
8assemjuve3705
9aragorn19863557
10Gergő Nagy3396
Country ranking
RankNameScore
1Colombia74679
2Ukraine33892
3Spain29525
4Serbia27426
5Brazil23661
6Albania20578
7Vietnam20460
8Turkey20111
9Macedonia19074
10Bosnia and Herzegovina16333
Club ranking
RankNameScore
1Manchester United147000
2Liverpool111527
3Chelsea90265
4Arsenal86299
5Manchester City58968
6Tottenham Hotspur19506
7Newcastle United10626
8West Ham United7701
9AFC Bournemouth4915
10Crystal Palace4568

Level

5
Average: 5 (1 vote)

Goals

  • Improve your vocabulary
  • Develop your listening skills