@@willrichardson519 Your sister is your mother, your father is your brother, you all fuck one another a kiddy family, duu duu duu clap clap duu duu duu clap clap duu duu duu duu duu duu clap clap
I work security at some very well known English stadiums, and I can say the spontaneous creativity amongst the fans when the chanting starts is absolutely incredible.
Unreal how they all know what to say, what to repeat, when to pause. We want our dick back back is in my top 10. These are relatively weak. The Jimmy Saville chants are brutal and VERY well deserved.
@@myflymkultra268 normally its just 1 bloke with a big mouth , you try it & see what happens , if they join in = they like it .takes guts .Its like Ringo Pitching a song to the beatles
6:56 For those who don’t know, The Toure brothers Yaya & Kolo were two very successful players in their own rights who both ended up playing at Manchester City at the same time. And this led to the birth of city fans most popular chant 💙
3:45 & 6:30 - the melody is from "La Donna È Mobile" by Italian composer Guiseppe Verdi. (It premiered in 1851 in Venice, Italy) 6:50 - 2 Unlimited - No Limit (released January, 1993)
england (much like germany, brazil, france, etc.) is the football capital of the world so chanting, singing along or crowd participation of any kind is in our blood- we are practically born knowing the words to at least one football chant lol
@@DAVID-ut7fg Football became a professional sport in England in the mid 1800s, it has the oldest domestic competition out of any sport worldwide in the FA Cup. We had the 1st league in 1880s and the Premier League is the most watch league in the world. There are over 900 clubs in England where 92 are professional across 4 leagues (rest are minor leagues with no FA funding but can be promoted to the professional leagues). The Play off game for the championship (to see who get promoted to the Premier League from the Championship, in a knock out of the 2nd to 6th final positions, as 1st 2 go up automatically) is the highest domestic price (monetary) in the world for the winning Team. Football capital is England.
As a Scottish schoolboy, England came to Hampden after they had won the world cup. Bobby Moore had been accused of stealing a bracelet from a jewelers. Spontaneously, the Scots sang: " Where's your bracelet, where's your bracelet Bobby Moore, it's in your handbag it's in your handbag, it's in your handbag Booby Moore. You're a p**fter you're a p**fter, you're a p**fter Bobby Moore." I had never heard the song until the moment it was sung.
Two of my favourite football chants of the past were- Many years ago Swindon played Everton at a time when the former were adrift at the bottom of the Prem and the latter themselves in relegation trouble. The Everton fans tried to taunt their rivals by singing to them "Going down, going, down, going down" and Swindon wonderfully came back at them with "So are we, so are we, so are we". I'm a Man City fan, in recent years we've been as good as virtually anyone on the planet but for too many years previously we were frankly shite. During an away match against Sheff Utd our hosts started a chant of "We hate Wednesday" due to that city's other team being Sheff Wednesday. As back then nearly all matches were played on Saturdays, we came back with "We hate Saturday". Gallows humour at its finest.
We blues have the funniest self deprecating songs and gallows humour on the planet, we earned it too. The anti scouse songbook is my favourite though. "Steve Gerrard Gerrard, He slips on his f***ing arse, He gave it to Demba Ba, Steve Gerrard Gerrard."
I'm a boro fan and I remember beating yous in the cup a few years back and chanting "you're just a shit man united" then 2 seasons ago at old trafford we were chanting "you're just a shit man city". How times change eh. Also one of my favourites was at turf moor last season when we went 1-0 up and started singing "top of the league you're having a laugh" Burnley went 2-1 up and responded "top of the league we're having a laugh"😂😂
@@Lukas-ht9xm football and rugby existed as different variations of the same game. But in 1863, the Football Association was formed to codify the rules of football so that aristocratic boys from different schools could play against one another. In 1871, the Rugby Football Union followed suit. The two sports officially became known as Rugby Football and Association Football. It was Oxford and Cambridge Uni's that changed the name's. Yes, I know
I grew up in America but live in England now. Nothing cpmes close to a European football match for atmosphere and chanting. Its such a buzz. Definitely recommend going to one if you get the chance. There are loads more funny chants than these as well.
In primary school we were made to do school assemblies & everyone had to sing in unison. We had songs in the rounds & other vocal methods. We are a country full of sarcastic people & will take the (P) out of anyone. No-one is exempt. No-one is safe! No-one!
The singing is part of the culture, there's a limited amount of tunes so it makes it easy for us to come up with a chant on the spot. The Yaya/Kolo Toure song is still sung by City fans years after they retired, it's a respect thing and it's fun but it's recently being changed to Alfie/Erling Haaland, his dad (Alfie) played for us too. Because of our dire past we are known for our self mockery, here's one of the chants from the dark days but we still sing it. "We never win at home/And we never win away/We lost last week/And we lost today/We don't give a f#*k /'Cause we're all pissed up/MCFC OK." Pissed up is slang for drunk. They can be brutal though. In the 80's a opponents wife was exposed by tabloids as having an affair, the moment that goalie took to the pitch the entire crowd sang 'Shilton Shilton where's your wife, Shilton, where's your wife?" This was our Wayne Rooney song after he was caught with a GILF "He's fat, he's round/He rolls along the ground/Wayne Rooney/He's fat, he's red/He'll take your gran to bed/Wayne Rooney." The very first song I remember learning was in the mid 70's and it was sweet poetry... "If I had the wings of a sparrow/If I had the arse (ass) of a cow/I'd fly over Old Trafford tomorrow/And shit on the bastards below."
It's the arse of a crow, as cow doesn't rhyme with below. " where's your father ? Where's your father? Where's your father, referee ? You ain't got one, you're a bastard You're a bustard referee.
As a Birmingham fan I remember some of our great food chants from the 80s like I'd rather be a sausage than an egg -sizzle sozzle, sizzle sozzle. All I want for tea is some soya sauce and chicken chop suey Rather have a Lita than a pint You're shish and you know you are O when the beans, O when the beans, Come out the tin, Come out the tin, O when the beans come out the tin, You put the bread in the toaster, When the beans come out the tin Stand up if you hate cabbage Ever had a tin Ever had a tin Ever had a tin of salmon Ever had a tin of salmon spread Here comes your mother with a loaf of bread Salmon, oh salmon Get it in a small tin Get it in a big tin Get it from Tesco's, alright!
Or, alternatively, Q: "Where's Your Father, Where's Your Father, Where's Your Father, Referee?" A: " You ain't got one, you're a xxxxxrd, you're a xxxxxrd, Referee..." I first heard that at Millwall in 1963...so 60 years ago...lol
In primary school, we had to sing every morning like a school choir - hence the unison.. at least all of us have been primary school so we have this skill 😂😂😂
Nobody on the planet dose spontaneous humour, wit , sarcasm or out right pisstaking like the brits ...fellas if you ever get the chance to go to an English or England game go ..i promise you its an experience you will never forget ...🏴
The key to it is they take songs which were super popular or famous and just change the word, so you only need to hear the new words and you can repeat easily. It's like changing the words to Happy Birthday, everyone already knows it.
Swindon my home town, my husband was raised on rugby took him to a night game, not for the game but for the atmosphere….he loved every minute… just as I enjoy watching you guys, Kia kaha from NZ…
If you want to see a support, fans singing the whole game, even if we're not winning, then check out Scottish team Celtic! Teams from all over the world have said they haven't seen fan support like it! When we played Barcelona many years ago, in an interview, Messi said he was amazed at the level of support for a team and never seen support like it, where the singing never stops even when we aren't winning. We even clapped their players off! Atmosphere is electric regardless of what team we play. We can easily drown out 10s thousands of the opposition fans with 1-2000 of us!
You've shit fans. I was going to Parkhead in 90s and it was like a wake. And you go 2 down to a wee team and you all depart. I'm Aberdeen but best fans are Hibs. Was at 1985 league Cup final. Won 3 v 0 but they stayed and sang throughout. Old firm shit fans. They never have bad times. So exist in a state of constant arrogance
Some random guy shown on the "jumbotron massive screen" just enjoying a mid game snack turns into a god 5 minutes of song(if you watch the full version)
Aww man, that last video at Bradford! He's eating a meat pie! We have brown sauce and red sauce in the UK and he get's given a packet of brown sauce...so good but very specific to us
I’m a Spurs fan and singing “Gimme Gimme Gimme a Ginger from Sweden” to the tune of ABBA’s Man before Midnight for our wonderful Swede Kulusevski is the best
You have to experience it live, it really is a trip. 6:57 they are Manchester City fans cheering 2 Ivorian Coast Manchester City players Yaya Toure and Kolo Toure.
Coming from a brit who until recently got into the nfl our football and fans are sooooo much different, i can say i havnt gone to see a live footie match in years because fights always break out
The meanest nasty chant was hearing a 1970s Liverpool fans singing “you’re going home in an ambulance” when an opposition player was carried off the field badly injured sung to a 70s pop chart hit song!
@@Leotv19 Is that the only insult people have for the British? There's not really much else to criticize about us really, we've always been the best at most things so pettiness is all you have. Oh, my teeth are immaculate 😁
In football (proper football⚽️) we're tribal. Chants go against players, the ref, managers, opposition fans, people being thrown out, oddballs..... nobody is safe.
One of the silliest songs I can remember was Afroman "cause I got high". It was dope when it came out early 00's. Maybe y'all could at least get a laugh. Love the content
The Black Lives Matter movement booed in English football stadiums. Supporters of two lower division clubs protested against the players' kneeling, which became systematic before each match, across the Channel. Incidents condemned by many, but praised by others, who refuse obedience to what they consider a political organization. In the English forums, however, the issue of racism is still very topical. According to a study published in the International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics and relayed by The Guardian, minority supporters remain relatively under-represented among supporters. Many of them say they have the same fears as decades ago when they went to the stadiums, despite the work of anti-racist football associations.
Pele & Georgie Best were 2 of the first famous footballers to play in the U.S. back in the `70`s. They were trying to kick-start the popularity of the game in your country. Pele signed for a club called the New York Cosmos in the NASL G. Best started with the Los Angeles Aztecs.
That's because you already know it. For these boys in the video, they don't. So when they see a video claiming "top 10 English football chants" they're going to assume it's the best. I've heard Sunday league chants better than those in this video, so I know too, but we have to cut the Americans some slack. They'll find better chants when or if they want to seek them out.
They might not have had any choice but to take the train. That location is the London Underground - and they're often herded there as a way of dispersing big groups of fans into smaller, more manageable clusters if the police feel like they're a little... emotionally charged... one way or the other. The idea is to shrink them down so that the police can get a handle on any trouble before it becomes a riot.
A little bit of background about the big toy on the ground. Sunderland's (the team in red and white stripes) manager at the time was the Dutchman Dick Advocaat, aka Big Dick. The toy was brought in as chant towards their manager.
It's changing a little bit but the overwhelming majority of top European and South American stars only sign for the MLS at the end of their careers, when They're well past their best. Players like Ronaldo and Messi wouldn't even had considered the MLS, when they were in the prime. The biggest and most prestigious football (soccer) leagues are all in Europe. The Premier League in England is the most watched and most lucrative sports league in the World!
If you like the last clip please please review '' John Sitton '' best ever football manager To loose the plot ..loose the plot- english term for going wild '' going mental in dressing room .. He sacks playing at half time .. gives them the walking paper and offers to fight the team ahaha So funny
He’s eating a pie…. All I can say is they say men never grow up but I know for sure is in Britain You’re a lad for life lol. He’s got some he’s got brown 😂 Imagine the atmosphere where you’re happy to cheer a bloke with a pie lol
My apologies about the "sleepin'" comment below. Glad to hear about 3 minutes into this that a couple of you are not sleepin' on the WC. Didn't know where to place my comment below and so came to your most recent soccer vid which I hadn't gotten around to yet