It might be coming home

By Andrew / Roar Guru

An Australian supporting England in most sporting endeavours is akin to high treason – an act so reprehensible, deplorable and unconscionable that the revoking of citizenships and forced registration on a public list would be fully justified.

The position of being Australian would be untenable.

There is, however, one English sporting team which I will never be able to muster the same loathing and animosity towards, unlike their detestable cricket and rugby teams.

That is the England football team, one of the most entertaining, amusing and dramatic teams to have bestrode the worldwide sporting landscape.

Where to start? 1966, The Hand of God, Gazza’s Tears, failing to qualify for tournaments, Beckham and Rooney’s red cards, Ronaldinho’s shot-cross, the Frank Lampard and Steven Gerrard conundrum, endless goalkeeping howlers, out of control egos and cliques, managers turning in to comedy figures by the end of their reins, and of course penalties – the torture of losing six penalty shoot-outs in seven attempts.

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The 2002 World Cup was the first football tournament I properly sunk my teeth in to, after becoming a football fanatic throughout 2001, and I was more than prepared to watch 64 games of football in a month due to the favourable timezone for Australia.

With the Socceroos falling at the final qualification hurdle once more, I had to pick a team.

Picking England seemed a no-brainer to me, a self-confessed, fully fledged Anglophile who has soaked up and revelled in English and wider British culture my whole life – the amazing music, the brilliant humour and of course their addictive and passionate football culture.

I’ve even lived here for the past four and a half years to fully immerse myself in it all, which has shattered some illusions but also enhanced my outlook on other facets of life here.

Like many, I was drawn to football by watching the Premier League and its history-laden clubs, big personalities and, most importantly, the sheer visceral thrill of witnessing the limb-splaying pandemonium of the crowd behind the posts whenever a goal is scored.

The players I was watching every weekend all played for England (with the still exotically oddball exception of Owen Hargreaves), so it made sense to adopt them as my non-Socceroos team.

Cue 16 years of downright farce, and as the ever-more ludicrous ways to lose football games piled up, reaching its nadir with the Euro 2016 loss to Iceland, I was safe in the knowledge that I could never be as fully invested in them as actual English people, a safeguard for which I am forever grateful.

England’s dramatic penalty shoot-out victory over Colombia on Tuesday resulted in one of the most joyous outpourings of relief and ecstasy I have ever witnessed, reminiscent of the Socceroos’ own 2005 hoodoo-breaker, as the streets and pubs were jumping for joy.

Yesterday on the train, at work and in the shops, there was a palpable sense of World Cup fever, and I am more than happy to get swept up by it all.

‘It’s Coming Home’ is now being used as a greeting much like Merry Christmas in December, and as the ubiquitous song the phrase originates from is rocketing to number 1 on the charts, for the first time I can ever remember, all seems right with the England football team.

They might lose to Sweden this Saturday, and that would be alright due to the progress and feel-good factor engendered so far, but England will never, ever have a better chance to make a World Cup final.

It might be coming home.

The Crowd Says:

2018-07-07T07:11:52+00:00

hogdriller

Roar Rookie


Yep, if they win it well never hear the F ing end of it. Mind you, if they get beat (by whoever) they'll more than likely officially complain to FIFA just like they did after they played Tunisia.

2018-07-07T07:06:01+00:00

hogdriller

Roar Rookie


Oh its an inherent arrogance alright......and that started around 600 AD if memory serves.

2018-07-07T06:26:11+00:00

hogdriller

Roar Rookie


The English didn't invent Golf, but agree I hope they get smashed........but by Sveden.

2018-07-07T04:56:27+00:00

Waz

Roar Rookie


There’s no implied arrogance just an implied bias on your part lol. When the Germans arrived home after winning the last World Cup their fans sang “its coming home” funny that ... It’s called football culture. Something we need more of in this country - the fans and media getting unrealistically carried away, 70% of the population watching the team on tv, the unreasonable hype, the tacky songs, oh I wish .... Anyway, arrogance would be tampering with the balls and expecting to get away with it or something ?

2018-07-07T00:50:06+00:00

The Phantom Commissioner

Roar Rookie


Scotland never gets their hopes up https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T68AXsUAEI

2018-07-06T08:36:54+00:00

Fadida

Guest


I know exactly what it refers to. There is actually an implied arrogance though

2018-07-06T07:54:24+00:00

MQ

Guest


For all English fans, a nice article in the Telegraph about Southgate's role in the transformation of England. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-cup/2018/07/05/englands-dna-project-paying-dividends-gareth-southgate-has/

2018-07-06T06:39:06+00:00

Tirateg

Guest


Fadida - coming home refers to the euro 96 tournament being played in England, the birth place of football. It was written specifically for that tournament. I remember German and Italian fans singing there own versions. it’s not some kind of inherent arrogance by the English you so want to believe in. It’s a song FFS....get over it!

2018-07-06T03:41:11+00:00

The Phantom Commissioner

Roar Rookie


Yeah i'm supporting England for the remainder of the tournament, my Dads side are English and my love affair with football started with their guidance and i'll be forever grateful for it!

2018-07-06T03:27:40+00:00

Mango Jack

Roar Guru


The poms traditionally excel at failure in games they invented. Football, rugby, cricket, golf, the list goes on. I hope they beat Sweden, as well as whoever they face in the SF. Come the final, I hope they are level at the 90 min mark, only for their opponent to smash a winner into the back of the net with 5 secs of extra time to go. Is that wrong?

2018-07-06T02:52:49+00:00

Fadida

Guest


I agree. It's the "coming home" part that makes me want them to fail. Home? FFS!!

2018-07-06T02:51:37+00:00

chris

Guest


Imagine England winning it. Wouldn't we have to sh*t up about any sporting achievements for the next....however many years.

2018-07-06T00:44:12+00:00

peeko

Guest


good to see you have a favourite side. i now have 7 teams left in the world cup, the other is England. go sweden!

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