People say it sounds like a swarm of bees as if its a bad thing! Come on Africa is not for sissies!
Tumelo
Enough about vuvuzela, jah, jah – its here to stay…we need to strategize on how we will win the last game that will determine whether we go through on the next round. I think Parreira should change the formation of the team. 4,4,2 will do…Modise out – Parker IN, Steven out, Nomvete IN….Arron out, Booth IN….that’s the only way we stand a chance of scoring 3 or 4 goals against France otherwise it’s all over
haha
i went to a match yesterday and there were vuvuzelas – ofcourse! foreigners had them too and blew them proudly. and those complaining about the game sounding like it was being played amidst a swarm of bees is mistaken. there are many sounds adding to the atmosphere, the vuvuzela, the cheering, the 80 000 people. so if you have said that you were thinking about not coming and changed your mind because of the vuvu then too bad for you!
KAY-EL
I agree totally with you – would make the same changes. I think that Parker and Nomvete together with Killer will give us so firepower up front and a bit off support in the middle. Aaron is also tired and he sometimes gets aggressive – we must be careful because Masilela is on one yellow card. But we cannot play with just onje striker upfront. And France – one can never underestimate them. They have a team full of great players that just can’t seem to play together. But I think the Boys can take them and if they keep their shape, play beautiful football that we know and love.
http://yahoo Gavin David
I am a South African soccer lover and I HATE tge wretched vuvuzela!!!!! It does not add anything to our beautiful game other than noise, Noise, NOISE!!!!!! I have attendd a soccer match where the vuvuzelas went on non-stop. Took away a lot of the joy of watching and enjoying a soccer game. I have attended rugby matches where all I could hear was the passion of the suppporters without the wretched noise of a vuvuzela. There is no better sound than that of a stadium full of people shouting, cheering and singing for their team. I will never attend a soccer game as long as the vuvuzela is allowed to be played. i know I’ll be missing out but I’d rather listen to the passion in people’s voices and cheers than the noise of that wretched, cheap, plastic tube!!! If our passion for the team is reduced to the cheap sound of a cheap plastic thing, then that say a lot about the state of our soccer. Cheap plastic thing equates to poor, cheap, hopeless performance of the soccer team. i’m actually glad that Bafana lost. it might mean there will be less vuvuzelas in the second round. i can only pray for that!!!!
Alex
If they want to blow those horns in South Africa, fine. The worst that might happen is that country will never be awarded another World Cup. (An unlikely scenario unless enough teams successfully make a case that their loss was due to the horns, or if FIFA gets creamed with hearing loss-related lawsuits. And by the time SA’s time comes around again in 20 years or so no one will remember them anyway.) I just don’t want to see (or, rather, hear) them at other sports in other parts of the world. The fact Wimbledon has seen fit to put out a preemptive ban suggests this could be a real concern. Mind you, it would be funny to see someone whip out a vuvuzela at the British Open golf tournament. Bet that would last about 10 seconds!
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At first I hated the vuvuzela, but I must admit it
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havito
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