Hotale.com wrote: » Can I ask why you don't like it? I never actually understood why it's so unpopular in some parts of the country.
vicwatson wrote: » See the FA Cup today? Not the SA Cup
orangesoda wrote: » You can't even see the ball and it is too fast. The ancient game played in ulster was more like modern scottish shinty that it is to modern hurling, this is because it was brought from ulster to the scottish highlands
Karl Stein wrote: » Preference for particular sports exist on a spectrum for true spots fans. Hating one sport and loving another is little more than evidence of a dull mind.
orangesoda wrote: » Your the auld plastic pitch soccer man aren't you good fellow? a real soccer man would get out on the grass
Witchie wrote: » There is football and then there is Gaelic football. Nobody except the Americans call it soccer.
oppenheimer1 wrote: » https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2GqlOYfgfw
orangesoda wrote: » p.s. Please add your prediction for the winner of the All-Ireland Football Championship
Lapin wrote: » No GAA fan worth their salt would predict one code without mentioning the other. So here goes.
Diego Simeone wrote: » I find Gaelic Football ecstatically boring unfortunately. Tries to mesh football and rugby but ends up losing the better parts of both. I don't understand its popularity in certain parts, but each to their own sure.
orangesoda wrote: » your missing the auld handball, camogie and weymans football there good fellow, I laugh and point my finger
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » I think we have a west brit here. A British unionist type possibly. I find it far less pathetic seeing the hoards of Irish supporting GAA than the hoards of Irish supporting British football teams.
Bloe Joggs wrote: » Never really got Gaa myself, it's a curious mix of Soccer, Basketball and Rugby. It's supposedly based on some ancient ball game but I get the feeling that the rules were hastily drafted back in the late 19th century when the GAA was founded and they never really put too much thought into how it would actually work in practice.
Bloe Joggs wrote: » It looks visually awkward to me, like it's trying not to actually be like any of the above mentioned games but still trying to be the kind of thing you would naturally do with a ball, which it clearly isn't. I guess if you play it long enough it all feels natural enough but something about it just doesn't slot into place for me, like it's the ultimate game designed by a committee.
orangesoda wrote: » I wonder which code you prefer? .
dan1895 wrote: » Gaelic football has to be the most unskillful team sport in the world maybe apart from tug o war.
Hotale.com wrote: » An excellent game of Gaelic football is unbeatable, a lot of the time it's brutal though. I'd take a brilliant game of Gaelic football over even a brilliant game of hurling - and look where I'm from! I'd be hanged, drawn and quartered if I said this in public.
Spring Onion wrote: » I play both sports. I do agree that gaelic football is an "ugly" sport. It's pretty boring to watch, even at intercounty level. Lets assume it was a worldwide sport, if so, I doubt I would have any interest in it. However it is an Irish sport and a community sport and I have been playing it since I was 5. It has become a very physical sport and the physical is dominating whatever skills it had which I think is a pity. I am playing a lot more soccer in recent years because I am getting older and I get less injuries. I find it enjoyable but I don't buy into supporting premiership teams.