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This Week: A Boxing Day thriller

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 three stories from this week in the Premier League and there are lots of football English words and phrases for you to learn.

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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.

This week, I’m talking about two matches that were played on the 26th of December, on the day we call Boxing Day. But before I get to the football stories, I want to talk about football at Christmas in the UK. You see, football at Christmas has a long history in the UK. Even before the Football Association was created and the first leagues were formed, festive football was part of the holidays.

The word festive is an adjective that we use to describe something that makes us happy and that is related to a special time or festival. The time around Christmas is often described as the festive period and if you go somewhere that has lots of Christmas decorations you might say that it looks very festive.

As I said, festive football has a very long history. Years and years ago, the game was quite different. We call it medieval football and it was played in towns and villages and there were often tens or even hundreds of players on each team.

The adjective medieval is used to say that something happened in the Middle Ages, that is between around 600 to around 1500.

Orkadians take part in the New Year’s Ba’ Game played with a hand crafted leather ball in Kirkwall Scotland

Orkadians take part in the New Year’s Ba’ Game played with a hand crafted leather ball in Kirkwall Scotland

In medieval football, teams were based on where you lived or where you were born and a goal or marker was set up on either side of a town and the two teams would battle to get the ball, usually an inflated pig's bladder, to the marker or into the goal. Inflated means filled with air, like a balloon. It was a very physical game. I read that the only rules were that you could not kill your opponents. Apart from that, there were no rules.

On Christmas day, in Kirkwall, the largest town in the Scottish Orkney Islands, the town turns out for a game of Ba’ which is also the name for the ball. Kirkwall ba’ is a version of medieval football. On Christmas morning, around 100 boys gather or meet together in the same space outside St Magnus’ Cathedral. The teams are the Uppies who have to get the ball up the town to the site of the old town gates and the Doonies who have to get the ball down the town and into the sea. At ten o’clock, the ba’ is thrown into the crowd of boys and the game begins. At one o’clock, the men’s game starts. The men’s game attracts over 300 players and is supposed to be quite impressive to watch. Once the ba’ is thrown into the crowd, the players form a massive scrum to push and jostle for the ball. A scrum describes a situation where two teams try to physically push each other to get to a ball. It’s an important part of rugby. It might look like a bit of a scrap, but it’s all just part of the game. If a player gets the ball, they try to dodge their opponents and weave through the crowd to reach the goal.

Uppies celebrate winning the New Year’s Ba’ Game played with a hand crafted leather ball in Kirkwall Scotland

Uppies celebrate winning the New Year’s Ba’ Game played with a hand crafted leather ball in Kirkwall Scotland

Nowadays, Premier League teams don’t play on Christmas day, but in Victorian times there were matches on Christmas day. This was partly because it was the only day off for many workers so it was their only chance to watch a match. In 1871, the day after Christmas Day was made an official holiday. This day is called Boxing Day and very quickly, Boxing Day fixtures became an important feature of the festive period. Now that people have TVs and can watch films as well as football at home, the number of matches over the holidays has fallen, but when most of the country eats too much and relaxes with their families, footballers have to be ready to put their boots on to entertain their fans.

And now, I want to talk about two matches that were played on Boxing Day. Aston Villa travelled to Old Trafford to take on Manchester United and Nottingham Forest went north to St James’ Park to take on Newcastle United.

The language from the stories that I’m going to talk about this week is:

  • To break the deadlock
  • To surge forwards
  • To evaporate
  • To break through
  • To bamboozle
  • A cheeky shot

United and Villa in five-goal thriller

Rasmus Hojlund celebrates with teammates after scoring Manchester United's third goal during the match against Aston Villa

Rasmus Hojlund celebrates with teammates after scoring Manchester United's third goal during the match against Aston Villa

Manchester United had not lost a home match on Boxing Day since 1978, the Red Devils were unbeaten in 19 Boxing Day home matches. Aston Villa have been playing brilliantly under Unai Emery and looked like they were set to break that record.

John McGinn broke the deadlock at Old Trafford. A slightly rash challenge by Fernandes on Dendonker outside the box on the right wing and Villa were awarded a free kick. McGinn’s ball in sailed over everyone and bounced straight into the goal.

The second goal came from another set piece, this time a corner. McGinn played the ball over the box to the rear post where Lenglet headed the ball back into the middle. Dendonker caught the ball with a backheel and scored his first Aston Villa goal.

In the second half, Garnacho halved the deficit with a good finish for a well-worked team goal that started when Fernandes intercepted Diego Carlos’s pass. Fernandes surged forwards before passing to Rashford who slipped the cross through to Garnacho who guided the ball into the net.

Not long after, Garnacho brought the scores level. Garnacho started the attack running with the ball. He passed the ball wide and when the cross came back, it was to Hojland who had slightly overrun it so tapped it back to Garnacho who powered the ball into the net and Villa’s 2-goal lead had evaporated.

In the 82nd minute, United had a corner. When the ball was played, McGinn was the first to the ball. He caught the ball on his thigh to control the ball ... but in the end, he controlled the ball for Rasmus Hojlund who volleyed it into the net, scoring his first Premier League goal.

Final score: Manchester United 3 - 2 Aston Villa

Newcastle bamboozled by Tricky Trees

Alexander Isak shoots to score Newcastle United's goal from the penalty spot past Nottingham Forest goalkeeper Matt Turner

Alexander Isak shoots to score Newcastle United's goal from the penalty spot past Nottingham Forest goalkeeper Matt Turner

Newcastle broke through Forest’s early resistance from the penalty spot. Alexander Isak was clipped when he tried to turn to shoot in the penalty area and the referee didn’t hesitate to point to the spot. Isak took the penalty well and Newcastle had the lead.

Just before half-time Newcastle were attacking and looked good, but Almiron played a weak cross that was intercepted by Montiel and knocked forwards for Gibbs-white who ran back up the pitch. He played the ball for Elanga who managed to cut the cross back for Chris Wood to tap in.

Chris Wood is a New Zealand forward who played for Newcastle for part of last season. He only scored one Premier League goal for the club at St James’ Park in 20 appearances before he was loaned to Forest who signed him officially last June.

In the second half, Forest went ahead. Once more, on the counter, Elanga ran with the ball with Isak on his heels. Chris Wood was the only Forest player making a run and Elanga picked him out among half a dozen Newcastle players. Wood bamboozled Dan Burn and got a cheeky shot away before the rest of Newcastle's defence could close in. Wood played a gentle chip over Dubravka and into the Newcastle goal.

Wood got a hat-trick in the 60th minute after a clever run saw him beat the offside trap. In a few strides, he’d rounded Dubravka and calmly fired the ball into the open goal.

Final score: Newcastle United 1 - 3 Nottingham Forest

Language challenge

Number 1. Passengers waiting on the station's concourse often ______________ when the platform their train is departing from is announced.

Number 2. From ChatGPT to machine learning, 2023 was the year artificial intelligence ______________.

Number 3. “Through the legs,” reflected Jurgen Klopp. “That was a bit _______.” This word sums up Curtis Jones, who brings an impishness and an impudence to his duties.

Number 4. A fresh perspective from an outsider was exactly what the team needed to ______________ in their brainstorming session.

Number 5. Boris Johnson was “__________” and “confused” by the scientific modelling and data presented to him during the pandemic, the UK’s Covid-19 public inquiry heard on Monday.

Number 6. The most powerful anti-Trump argument in the Republican party has _________ now that Biden’s poll numbers are plummeting.

Leave your answers in the comments section at the bottom of the page and I will go through them next week.

Football Phrase

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

This week’s football phrase is to **** *** ******* ****. This is quite difficult to explain without using the words in the phrase. The phrase is an action and to do it, a player has to time a run forwards perfectly so that they can run onto and behind the last defenders without breaking the ******* rule. Defenders try to catch attackers out by pressing forwards and so that attacking players are ******* when the ball is played forwards. This is the ******* **** and attacking players have to get their timing right if they want to **** *** ******* ****.

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