Wednesday, 16 June 2010

A summer of football!

We seldom get to see this much football throughout the year. It almost feels like it never ended! Just a week's break following our trip to Wembley and then it was time to don my 'other' football shirt, that one with 3 Lions upon the chest!

Last season, by the time the new season fixtures were released my mouth was drooling after what had seemed like a lifetime summer break. This summer is the opposite. My mouth is still drooling over the fact that new season fixtures are released tomorrow, but I've still got 3 weeks of International football to get my teeth into! We've done something a little bit special at my house to cheer on the lads out in South Africa. We've transformed the back garden into "Gig's Arms", THE venue to watch the World Cup in Hungerford. We've also created a prediction game called "The Beautiful Game" thanks to the great idea from Will Beattie. This drummed up amazing interest amongst friends and family, getting 34 entrants! And at a tenner an entry that's given us quite a hefty prize pool to play with. The idea is, you make your predictions, then throughout the World Cup, you get points for true predictions. For example, you choose Brazil as Top Goalscorers, each time they score a goal you will get 2 points.

So far I haven't missed a World Cup game. It hasn't been the most thrilling start ever to a World Cup but I just can't get enough of it! This is the first World Cup of the Social Networking age as well, and Twitter has been overhauled with "football twits"! There has been some great discussion, from everything to jokes about Rob Green's gaff, to the Vuvuzela debate! I've been using Twitter for Blackberry away from my computer, Seesmic Web whilst at work and Tweetdeck at home on my PC to stay involved all the time in between my work responsibilities.

At work, I've been used our independent BT Broadband link (so as not to disrupt our network and keep senior management happy!) to watch the games streamed live on the broadcaster's respective websites www.bbc.co.uk/worldcup and www.itv.com/worldcup. This has been a godsend! Though the big names have thus far failed to light up the tournament (bar Germany), I'd have been livid at the prospect of missing games such as Ivory Coast vs. Portugal, which on paper should have been an encounter for the ages.

I think the above have helped let everyone get involved in the World Cup if they want to, wherever they are, for the first time ever. Its a true signal of what is to come - watching games wherever you might be, sharing banter with fellow supporters halfway across the world, or at the games in South Africa themselves. However, all good things must come to an end. The World Cup will be won and lost and life will be back to normal.But until then, keep hash tagging #worldcup and get involved in the first major footballing tournament of the digital age!

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