MaestroZidane
YELLOW CARD: Untrustworthy
I don't know if this is worthy of a new thread, so i'll let the people decide. I know some of you are not happy with the sound of them during the Confederation cup, as was I, but prepare for them to be around the world cup next year.
O'k, it's part of their culture and I'm fine with that, yet at some point, you have to realize that its just not good for T.V. Here in the states, The MLS actually banned the sales of vuvuzelas because they were annoying to fans.
I Hope FIFA does the right thing for the sake of the viewers around the world
I personally have become annoyed with them and to have o deal with them over a 30 day period is gonna drive some people crazy. How about letting the crowd cheer and letting them voice their emotions throughout the game rather then being them drowned out by the sound of bees.Prepare for vuvuzelas at next year’s World Cup
By RAF CASERT, AP Sports Writer
Jun 18, 3:09 pm EDT
Buzz up!8 votes
RUSTENBURG, South Africa (AP)—Take away the vuvuzela trumpet, and you take away the essence of the South African soccer fan.
So when some Europeans complained the relentless noise during Confederations Cup games pained their sensitive ears, South Africans showed little compassion.
“MOVES TO BAN VUVUZELAS,” news billboards across the capital Pretoria blared on Thursday as fan became outraged.
“This is our voice. We sing through it,” said Chris Massah Malawai, a 23-year-old company owner who was cheering, and blaring, for Bafana Bafana as they beat New Zealand on Wednesday. “It makes me feel the game.”
At 17, student Rolebolige Matolindizo and his trumpet are inseparable.
“My vuvuzela will be part of my life,” he said.
Danny Jordaan, head of the South African World Cup organizers, has said the roof architecture of Soccer City Stadium, site of next year’s final, will have the vuvuzela noise cascading down the stand and produce “the noisiest World Cup ever.”
In essence, it would be the same as banning European fans from singing and roaring at games. And FIFA itself has promoted the vuvuzela as something uniquely South African on par with the makarapa, the crazy and colorful miner’s helmets stitched together from recycled materials.
Beville Bachmann, who co-owns the trademark, said the origins may go back to the use of kudu antelope horns.
“We think plastic is better,” he said. We make no excuses about the noise. We are quite proud of it.”
Sales have gone in the hundreds of thousands and are expected to reach record levels with the hype around the World Cup.
Brazil forward Robinho complained about not being able to hear instructions from coach Dunga because of the vuvuzelas during Thursday’s 3-0 victory over the United States.
“This is something that needs to be decided by the people in charge,” the former Brazil captain said. “It’s a matter of culture. You have to weigh in the pros and the cons, see if it’s negative or positive.”
Spain seemed ready to accept the horns.
“It’s true that they make a lot of noise, but we’ll just have to get used to them,” forward Santi Cazorla said.
“You can certainly hear them,” Italy captain Fabio Cannavaro said after his team’s first game.
Spain midfielder Xabi Alonso wanted FIFA to get rid of them as an “annoyance,” and European broadcasters have been complained they interfere with commentary piped back home.
FIFA has said it will discuss the instrument with the local World Cup organizing committee, but not before the end of the Confederations Cup on June 28.
The official vuvuzela is a plastic horn in colorful colors that is 24 inches long and weighs no more than four ounces. The name roughly translates from Zulu to making a lot of noise.
Stadiums need only to be half full, and the din of the trumpets exceeds the noise level in many a European stadium. It usually starts as soon as the first fans enter the stadiums and continues throughout the game, turning into a monotonous blare as if produced by a million bees. Others say it sounds like elephants blowing their trunks.
“Our fans blow their vuvuzelas before the match. Maybe because they know that they might not be celebrating afterwards,” Jordaan joked.
Sales have gone in the hundreds of thousands and are expected to reach record levels with the hype around the World Cup.
And like it or not, the vuvuzela will be there next year, right through the World Cup final on July 11, 2010.
“When we go to South Africa, we go to Africa,” FIFA president Sepp Blatter said. “It is noisy. It is something else than in the rest of world.”
Associated Press writer Stuart Moir contributed to this report.
O'k, it's part of their culture and I'm fine with that, yet at some point, you have to realize that its just not good for T.V. Here in the states, The MLS actually banned the sales of vuvuzelas because they were annoying to fans.
I Hope FIFA does the right thing for the sake of the viewers around the world