A vida na bolha de Hollywood fica em segundo plano em relação à necessidade dos EUA de obter sucesso na Copa do Mundo | Max Rushden
Trabalhar em um torneio traz suas próprias exigências, mas nada comparado à pressão sobre os jogadores da casa para um bom desempenho. Saudações de Los Angeles – do seu correspondente em podcast. Deixando a Inglaterra de lado, já faz 20 anos desde que estive no país anfitrião de um grande torneio. Os compromissos profissionais tornam esta experiência um pouco diferente de viajar pela Alemanha com Ian, Matt e Oli em 2006…

Working at a tournament brings its own demands but nothing like the pressure on home players for a good showing
Greetings from Los Angeles – from your own podcasting correspondent. England aside, it’s been 20 years since I was in the host country for a major tournament. Professional commitments make this a marginally different experience from driving around Germany with Ian, Matt and Oli in 2006 just wondering when the next stein was going to be thrust into my hands – dancing with Trinidad and Tobago fans, feeling lucky to miss out on Brazil v Australia tickets because my hangover was too much for the sun.
The question you are asked most by people back home is along the lines of: “Is there World Cup fever in the States?” I am reminded of a local TV crew who walked around central Cambridge on the eve of our FA Cup quarter-final with Crystal Palace in 1990 asking people how they felt about the game, and being rewarded with lots of nice middle-class people who didn’t even know there was a football team in Cambridge.
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