In this football language podcast we look at the phrase ‘sweet volley‘ from the England-Scotland game from Group B in the 2020 European Championships. You can read a transcript for this podcast below, while you can also check out our glossary of footballing phrases
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Football Language Podcast Euros 2020: Day 8 – Sweet Volley
DF: Hello everyone, this is Damian from the Learning English Through Football team – I hope you are all doing well. We are posting a football expression from the Euro 2020 tournament every day – yesterday Damon looked at the expressions ‘
hit their stride‘ and ‘
book their spot‘ from the match between Austria and the Netherlands and today I’m looking at a description of a shot from the Scotland versus England game at
Wembley: Hit the volley sweetly.
Stinger: You are listening to
languagecaster.com (in French).
Here
the Guardian newspaper report describes the shot from Scotland wing back Stephen O’Donnell – he
volleyed the cross from Scotland captain Andy Robertson which means he hit the ball while it was still in the air. This kind of shot is quite difficult to carry out as the player needs a lot of technique and control to hit the ball just right. If a player hits the volley sweetly it means that they have hit it really, really well – another way of saying this is ‘cleanly‘ – the player hit the ball cleanly. Sometimes we can hear the verb ‘to catch’ used with this phrase – the player caught the ball sweetly – which means they have hit the ball well, while we can also hear the phrase ‘a
sweet strike‘ which refers to any shot that has been really well hit.
Another form of volley we might hear in football is a
half-volley which is when the player hits (or catches) the ball just as it is hitting the ground and again the player has to demonstrate really good control and technique to make sure they don’t
blaze the ball wide or over the bar or that they don’t
slice or
mishit their shot.
So, O’Donnell’s volley was sweetly struck – he caught his volley sweetly – but the England keeper Pickford ...