In this football language podcast we look back at some of the phrases that emerged from the 2020 Women’s Olympic Final between Canada and Sweden, including ‘sudden-death‘ and ‘decisive penalty‘ which came from
the Guardian report. You can read a transcript for this podcast below, while you can also check out our glossary of footballing phrases
here and visit our site to access all our previous posts and podcasts. If you have any suggestions or questions then you can contact us at
admin@languagecaster.com.
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Learn English Through Football Language Podcast: 2020 Women’s Olympic Final
DF: Hello everyone, this is Damian from the
Languagecaster.com team – I hope you are all doing well. Now we’ve been taking a short break over the summer but in today’s show we look at some of the words and phrases from the 2020 Women’s Olympic final between Canada and Sweden that took place in Yokohama, Japan. Some of the words we look at include: sudden-death and decisive penalty which were used to describe the Canadian win in the
penalty shootout to claim their first ever gold medal.
Stinger: You are listening to
languagecaster.com (in Swedish).
Let’s have a look at how the writer from
the Guardian newspaper has described the gold-medal match that went to penalties after a 1-1 draw. So, the first part of the sentence focuses on the winning goal in the penalty shoot-out – Canadian player Grosso’s penalty was described as ‘decisive‘ which means that her goal decided the game; she scored the winning goal in the
penalty shoot out. The second part of this sentence explains which side won the gold medal – Canada – and how they defeated Sweden; how they beat Sweden, who have now lost two Olympic finals in a row (or in succession) – this is what ‘back-to-back‘ means here. The next section describes how the Canadian side did this – in a sudden-death shootout – which means that if both teams are still level after the five penalties of the shootout then they keep taking penalties until someone misses. So, we can say that Canada won 3-2 after sudden-death. The final part of the sentence decribes the main information from the game: Canada’s Fleming scored an
equaliser from the penalty spot cancelling out an opening goal in the first half (first-half strike) from Swedish striker Blackstenius. This
cancelling out sent the game to
extra time (so forced the game beyond 90 m...