In this short football language podcast we look at some of the words and phrases used to describe Chelsea’s win over Manchester City in the 2021 Champions League final and to do this we will look at
the BBC 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 then you can contact us at
admin@languagecaster.com.
Learn English Through Football Podcast: 2021 Champions League Final
DF: Hello everyone, this is Damian from the Learning English Through Football team. I hope we are all doing well and staying safe wherever we are. Now, as regular listeners will know I am based in London while the other member of the
Languagecaster.com team, Damon is in Tokyo although Damon is unavailable today. You will, however, be able to hear him on a couple of recent posts we have posted here on our site: first up on the
2021 Premier League winners Manchester City and then explaining a phrase from the Champions League final – he looks at the phrase ‘
shaped hole‘ – interesting. Now we have been rather busy at languagecaster recently as we try to catch up with the end of the domestic season here in Europe. We have put out posts on the
Women’s Champions League final, the
Europa League final, that podcast on
Manchester City’s Premier League win and this podcast which reviews the 2021 Champions League final between City and Chelsea.
Stinger: You are listening to
languagecaster.com (in French).
Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){
gie.widgets.load({id:'OfQmSM_6SABZrfutvMisWg',sig:'KPbQE-aIBHEplpgCjsjuzEB6tLOmGeV5mwhalW8dPoc=',w:'594px',h:'384px',items:'1320701743',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })});
DF: Now on this football language podcast we look at some of the words and phrases from Chelsea’s 1-0 win over Manchester City which gave the Blues their second Champions League title. We’ll look at three different aspects of the report; a summary of the game, a description of the winning goal and how Chelsea’s defence held firm. Right, let’s hear how the
BBC summed up the whole game.
This is the opening sentence from the
BBC report and typically for these types of reports it includes lots of information about the game: the names of the two sides, the winners, the
venue and so on. We are going to take a look at how they have described some of the key nouns in the sentence...