Thursday, June 10, 2010

The 20 Swear Words Rooney Cannot Say

The big hoo-hah over the World Cup now is the amount of incessant swearing by players. Rooney has been made the poster boy. In fact, newswires now report that the referees for the match between England and USA have been given 20 English swear words so that they can familiarise themselves for that match between England and USA. Trouble is NONE of the swear words were released or published by the media. Only at Malaysia Finance do we try to analyse which 20 words they were. Please read at the latter part of article.

The Daily Telegraph:

Carlos Simon, who has a reputation as a no-nonsense, if also controversial, official is a fluent English speaker but he and his assistants, Roberto Braatz and Altemir Hausmann, have been given a list of 20 English swear words to prepare themselves for England's Group C match against the United States.

With Rooney cautioned in Monday's practice match against the Platinum Stars for using foul and abusive language against referee Jeff Selogilwe - who warned that if the striker behaved the same during the tournament he could get sent off - it will intensify the focus on his behaviour.

Fabio Capello is likely to speak, informally, to Rooney ahead of Saturday's game to remind him of his importance to the team and also the need to keep his discipline especially if he is provoked by the Americans who have already questioned his, sometimes, volatile temperament.

Given a list of English swear words ...  controversial referee Carlos Simon

Given a list of English swear words ... controversial referee Carlos Simon Photo: Getty Images

Hausmann, Simon's first assistant, said: "We have to learn what kind of words the players say. All players swear and we know we will hear a few 'son of a ..... '."

His fellow assistant, Braatz, added: "We can't do this in 11 different languages but at least we have to know the swear-words in English."

Simon, 44, is officiating in his third World Cup finals, but has been criticised in Brazil for a series of decisions which led to one of the country's biggest clubs, Flamengo, petitioning Fifa to get him thrown out of the tournament.

Wayne Rooney .... cautioned for swearing in England's friendly match

Wayne Rooney .... cautioned for swearing in England's friendly match

Capello is acutely aware of the different referees and styles the England players will encounter during the World Cup which is why he selected officials from a series of different countries during the warm-up games and friendlies over the past two years.

It is all part of his meticulous preparation which stepped up on Wednesday with the Italian starting his in-depth analysis of how the Americans will play on Saturday. He will examine DVDs and scouting reports which may influence the selection of the team he puts out although the XI is, according to sources, starting to take shape.

One of the key decisions is who will play in goal and Joe Hart is, as has been apparent since the squad arrived in South Africa, putting increasingly severe pressure on Robert Green to be selected and may even, now, have edged ahead. Indeed it is understood that so close is the call between the two that Capello is not likely to make up his mind until after his usual post-breakfast walk on Saturday morning.

The England manager had indicated he would decide who would play on Friday but Hart's impressive performances in training and his self-assurance is putting Green's selection in doubt. David James, who is still recovering from a sore knee, is unlikely to be risked by Capello.

The decision will come down to who does best in the last two days of training with Hart understood to be that little bit "sharper" than Green right now, although the West Ham goalkeeper does have the advantage of greater experience.

It is likely that Capello will partner either Emile Heskey - who appears the favourite as things stand - or Peter Crouch with Rooney in what is expected to be a 4-4-2 formation. One of the other big selection issues is whether James Milner - who will return to training today after missing the last two days due to a temperature - or Joe Cole plays on the left of midfield. The likelihood is that Capello may favour Milner but, again, it will be an extremely close call and may depend on how he feels the Americans will line up.

The Daily Telegraph, London

--------------------------

The 20 swear words will have an English/UK bent to it. To that end, Anorak has cited a survey of swear words: Swearing and offensive language – severity rating - Source: Delete Expletives? Researched by NOP for the ASA, BBC, BSC and ITC

Cunt

83

13

3

1*

1

1

Motherfucker

79

15

4

2*

2

2

Fuck

71

22

6

1*

3

3

Wanker

37

37

22

4

4

4

Nigger

42

26

14

18

5

11

Bastard

33

33

25

8

6

5

Prick

26

36

29

8

7

7

Bollocks

25

32

34

8

8

6

Arsehole

22

34

36

7

9

9

Paki

34

26

16

24

10

17

Shag

27

28

32

12

11

8

Whore

26

33

25

15

12

13

Twat

26

27

27

19

13

10

Piss off

18

32

42

7

14

12

Spastic

32

24

16

28

15

14

Slag

19

31

33

17

16

18

Shit

16

26

49

9

17

15

Dickhead

16

24

44

16

18

19

Pissed off

14

24

47

14

19

16

Arse

10

21

47

21

20

20

Bugger

9

22

48

21

21

21

Balls

11

19

44

25

22

22

Jew

20

15

14

51

23

24

Sodding

7

18

45

30

24

23

Jesus Christ

14

13

27

46

25

26

Crap

5

15

48

32

26

25

Bloody

3

11

56

29

27

27

God

10

8

23

60

28

28

*Fewer than 25 correspondents





















There are more than 20, so to cut the list down, here is what I think the 20 swear words were, in order of popularity:

1. FUCK / FUCK OFF
2. PRICK
3. PISS OFF
4. SHIT
5. ARSEHOLE
6. BUGGER
7. JESUS / JESUS CHRIST / CHRIST
8. BOLLOCKS
9. DICKHEAD
10. WANKER
11. GOD
12. BALLS
13. MOTHERFUCKER
14. BASTARD
15. CUNT
16. SODDING / SOD OFF
17. TWAT
18. CRAP
19. SPAZ / SPASTIC
20. ANY PAIRINGS OR COMBINATIONS OF THE ABOVE

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Share

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites