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Football for Dummies by Dummies

Podcast von Geoff

Englisch

Sport

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Two american guys just chatting about (mostly) european football/soccer, with an emphasis on chelsea football club in london.

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14 Folgen

Episode not a fan Cover

not a fan

They open by acknowledging the long break, then quickly dive into Chelsea’s chaotic week across competitions. The big question is which Chelsea shows up: the sloppy, disjointed side that struggled in the cup match against Wrexham, or the aggressive, confident team that went to Villa and dominated after going behind. They expect the “Villa version” in Paris for the Champions League match against PSG; recognizing it’s a brutal place to play but believing Chelsea at least has a puncher’s chance to return to London with the tie still alive. The conversation moves through squad rotation and the strange lineups the manager has been experimenting with, including odd striker pairings and heavily rotated cup squads. They debate whether players like Guu have been unfairly pigeonholed as traditional strikers when they might actually offer more creativity. Despite the inconsistency and Cole Palmer’s recent drop in form, they’re impressed Chelsea is still alive in three competitions and roughly on track for what they defined as a successful season: a Champions League quarterfinal run, an FA Cup semifinal, and a top-four finish in the league. From there the discussion widens to the rest of the soccer world: the upcoming World Cup, potential Ballon d’Or contenders like Harry Kane and Declan Rice, and storylines across leagues such as Wrexham’s improbable promotion run and Tottenham’s ongoing collapse near the relegation zone. They close on the emotional side of fandom; how intensely they experience matches, the absurdity of juggling multiple competitions, and how being a “real fan” often just means paying obsessive attention to details that casual supporters barely notice.

9. März 2026 - 54 min
Episode outlander outliner Cover

outlander outliner

Chelsea are becoming that team; go down early, then storm back and win, which is thrilling and kind of maddening. The second half (especially vs West Ham) gets framed as some of the best football they’ve played outside the Barcelona game, but it comes with a caveat: they keep creating their own problems with odd lineups and slow starts, so the “credit to the manager” also includes “shame on the manager” for needing to fix what he set up. A big chunk is diagnosing what went wrong: the left side was a “leaky sieve,” with Garnacho singled out as a major culprit (plus Hato and Badiashile), and the two West Ham goals get chalked up to both fluky chaos and structural issues in positioning/roles. They pivot to squad-building and the transfer window: Chelsea don’t really need more promise on the wing; they need a reliable center back (given the Fofana/Colwill fitness worries). They also argue about whether rumored winger targets are truly available or just “available”. They wrap by zooming out to priorities: the table and Champions League qualification matter most, and the “why” is getting more of those big European nights next season. The Carabao Cup semi at Arsenal is treated as the least important competition left; fun if it happens, but not worth risking legs or injuries . So they debate whether to go all-out early or play conservatively and reassess at halftime. It ends on a softer note: a tangent about being old enough to be these young players’ parents and how that changes what you root for.

1. Feb. 2026 - 56 min
Episode my flan cookbook Cover

my flan cookbook

They kick off joking, then recap a fun Chelsea win over Palace where the team actually looked like they enjoyed themselves. The only real sour note: even up 3–0 and up a man, Chelsea somehow still conceded late (off a corner), which felt unnecessary and sloppy in the game-state. The main debate is about game management and style under Ignor. They hate how Chelsea goes passive once ahead—inviting pressure, corners, and late chaos—when they should be controlling the match with fresh legs and proactive possession. The bright spot is the attacking intent: winning the ball and moving it forward more directly than before, plus a standout “solo magic” goal (best moment of the match), with quick nods to Pedro’s finish and Enzo’s penalty. They zoom out to the bigger picture: Cole Palmer’s absence and “unhappy in London” rumors feel like telephone-game clickbait more than a real transfer threat, likely tied to fitness and confidence after injury/illness. They also feel for fringe guys like Mark Guiu not getting minutes, then finish with table/fixture chatter—don’t underestimate West Ham, the Champions League week is massive and goal-difference tight, and despite the league’s chaos they’d still rather be Chelsea than almost anyone outside City/Arsenal (and they like Rosenior's vibe).

26. Jan. 2026 - 46 min
Episode doobies Cover

doobies

They start hyped: Chelsea “saved the season” by beating Brentford. Then they immediately undercut it—result great, but it wasn’t an easy win. Brentford won the stat battle (corners/chances/xG), and Chelsea probably got a little lucky. They treat most Chelsea headlines as clickbait (farm-system manager stuff, Enzo-to-PSG rumors): “of course PSG wants him” isn’t the same as Enzo pushing to leave, and Chelsea’s leverage is his long contract. Bright spot: Delap looks more settled—better runs, better timing, wins a pen—hinting the coaching change might actually help strikers. Big picture: the schedule is packed, Napoli away feels scary, and Champions League qualification still hinges on stacking wins and Palmer returning to being the difference-maker, not just “present.”

23. Jan. 2026 - 54 min
Episode their holes Cover

their holes

They’re reacting to a chaotic Chelsea–Arsenal cup match that felt “close but sloppy”: plenty of energy and pressure, but goals driven more by mistakes than control. They like that Chelsea looked more intense and direct under the new manager, and they’re encouraged by young players getting real minutes and flashes of the talent Chelsea bought (especially the “electric” attackers). Even in a loss, they frame it as survivable—and maybe even useful—because it’s not league damage and it sets up a second leg with something still to play for. The big tension is priorities and identity. They don’t really care about the Carabao Cup the way they care about the league/Champions League chase, and they’re torn between wanting development minutes vs. needing stability. That theme shows up everywhere: who starts, where Palmer plays, whether the team is still too rigid/side-to-side, and whether you can afford another major change (like swapping keepers) when the back line already lacks consistency. They also spiral into transfer/club-building philosophy: skepticism about star “headache” signings like Vinícius Jr. (cost + ego + influence on younger Brazilians) versus the simple argument that elite talent wins leagues. The episode ends with table math and a Brentford “must win” preview: the margin for error is gone, the schedule is brutal, and Champions League qualification is the only outcome that really keeps the project from getting shaky.

17. Jan. 2026 - 39 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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