WHO REMEMBERS? The UK Nostalgia Podcast

Remembering the 2010 World Cup: South Africa Revisited Part 2 (with Ben "Mo Money" Meakin & Travelling Blade)

54 min · 19. juni 2026
episode Remembering the 2010 World Cup: South Africa Revisited Part 2 (with Ben "Mo Money" Meakin & Travelling Blade) cover

Description

A ball bounces down off the bar, lands over the line, and somehow the goal is not given. That single moment is enough to send you straight back to 2010, when the South Africa World Cup knockouts delivered peak drama, peak chaos, and a few scars that still itch whenever anyone mentions refereeing. We pick up our UK nostalgia deep-dive with England v Germany and the infamous Lampard “ghost goal”, plus the strange pre-match confidence that collapses almost immediately. From there we jump to Argentina v Mexico, where an offside goal is shown on the stadium screen for everyone to see, yet it still stands because there is no VAR to intervene. If you ever wonder why football sprinted towards goal-line technology and video review, these are the case files. The quarter-finals and beyond give us a different kind of argument: not just who is better, but what we actually want the game to be. Germany flatten Argentina while Maradona provides pure managerial theatre, Spain grind their way through with suffocating tiki-taka, and the Netherlands shock Brazil before turning the final into a war of attrition. We also revisit Ghana v Uruguay, Suarez’s deliberate handball, Asamoah Gyan’s heartbreak, and the uncomfortable question of whether a “smart” red card can still feel like cheating. If you love World Cup history, 2010 South Africa memories, and proper debates about fairness versus winning, hit play. Subscribe, share it with a mate who still argues about that Lampard goal, and leave us a review with the moment you will never forgive: what’s yours?

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79 episodes

episode TV Finale's (From The Madeley Archives) artwork

TV Finale's (From The Madeley Archives)

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episode The Summer of 1998 | France '98, The Ladettes, the Birth of Google & the Death of Cool Britannia artwork

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