🔥 Warm-Up — Before You Read
Discuss these questions with a partner or write short answers.
📝 Sports Jargon & Vocabulary
Study these words and phrases before reading the summary.
| Word | Meaning in Context | Type |
|---|---|---|
| chippy | a game characterized by rough, aggressive play and bad tempers | Adjective |
| collective | the entire team working together as one unit; cooperative | Noun / Adj |
| demur | to raise doubts, show reluctance, or avoid answering directly | Verb |
| flair | stylishness, originality, and confidence in the way one plays | Noun |
| book | when a referee records a player's name for a foul (gives a yellow card) | Verb |
| scuffle | a short, confused fight or struggle between players | Noun |
| curtail | to cut short, reduce in extent, or put a restriction on something | Verb |
| tweak | a fine adjustment to a team's strategy or tactical plan | Noun / Verb |
✏️ Vocabulary Practice
Type the best word or phrase from the vocabulary list.
📖 Article Summary
The U.S. men’s football team punched its ticket to the World Cup knockout round with a comfortable 2-0 victory over Australia. Leading up to the match, there was widespread concern because the U.S. was playing without their generational star, Christian Pulisic, who was nursing a left calf injury. However, head coach Mauricio Pochettino had spent 19 months preaching the value of the collective over individual stars.
The Americans dictated possession and played with flair. Folarin Balogun created the first goal in the 11th minute, forcing an Australian own goal after speeding past a defender. Later, Alex Freeman scored the second goal on a scrappy header from point-blank range, which was awarded by the referee after a lengthy VAR delay.
Pochettino anticipated a highly physical match, making a tactical tweak to start striker Ricardo Pepi. His prediction was correct. Similar to a previous match against Australia that Pochettino called a "street game," this World Cup encounter was notably chippy. Players engaged in jabs, shoves, and heavy challenges, resulting in several players from both teams being booked with yellow cards in a messy second half.
🧩 Key Ideas / Match Timeline
Focus on the sequence of events that defined the game.
1. The Setup
Coach Pochettino emphasizes the "collective," refusing to praise individuals.
2. The Absence
Star player Christian Pulisic is officially left off the game-day squad due to injury.
3. Goal 1
Folarin Balogun drives into the box, causing an Australian player to score an own goal.
4. Goal 2
Alex Freeman scores a header, though his celebration is delayed by an offside check.
5. The Rough Play
The match becomes "chippy," with heavy challenges, head clashes, and yellow cards.
6. The Result
The U.S. comfortably coasts into the knockout stage with a game to spare.
✏️ Timeline Practice — Match the Event
Choose the event that best fits the description.
✅ Comprehension Check
Choose the best answer. The choices are shuffled automatically.
💬 Short Answer
Answer in your own words.
🔧 Grammar Focus A — Dynamic Sports Verbs
Sports journalists almost never use plain verbs like ran, hit, or won. Instead, they use highly descriptive, dynamic verbs to make the reader feel the energy of the game.
Look at these examples from the article:
- Instead of "pushed": "Freeman muscled goalkeeper Patrick Beach from the ball..."
- Instead of "ran": "He zipped past a defender..."
- Instead of "knocked down": "...Jordan Bos felled Weston McKennie..."
- Instead of "beat": "...cohesion to swat aside the Australians..."
| Dynamic Verb | Base Meaning | Nuance |
|---|---|---|
| muscle | to push | using heavy physical strength against an opponent |
| zip | to run | moving with extreme, sudden speed |
| fell | to knock down | like cutting down a large tree; a heavy blow |
| swat | to beat/dismiss | treating the opponent like a minor annoyance (a bug) |
✏️ Dynamic Verbs Practice
Type the correct dynamic verb (muscled, zipped, felled, swat) to complete the sentence.
🔧 Grammar Focus B — The Passive Voice in Penalties
In sports, things happen to players. Journalists use the passive voice frequently to focus on the person receiving a hit, penalty, or injury, rather than who caused it.
Structure: Object + Form of "To Be" + Past Participle
| Active Voice (Focus on the ref/rules) | Passive Voice (Focus on the player) |
|---|---|
| The referee booked Alessandro Circati. | Alessandro Circati was booked. |
| The rules put the mantra to a test. | That mantra was put to the stiffest of tests. |
| An offside call curtailed his celebration. | His celebration was curtailed by an offside call. |
✏️ Passive Voice Practice
Rewrite the verb in the brackets to complete the passive voice sentence.
✍️ Writing Task — Opinion Paragraph
Write a paragraph answering this question:
Your paragraph should include:
- your opinion clearly stated
- at least 2 reasons supporting your view
- at least 1 passive voice sentence
- at least 2 vocabulary words from Tab 2 (e.g., collective, chippy, flair)
Model Paragraph
In my opinion, a football team is much stronger when it focuses entirely on the collective rather than a single star player. First, if a team relies too much on one person, their entire strategy is ruined if that player is injured or booked by the referee. Second, playing as a collective unit allows different players to show their individual flair and surprise the opponent. For example, in a chippy and physical game, the energy of the whole team is needed to survive heavy tackles. Ultimately, games are won by the team, not by one person.
💡 Discussion Questions
1. The coach called a previous game against Australia a "street game." What do you think he meant by that metaphor?
2. Do you prefer watching football matches that are highly tactical and clean, or matches that are aggressive, emotional, and "chippy"?
3. Why do you think a referee might delay a goal celebration? Does technology like VAR (Video Assistant Referee) ruin the emotion of the game?