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Alexi Lalas refuses to call it football: ‘It makes you look like a weak poser’

Alexi Lalas has never met a hill he didn’t want to die on, and this week’s hill is, of all things, vocabulary. A fan pushed back on the Fox Sports studio analyst for repeatedly saying “soccer” instead of “football,” arguing that even American players make the switch in overseas i

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Alexi Lalas refuses to call it football: ‘It makes you look like a weak poser’

Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn ImagesAlexi Lalas has never met a hill he didn’t want to die on, and this week’s hill is, of all things, vocabulary.A fan pushed back on the Fox Sports studio analyst for repeatedly saying “soccer” instead of “football,” arguing that even American players make the switch in overseas interviews as a basic show of respect for the global game, but Lalas was unmoved.“Yeah…

that’s not gonna happen,” he wrote. “I call it soccer. I own it proudly.

I never apologize for it. If you grew up calling it soccer and changed out of insecurity or some misguided belief it makes you more authentic/credible…it doesn’t.

It’s cringe. It makes you look like a weak poser.”Yeah…

that’s not gonna happen. I call it soccer. I own it proudly.

I never apologize for it. If you grew up calling it soccer and changed out of insecurity or some misguided belief it makes you more authentic/credible…it doesn’t.

It’s cringe. It makes you look like a weak poser. https://t.

co/QafqhKGsBP— Alexi Lalas (@AlexiLalas) June 18, 2026It’s worth noting that this is the same Alexi Lalas who called James Corden a “full kit wanker” on live national television earlier this tournament, leaving Thierry Henry, Zlatan Ibrahimović, and Rebecca Lowe visibly stunned at the desk. There is apparently some British words he is perfectly comfortable deploying on American TV for an American audience, but “football” is not one of them.His colleagues on that desk — Lowe from NBC’s Premier League coverage, Henry from CBS’s Champions League coverage — have spent their careers speaking to audiences on both sides of the Atlantic and presumably say “football” without anyone accusing them of being posers for it, or questioning their authenticity.

And Zlatan, who spent his career playing in England, Spain, France, and Italy, before coming over to the States to play for the LA Galaxy, probably says it too.Lalas isn’t entirely wrong that changing what you call the sport out of insecurity doesn’t make you more cr

Nguồn: Yahoo Sports

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