I read in today's Wall Street Journal that a seat for today's Ghana-USA game were going for $283. That was according to ticket-price forecaster SeatGeek.com. David Biderman says "That's cheaper than six of the round's other seven matches. A seat at Sunday's Argentina-Mexico match is going for $633, while tickets for the title game are already at $2,347."
Me: I appreciate the opportunity to see the game on TV for zilch. I also note that not everyone is excited about soccer. Englishman (now American) John Derbyshire stands by his 2000 article in which he minces no words:
What really needs explaining is not why Americans do not care to watch soccer, but why the rest of the world does. With the probable exception of cricket, it is the most boring game ever devised, and has been trending in the direction of utter eventlessness for several decades. . . It is amazing, in such a busy age, that so many people are willing to spend ninety minutes watching a game that frequently has no result.
Derbyshire goes on to write of hooliganism among the fans and brain injuries among the players.
I personally have been enjoying the World Cup games I've been able to see. Especially intriguing has been the ball control footwork, accurate passing, and the setting up of attacks. Quite extraordinary really.
Update: Ghana beat the USA 2 to 1 in overtime.
Update #2 - (HT: Joyce)
Christianity Today magazine reports:
Ghana: The Team That Prays TogetherAmerica's Saturday World Cup opponent is reportedly one in the Spirit.
Ted OlsenThe team America faces Saturday in its second round World Cup matchup is spiritually united, ESPN's Jeff Bradley reports.
"We love to sing together, dance together, pray together," Ghana striker Asamoah Gyan told Bradley. "It brings joy to our hearts. This is our team."
Bradley says that spirit continues to the field. "What I've noticed, more than anything, about the Black Stars, is they are a team in every sense of the word," he wrote. "From their pregame (and postgame, and halftime, and pre-training and post-training) songs and prayers, to their disciplined adherence to Rajevac's rigid system that features a single striker, they are true believers that the whole can be greater than the sum of its individual pieces. ... It's 11 together with one goal."
Captain John Mensah (right) told the German news service DPA that prayer is no afterthought.
"We are Christians and we all know how important God is," he said. "We all respect God and we pray every time before the game and after the game. ... We praise God, what he has done for us. Then the next day is match-day, so we use that opportunity to give us strength and help us go on into the game."
The team isn't praying alone. The government and nation's churches have called for united prayers at home for the team.
And now that Ghana is the only African team left in the World Cup, Cameroon players Alex Song and Samuel Eto’o both said, in separate interviews, "Everybody must pray for Ghana."
The country of Ghana is 83 percent Christian--mostly Protestant (71%) and Pentecostal (26%). 83 percent of Christians say they attend services at least weekly.