
Why the US might finally start calling soccer ‘football'
Is it football or soccer?
U.S. President Donald Trump waded into the topic while at the Club World Cup final in New Jersey last Sunday. He joked that he could pass an executive order to bring the United States in line with much of the rest of the world and ensure that from now on Americans refer to it as football.
'I think I could do that,' he said with a smile during an interview with host broadcaster DAZN.
It was a light-hearted comment, but at a time when the U.S. is playing an increasingly significant role in soccer the question of why Americans continue to call it by a different name to the one by which it is most commonly known has been raised again.
'They call it football, we call it soccer. I'm not sure that change could be made very easily,' Trump said.
Soccer keeps growing in the U.S. and so does its influence on the sport. It is co-hosting the men's World Cup with Canada and Mexico next year — the third year in a row that it stages a major tournament after the 2024 Copa America and this summer's Club World Cup.
Other factors are keeping soccer more often in the U.S. consciousness — and perhaps they will make saying 'football' more commonplace in a tough sporting landscape.
One of the greatest players of all time, Lionel Messi, plays for MLS team Inter Miami; the popularity of the Premier League and Champions League is booming; and the documentary series 'Welcome to Wrexham' about a low-level Welsh club co-owned by Hollywood actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, has attracted new eyeballs.
Despite 'soccer' being widely associated with the U.S., it is commonly accepted that the word was actually coined in Britain, perhaps as far back as the 1880s.
The exact date when it was first used is not known, but it is believed 'soccer' was derived from 'association football,' which was the first official name of the sport.
The charity English Heritage says the nickname may have first been used by pupils at the iconic Harrow School to 'distinguish the new association game from their older pursuit, known as 'footer.''
Numerous versions of football began to flourish, often involving handling a ball more than kicking it. One example dating back to the 1600s and still played today in England is Royal Shrovetide. Rugby is another example.
The English Football Association was created in 1863 and drew up codified rules for associated football to set it apart from other versions being played elsewhere in Britain and, from there, soccer as we know it was born.
Dr. Stefan Szymanski, a professor of sport management at the University of Michigan, wrote the book 'It's Football, Not Soccer (And Vice Versa)' and explored the origins of the name. In a lecture to the American University of Beirut in 2019 he said soccer was 'very clearly a word of English/British origin.'
'And bear in mind that the name 'association football' doesn't really appear until the 1870s,' he said, 'so it appears really very early on in the history of the game and the word 'soccer' has been used over and over again since it was coined at the end of the 19th century.'
'Soccer' is not a commonly used term in Britain these days but that has not always been the case.
It was the title of a popular Saturday morning television show, 'Soccer AM,' which ran from 1994 to 2023 on the Premier League's host broadcaster Sky Sports.
England great and 1966 World Cup winner Bobby Charlton ran popular schools for decades, titled 'Bobby Charlton's Soccer School.'
And Matt Busby — Manchester United's iconic manager who won the 1968 European Cup — titled his autobiography, which was published in 1974, 'Soccer at the Top, My Life in Football.'
That book title suggests the terms 'soccer' and 'football' were interchangeable in British culture at that time.
Szymanski suggested the problem some people have with 'soccer' isn't the word at all. But rather that it is specifically used in America.
'It's when Americans use this word that we get the outpourings of distress and horror, and one of the most popular thoughts that people throw at this is to say that American football is not really football,' he said in his lecture.
He argued that given the overwhelming popularity of the NFL in the U.S. it makes perfect sense to differentiate between soccer and its own version of football.
The use of the word 'soccer' is a bit more confused in other countries.
Australia, which has its own Australian rules football along with both rugby codes, commonly uses the term and its national men's team are known as the Socceroos. It's soccer federation, however, is called Football Australia.
It's a similar situation in Ireland, where Gaelic football is popular. The term 'soccer' is used but the national soccer team is still governed by a body called the Football Association of Ireland.
Canada, like the U.S. simply calls it soccer, which clearly distinguishes it from the NFL and Canadian Football League.
The Associated Press stylebook says soccer is the preferred term in the U.S. but notes that 'around the world the sport is referred to as football.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Nottingham Forest midfielder Danilo joins Botafogo
Nottingham Forest midfielder Danilo has joined Brazilian club Botafogo on a four-year deal. The Brazilian signed for Forest from Palmeiras in January 2023 for a fee of about £16m. He made 62 appearances in all competitions with the majority of those coming in his first full season with the club. The 24-year-old featured just 13 times in 2024-25 after suffering a broken ankle during the opening-day draw against Bournemouth. Forest said: "Everyone at Nottingham Forest thanks Danilo for his contribution while at the club, wishing him the very best for the next stage of his career." Listen to the latest Football Daily podcast Get football news sent straight to your phone


CNN
22 minutes ago
- CNN
Stephen Colbert had big shoes to fill in late night and he blazed his own trail
When it was announced in 2014 that Stephen Colbert would succeed David Letterman as host of the CBS 'Late Show,' reaction was mixed. Letterman, who retired after helming the talk show for 22 years, had a loyal audience. At that point, Colbert was best known for playing a satirical version of himself on Comedy Central's 'The Colbert Report.' Some wondered whether Colbert's mix of topical news and political humor would be embraced by Letterman's audience and how he might fare competing against the established late night hosts at the time, Conan O'Brien, Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel. 'I don't know what anybody else is going to do. Conan, Jimmy and Jimmy — sincerely, we're friends. So it's better for me not to think about that,' Colbert told the New York Times in 2015. 'I can only do what I do.' What Colbert did - after a bumpy start - was take 'The Late Show' to the top spot in broadcast TV late-night ratings by 2017, where it's remained for eight years. On Thursday, it was announced 'The Late Show' will cease production next May. CBS cited financial pressures as the reason for the cancelation, though some have speculated about the timing amid a pending sale of Paramount and two weeks after a legal settlement between President Donald Trump and CBS News. Colbert has been a pointed critic of Trump. The host's mix of candor, patriotism and sincerity, along with his ability to mine humor in current events, however, has been credited for fueling the show's success. Colbert's relative popularity in a genre that has seen audiences tuning out has some scratching their heads about CBS ending the program. It has also stoked some ire. 'Love you, Stephen,' Jimmy Kimmel, who hosts ABC's late night show 'Jimmy Kimmel Live,' wrote in an Instagram Story. 'F**K you and all your Sheldons, CBS.' 'Sheldon' is a character on the hit CBS comedy 'The Big Bang Theory,' which has spurred several spinoffs. Another talk show host, Bravo's Andy Cohen, told Deadline 'it's a sad day for late-night television.' 'I think Stephen Colbert is a singular talent,' Cohen said. 'I can't believe CBS is turning out the lights at 11:30 after the local news. Just completely turning out the lights. I'm stunned.' Democrat Senators Elizabeth Warren and Adam Schiff both took to social media to raise concerns. 'CBS canceled Colbert's show just THREE DAYS after Colbert called out CBS parent company Paramount for its $16M settlement with Trump — a deal that looks like bribery,' Warren wrote Thursday on X. 'America deserves to know if his show was canceled for political reasons.' Schiff, who was a guest in Colbert's show Thursday when the host shared the news, also posted on X. 'If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserves to know,' Schiff wrote. 'And deserves better.' When Colbert informed viewers on Thursday about his show coming to an end, the studio audience booed. 'I share your feelings,' Colbert replied. 'I do want to say the folks at CBS have been great partners. I'm so grateful for the Tiffany Network for giving me this chair and this beautiful theater to call home.' He went on to express his gratitude to the viewers who have watched the show for ten seasons and the approximately 200 staff members who work on the program. 'It is a fantastic job,' Colbert said of hosting 'The Late Show.' 'I wish somebody else was getting it.'


Fox News
22 minutes ago
- Fox News
Liberals, journalists, and celebs ‘extremely sad' over late-night ally Colbert getting the boot from CBS
Prominent liberals and celebrities are mourning the news that CBS will end "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" next year. Host Stephen Colbert announced Thursday he had just learned that CBS was axing the show next spring. The host's announcement was met with boos from the in-studio audience, as well as displeasure from his liberal fans online. Under Colbert since he took over in 2015, the show had become a reliable destination for progressive views, anti-Republican talking points and friendly Democratic interviews. "Snow White" actress Rachel Zegler commented on his Instagram video sharing the news, stating, "I am extremely sad. I adore you, Stephen." CBS said the show, which has been on the air since 1993, will end in May 2026. It clarified that the move was "purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night," adding, "It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount," CBS' parent company. The show's cancellation follows the network and its parent company's settlement with President Donald Trump earlier this month after he sued both for "election interference" over a "60 Minutes" interview edit of his 2024 opponent, then-Vice President Kamala Harris. Colbert was among the critical voices at the network of Paramount's settlement, which he and others portrayed as a cowardly surrender. On "CBS Mornings," host Gayle King called the news a "kick in the stomach," and fellow host Nate Burleson called it a "hard pill to swallow." "Severance" actor Adam Scott lamented the cancellation, posting, "Love you Stephen. This is absolute bulls--- and I for one am looking forward to the next 10 months of shows." Actor Ben Stiller posted on X, "Sorry to hear @CBS is canceling one of the best shows they have. Wishing all the people who work so hard on that show all the best." Longtime journalist Katie Couric commented, "I am so upset about this. I need more information. We love you, @stephenathome." Ex-CNN reporter Jim Acosta was skeptical of CBS saying it canceled Colbert as a "financial decision," commenting on the story with a GIF of Marsha from The Brady Bunch sarcastically saying, "Sure, Jan." However, his former colleague Brian Stelter reported late Thursday that a CBS source said Colbert's program was "bleeding red ink." Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., shared a post to X suggesting that people investigate why Colbert is being canceled. "CBS canceled Colbert's show just THREE DAYS after Colbert called out CBS parent company Paramount for its $16M settlement with Trump – a deal that looks like bribery. America deserves to know if his show was canceled for political reasons. Watch and share his message." Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who was a guest on the show Thursday night, reacted similarly, writing, "Just finished taping with Stephen Colbert who announced his show was cancelled. If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserves to know. And deserves better." "Love you Stephen. F--- you and all your Sheldons CBS," fellow late-night host Jimmy Kimmel posted on Instagram, mocking the network's "Big Bang Theory" spinoff, "Young Sheldon." Former CNN anchor John Avlon wrote on X, "For @CBS to cancel @colbertlateshow is complete malpractice. The brand is strong, storied and irreplaceable. And no host is funnier and more thoughtful - soulful - than @StephenAtHome. That's why he is loved by a loyal audience, and they will follow him to whatever he does next." On Bluesky, the left-wing alternative to X, progressives fumed en masse at the cancellation news. "I'm not crazy for thinking that this was related to Colbert criticizing the network, am I?" far-left journalist Jemele Hill wrote. Ex-NBC reporter Ben Collins, who now runs the satirical site The Onion, said Colbert would land on his feet but "they are just torching the Late Show, an institution, solely to appease a dictator. And that f---ing sucks." During a CNN segment on Thursday, Stelter called the cancellation a "total gut punch to Late Show staffers and for a lot of Colbert fans out there. There are millions of those fans." Though Stelter acknowledged CBS' financial reason for the cancellation, he said people are still going to speculate about possible political reasons for why the show was canceled. "I think everybody is looking at this and wondering if CBS is succumbing to political pressure, because we know that the parent company has been desperate to get its merger approved by the Trump administration," he said.