Why Everyone Loves The Underdog 6 Minute English
Why Everyone Loves The Underdog 6 Minute English
Why Everyone Loves The Underdog 6 Minute English
6 Minute English
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil.
And I'm Georgie.
Whether it's Cinderella, David and Goliath or the Rocky movies, we all love an
underdog story.
The underdog in a situation is the person who seems least likely to win, nevertheless,
with some luck and plenty of hard work the underdog sometimes ends up the winner.
Sport is full of underdog stories - minor teams and sports people who play with
courage and end up beating the superstars and multi-million pound clubs.
But if you were given a choice between your team being the favourite to win or being
the underdog, it's pretty obvious you'd want to be the favourite, right?
Well yes, being the favourite gives the team confidence, but maybe the fact that no-
one expects the underdog to win is actually an advantage which could help them to a
surprise victory. In this programme, we'll be hearing about an underdog football club,
doing just that and as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary, too.
Great. But first I have a question for you, Georgie.
One of the biggest underdog stories in sports history happened in the 2015-16 English
football season when a little known club beat top clubs like Manchester City and
Liverpool overcoming odds of 5000-1 to win the Premier League, but which club was
it?
a) Charlton Athletic
b) Leicester City
or c) Crystal Palace?
I'll guess it was Crystal Palace.
OK Georgie,
I'll reveal the correct answer at the end of the programme.
The English football Premier League is a good place to find underdogs.
Each season the three best clubs in their second league are promoted up while the
three weakest Premier League clubs are relegated down.
One club that knows all about relegation is Luton Town FC.
In 2009, Luton Town were relegated entirely from the English league.
Slowly, their fortunes improved however, and they have now become the first
English team to progress from non-league to the Premier League.
Here's Luton fan, Alex, talking about his team's chances to BBC radio programme,
Mental Muscle: But some of these Elite Premier League clubs will look down their
nose at us and just think we shouldn't be there, and we are there on merit and we've
just gotta prove it this season.
So we are the underdog, certainly, financially, but on the pitch I don't think we will
be.
Alex thinks some of the rich Premier League clubs will look down their noses at
Luton.
If you look down your nose at someone, you think you're better than them.
But underdogs Luton have done better than expected, even beating some of the big
clubs like Newcastle United.
The question is how?
Is there something about being the underdog that improves a team's chances of
winning?
To answer that sports psychologist, Gillian Cook, spoke to BBC Radio programme
Mental Muscle.
So, you could find that when the newly-promoted team comes up, they've got high
confidence because they've just come from a season of winning - so they've got the
belief that they can do it.
But on the flip side, it's just as important to look at the top dogs' performance who
everyone expects them to win they're playing the newly-promoted team.
So we might think of Man City who might be about to come up against Luton Town.
So, what we can see from that is what in psychology literature is known as choking
and that's when pressure gets to an individual or a team and they underperform.
Clubs newly promoted to the Premier League are used to winning and start the season
confidently.
On the flip side, they have to play much stronger teams than before. The phrase 'on
the flip side' is used to show the opposite, less positive side of something.
Of course it's not just the underdog playing, there are also top dogs, the most
successful
or powerful person or team.
No-one expects underdogs to win and this gives them freedom to relax and play
naturally.
Top dogs, on the other hand, experience a lot of expectation, and this sometimes
leads to 'choking', a sports term which describes the failure of a player to perform
their best because of psychological pressure or social expectation.
Choking causes teams and players to underperform, to perform worse than expected.
It is also true that neutral fans - people watching a match when their team isn't
playing
- tend to support the underdog as well.
In football, it's tough at the top.
I think it's time to reveal the answer to your question, Neil.
You asked me about the famous Premiere League winning underdogs of the 2015-16
football season and I guessed it was Crystal Palace.
Which was the wrong answer,
I'm afraid, Georgie. In fact, it was Leicester City, nicknamed the foxes, who became
the unexpected champions of the Premier League.
OK, let's recap the vocabulary we've learned from this programme about the
underdog, the person in a competition or situation who seems least likely to win.
If you look down your nose at someone, you think you are superior to them.
The phrase 'on the flip side', is used to show the opposite, less positive or less popular
side of something.
'The top dog' is an informal way of saying the most successful or powerful person in
a group.
In sports, choking happens when a player or team fail to perform their best because of
psychological pressure or social expectation.
And finally, the verb 'to underperform' means to perform worse than expected.
Once again, our six minutes are up.
Remember to join us again next time for more topical discussion and useful
vocabulary, here at 6 Minute English.
Goodbye for now! Bye!