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Why is football called 'soccer' in the US and Canada? 6 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Margarita Rodríguez BBC News Mundo Getty Images Football is life for millions of fans around the world, but in two of the co-host nations of the 2026 World Cup, they tend to call it by a different name. In the US and Canada, it's known as soccer. But why? And does that word annoy other football-loving nations? "When I was a child in England, the word 'soccer' was perfectly acceptable," Stefan Szymanski says. The emeritus professor at the University of Michigan, who grew up in the 1960s and 1970s, says the debate around "football" versus "soccer" struck him as strange. "I started asking my friends: 'Do you remember? Maybe it's a false memory. Was it ever a problem?' I began talking to people about it. And the consensus was that in the 1970s there didn't seem to be any issue with that word." Szymanski's interest turned into research. He explains that, in its early days, football was a very "posh" sport. "The people who founded the Football Association in England in 1863 were Oxford graduates who had attended elite public schools," he said. The game played under Football Association rules became known as "association football", wrote John M Cunningham in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. The name also helped distinguish it from another popular sport: rugby. "There were two games: one called rugby football, at that time, and the other called association football," says Szymanski. Brekker, rugger, soccer Among wealthy university students in the 1880s and 1890s, there was a habit of shortening words and adding "-er" to the end, creating a kind of slang. "So instead of saying 'breakfast,' they would say 'brekker'." Applied to rugby, they would call it "rugger." So how did the word "soccer" emerge? There is a theory, Szymanski says - though he cautions that "no-one is entirely sure". It appears that these inventive students took "soc" from the middle of the word "association" and added "-er," producing "soccer". "Obviously, no-one knows for certain, but what people are sure about is that it comes from Oxford. There are many documentary sources confirming that it was a word coined by students there." Getty Images Opposing captains shake hands before a match in 1938. On the left is H S Seaford, of Oxford University, and F E Templer of Cambridge on the right Soccer spreads to Canada, the US and more Sports historian Andy Mitchell has pointed to "at least" three examples of "soccer" or "socker" appearing in school magazines in late 1885 in different parts of England. "My intuition is that 'soccer' and 'rugger' were already being used verbally and had appeared in print earlier that year (1885) in another, as yet unidentified, publication," Mitchell wrote on his blog Scottish Sport History. Over time, the "socker" variant fell out of use, while "soccer" remained. The word began travelling to other continents at the same time the sport itself was spreading, and
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    This soccer naming debate mirrors our larger environmental disconnect - weve domesticated an international sport while ignoring the urgent need for global climate action. The same cultural imperialism that renamed football seems to ignore our shared planetary crisis.