エピソード

  • Kick Off: The World Cup, But Not Really
    2026/05/12
    The World Cup, But Not Really is the football podcast for people who love football, and the people who don't. Host's Rune Pedersen and Stefan Delatovic dive into the fascinating world that surrounds the game: the chants and the emotions, the stories off the pitch, jersey culture, a blind women's team taking to the field, and so much more. From the weird and the quirky to the deeply human, each episode explores what football really means, to the fans, the communities, and the cultures it touches around the world. Dive in if you're as into culture as you are into the beautiful game, or if you're just drawn to the strange, the curious, and the stories that don't usually make the highlights reel.
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    2 分
  • Why The World Loves Football
    2026/05/15
    Meet two culture nerds, Rune and Stefan - one who has always loved football, the other who can't kick a ball - and find out why they're making a podcast together about the world's biggest sporting event. They'll be talking to fans and players about what makes the World Cup unlike anything else, the way it suspends normal life, defines eras, and pulls people together under one flag. And Stefan introduces Rune to Paul the Octopus - the clairvoyant German octopus who correctly predicted eight out of eight matches at the 2010 World Cup, survived death threats from losing nations, and has never truly been replaced.
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    12 分
  • Why We Chant
    2026/05/29
    In this episode of The World Cup, But Not Really, Rune makes the case that football chants are among the loudest and most important things humans do together. Stefan finds them unnecessarily aggressive. Rune sits down with Jorge Knijnik, Brazilian-Australian academic and lifelong football devotee, to unpack why chanting isn't just noise. It's belonging, carnival, and controlled war all at once. And Caroline Carnegie, CEO of Melbourne Victory, shares how they work with fans, stadiums, and police alike to make sure the few who cross the line don't define the many who are simply there to sing. Along the way, Rune trace the Aussie Aussie Aussie chant back to Cornish pasty sellers, and follow a Gloria Gaynor disco track through Dutch pop music to the streets of Paris. This episode is about what it means to be part of something bigger than yourself, and how chanting is how we get there.
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    26 分
  • Collecting Football Jerseys & Memories
    2026/06/05
    What does a football jersey really mean? From a secret shirt swap in a Mexican tunnel in 1986 to a record-breaking auction sale of 7.14 million pounds, Rune explores how the humble football jersey has evolved from game day gear into cultural artefact, fashion statement, and serious collector's item. Rune meets Bryan Cush, originally from Northern Ireland and now living in Australia - a lifelong football obsessive and collector of vintage football jerseys. Bryan shares how a childhood love of Manchester United strips grew into a deep passion for the stories stitched into every shirt, from spotting fakes on eBay during COVID lockdowns, to using a football jersey as a diplomatic tool at African border crossings, to organising a dawn-to-dusk football tournament for Maasai tribes in Kenya. Along the way, they reflect on why retro football kits have exploded in popularity, and why, in an age when people rarely talk to strangers, a football jersey can still stop someone in their tracks.
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    25 分
  • Football, Soccer, Whatever
    2026/06/09
    Rune insists the only sport played with an actual round ball that you actually kick with your foot consistently should be called football. Stefan, who grew up calling it soccer and once won most improved, is not so sure. Joining them in this episode is Dr. Hunter Fujak, senior lecturer in Sport Management and author of Code Wars, to explain why Australia is unlike anywhere else on earth, a country of 26 million people somehow sustaining seven commercial sports at once, four of them called football. Along the way, Rune uncovers an inconvenient truth: the word "soccer" wasn't invented by Americans. It was invented by the British, who today pretends it never happened. And Stefan proposes a new title for a landmark book in Australian football history. This episode is about what it means to be a global game in a country that already has too many games, and why that might actually make the FIFA World Cup really special.

    Watch every minute of the FIFA World Cup 2026™ via SBS On Demand
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    26 分
  • The Australian Con Man Who Changed Canadian Soccer
    2026/06/12
    In this episode, Rune digs into the tale of Con Jones. Born Thomas Shortell, a Sydney bookie who fleeced a hundred punters on Melbourne Cup day in 1903, fled the country one step ahead of a mob, and washed up in Vancouver with a bag of stolen cash and zero history in football. Twenty-five years later he died wealthy, respected, and in a Soccer Hall of Fame. Rune talks to former ABC journalist, Trevor Thompson about how an absolute scoundrel ended up cementing the spiritual birthplace of Canadian football, and why nobody back home remembers his name.

    Watch every minute of the FIFA World Cup 2026™ via SBS On Demand
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    24 分
  • The Goalkeeper is Always Ready: Socceroo's Paul Izzo
    2026/06/17
    Is goalkeeping the loneliest job on the pitch? You're part of a team, but you're also doing your own thing, separated from everyone else by a strip of grass and some paint. In this episode we find out. We meet Paul Izzo, an Australian professional footballer, and one of three goalkeepers named in Australia's squad for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, currently playing at the Danish Club Randers FC, where we meet him. Paul explains the strange psychology of his position: why being number two might be the hardest job in all of football, and why his approach to being a goalkeeper sometimes is to imagine the worst thing that could happen in a single moment. This episode is about pressure, patience, and what it costs to wait on the bench for a moment that may never come, and why that moment, when it arrives, can mean everything.

    Watch every minute of the FIFA World Cup 2026™ via SBS On Demand
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    27 分
  • Makers & Takers: How a Football Shirt Becomes Sacred
    2026/06/25
    How does one of the happiest jerseys in football, The Canarinho, become something some Brazilians can't bring themselves to wear? And how were iconic football jerseys from the '90s made? Those are the two topics Rune deals with on this part two of the jersey episodes. Rune tracks down Drake Ramberg, who spent 37 years at Nike and was in Europe in the '90s as part of a team designing jerseys we now consider iconic for teams like Arsenal, PSG, Borussia Dortmund, Nigeria and Italy. Drake walks through how the iconic vintage shirts of that era actually got built, from screen-printing in the dark room to the partnership with clubs and federations that decides what a kit becomes. Rune also chats with Brazilian SBS journalist Fernando Vivas, and follows the Brazilian jersey and how it slipped from a symbol that united a country into the colours of a nationalist movement, and what happens when a football shirt, that’s arguably sacred to everyone, stops belonging to some.
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    26 分