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| Football: pleasure and painfulness. |
But what's the point of the fanaticism against a team? Rarely it is for the simpathy of the person. Often it is because of the parents/family influency, at the same way that the religion is adopted. There are too the kinds of fans, that are the ones who cares so much about the team and the ones who simply like it.
So, let's take an really aficionado, that always goes to the stadium when the team is playing home. That person that buys PayPerViews in the television always when they can't see the game or the team is playing outside his/her city. He/she also watch the game with the bar folks, makes bets and have emotion in every minute of the game. Well, he/she is a real sufferer.
Assuming that only one team wins the Brazilian Championship per year, the others stay with a bad feeling (unless they take it easy) and sometimes even suffering with the team, either by losses or by lost positions, that makes the difference in the last days of the tournament. This excluding the lost goals, the goals by the opposite teams, the faults that the team makes, etc.
In synthesis, the principal factor of joy in football - the goal - is almost irrelevant when compared to the factors of sadness and apprehension. As the football is the national mania and the ones that are fans of a team in Brazil are more aficionados than the Americans that are fans of a team of basketball or American football, we still don't have in numbers how many football disrupts people's life, since this kind of research is more commonly made there.
The conclusion of this discussion is inconclusive. I really don't know if football disrupts people's life. And what about you, what do you think?


