reunion
It is a special cup teams compete in.
In a football score it can mean nil, or that the match was a draw.
college football?. Don't you mean American college football,or the real thing?
It depends on what you mean by a football team. In Merseyside it usually means soccer teams in the Football League, that is the big commercial soccer teams. On that narrow definition there are three, Liverpool, Everton and Tranmere Rovers. Several more (about 7) play in minor leagues, and then there must be hundreds of amateur teams, both formal and informal. There are also rugby football teams, notably St. Helens RLFC.
If by "they" you mean every football organization in the world, sometimes.
If you mean "International teams", you've got as much teams as officially recognized by FIFA (Football International Federation Association) : 207 teams (in august 2008) If you mean "professional teams", it's like between 20 and 100 by country which have professionnal league (like 50) But if you mean "teams, local like huge", nothing like France has nearly 10 000 teams (or maybe more)
When two teams intentionally play out to a draw to progress together at the expense of another team in the same group. Example: Denmark 2-2 Sweden in Euro 2004 at the expense of Italy being eliminated from the group stage.
The word tie in games mean draw both teams haveequal scores.
Varsity football teams are not good just because they have quality education and top sport equipment does not mean there good
Presuming you mean so far this season, the remaining undefeated teams are the Saints, Vikings, Broncos and Colts (as of 10-21-09).
I think you mean Competition Manager. Its his/her job to organize what competitions the teams will be competing in in any one season.
It is not a requirement, so nope. That's not to mean that they haven't over the years.