Wrong. To be fair, football is mainly played in England, Spain, Italy, France, Germany, Greece, Portugal, Israel, Holland, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Scotland, Russia and countless others. Football is the biggest sport in the world. I do hope we're talking about soccer here, and not American Football, which sucks.
Britain, and mainly France
yes it has for years but now its in quarters yes it has for years but now its in quarti
Triple means three so it wasn't two countries.
Germany and Britain were the two countries that spent more on Armaments in 1914.
Relations between the two countries, friendly, or neutral.
Spain and The Netherlands. Spain won by one goal to nil.
No major club has a stadium in two countries man utd only has old Trafford because it's been built in Manchester and it will only be the only stadium for them so basically no football team has a stadium in two countries. International football have camps but not two different grounds
You can switch sides if you played under 21 football for one country and can play senior football for another country (but you must be a national). So you can but at a different level.
cricket and football
Marcus Jones excels in two sports. The first sport is football. He played in college and in the National Football League (NFL) mainly with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He then became a Mixed-Martial Arts (MMA) fighter.
its mainly in Thailand and Cambodia as these two countries have the most buddists in so it is really big there!
Britain, and mainly France
Mainly tariffs and tensions between the two countries.
The two NFL football teams played in Monday night football on September 21st 2009 was Miami Dolphins @ New York Jets.
Just American Football or gridiron. It is also generally referred to as "gridiron" and "American football" in some countries where "football" is NOT soccer! For instance, it is called by such names in Australia, where most of the country plays Australian Football (or Aussie Rules) and two ot the states mainly engage the rugby codes: Australians refer to their more popular local football brands there as 'football' or 'footy', depending on reference. In New Zealand, where rugby is virtually 'King', the American game is also not referred to as 'football'. In Ireland, football means Gaelic football, not soccer football and not American football. [However, I cannot tell you how the American game is addressed!]
No the two sports mainly played in Argentina are Soccer and Basketball
A lot, thats for sure :P