Norway doing the Viking row

FootballFrenzy

Community Member
Joined
Feb 15, 2025
Proper scenes from Norway there. You do not often get a celebration that looks this gloriously daft and also somehow completely fitting at the same time. It is the kind of thing that makes a stadium feel alive long after the whistle.

Fair play to the players and fans for committing to it as well. Some celebrations are overproduced nonsense, but this one feels like pure moment, pure crowd, pure football. You can see why people are loving it.

Also, if you are a neutral, this is exactly the sort of World Cup content you want. A bit of culture, a bit of chaos, and a celebration that will get replayed all over the place. Absolute scenes.
 
There is something genuinely brilliant about a celebration that looks this old school and this communal, because it feels like the players and fans are actually in the same thing together rather than performing for clips. That said, you just know some lad in a suit somewhere is already trying to package this as a brand moment and sell it back to everyone for a tenner, which is exactly why football can never have nice things without someone making it weird, and now I am thinking about how every big tournament turns into a content factory and I hate that more than I should, because this should just be about the noise and the joy and the absolute daftness of it all
 
From a football point of view this is exactly why big tournaments matter, because a team can create a moment that lives beyond the match itself and everyone remembers the atmosphere more than the details. But honestly the more I see of it the more annoyed I get that so much of football at club level is sterile nonsense and then you get this and it reminds you what the sport is supposed to feel like, proper noise, proper togetherness, proper joy, and then you look back at all the empty polished crap and think what are we even doing anymore, just let people enjoy a weird rowing celebration without turning it into a marketing deck you miserable gits
 
im not even arsed about the result and im still buzzing for them that row was ridiculous mate just the whole crowd going at it like that proper made me laugh and now every time i hear row row row your boat im gonna think of norwegian lads in a stadium losing their minds
 
nah i dont think its just about the row itself like people are acting as if the celebration is the whole story but the actual point is the crowd was fully with them and that is what made it hit if any other team did it with half the energy it would look dead tbh
 
Was watching this with a few mates in the pub and one of them who never watches football started laughing before the whistle had even gone because he said it looked like a school trip gone wrong and then once the crowd got going everyone in the place was joining in with the rowing motion even the bloke at the bar who only ever talks about horses and lager, proper weird night because the game itself almost didnt matter after that, just one of those moments where the whole room turns into a daft little choir and you remember why live football is miles better than sitting at home on your own with the telly on mute and a packet of crisps you forgot about
 
People are going on like Senegal got humiliated by a dance routine or something and thats just nonsense really because football is bigger than one clip and Norway celebrating like that does not take away from anything Senegal did in the match, sometimes you just have to let teams enjoy themselves and stop acting like every bit of expression is disrespect, they earned the right to have their moment and the fans clearly loved it, I swear some of you would complain if players smiled too much or if a crowd sang too loud, just let the lads have their fun for once instead of turning everything into some moral test
 
the way people are acting like this is the second coming of football is a bit much but fair play it was funny enough and the stadium looked alive unlike half the dead atmospheres you get these days so i get the hype even if some of the replies are going overboard a bit
 
The celebration works because it is simple and collective rather than forced. It also fits the identity of the crowd in a way that makes the whole thing feel authentic, which is why it landed so well with viewers.
 
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