| | Re: does anyone actually play this?...
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(...) ...ahha :-) Rich was using this layout. I like it. The non-symetrical sides make for interesting approach, I would think. But there's no center attacker :-/ (I wish u could line up a small base on the midline of the side of a big base :-( (...) (24 years ago, 8-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: does anyone actually play this?...
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(...) board using an (...) (URL) forgot to mention that this takes an expansion pack also, sorry. My team layout is slightly different from Richard's but my field is identical. Deidre drb@tasmail.com (24 years ago, 8-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: does anyone actually play this?...
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(...) I play it, and it's fun. (...) They can shoot pretty well, but because of the so called "never gets stuck between players" plates the ball can sometimes do wierd things like make an S shape around the other team and enter the goal. This makes (...) (24 years ago, 8-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: does anyone actually play this?...
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(...) ...Hmmmm... What's the url on that one? I finally came up with an 11 player board using an expansion set (prolly will get round to 'templating' it soon). ...Also, don't forget! The game makes a _great_ drinking game! :-) (URL) for the record, (...) (24 years ago, 7-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: A request for information.
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Try asking your favourite search engine. Here's the first one I found: (URL) (24 years ago, 7-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: New newsgroup lugnet.sports for Football/Soccer
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FIFA stands for (excuse my spelling) Federation International Football Association I think. If not it's something similiar. If an international organization calls it football, then one would assume it is called football in most countries, right? (...) (24 years ago, 7-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports, lugnet.loc.au)
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| | Soccer Promo, possibly German
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Hey all, I saw this Soccer Promo set, a tiny polybag, here in .il. The writing is German so I figured it might've originated from there. It came as a present from a kids' magazine; two 'figs, including a grey baseball cap. I'll scan the bag ASAP... (...) (24 years ago, 6-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports, lugnet.promo)
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| | Re: A request for information.
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"Farlie A" <alex_farlie@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:FytLtF.KEr@lugnet.com... (...) Lego(R) (...) The Dewey Decimal is approximatly 909.?? How would I find the CIP record. I looked in the book itself and couldn't find anything that sounded (...) (24 years ago, 5-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: A field arrangement Question!
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In lugnet.loc.au, Deidre Rushton Brumby writes: What i can't find however is where the 4x12 green brick/baseplates come from? (...) The 4x12 brick plate is not extra and I would also like to know where you can get all those 2X2 green plates without (...) (24 years ago, 5-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports, lugnet.fabuland)
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| | Re: A request for information.
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(...) Catalouging in Publication record.- Essentially It is what libaries use to classify the book as well Dewey decimal. In the US I think it is called a Libray of Congress record or similar. It is easier for my libaray if i have the CIP (...) (24 years ago, 5-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | (canceled)
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| | Re: A request for information.
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<snip> (...) Lego(R) (...) I apologize for ignorance but what is a CIP record? Ian (24 years ago, 5-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: A request for information.
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(...) Event if false its certainly an intresting story! Do you have a CIP record for the book? Anyhow the reason I asked was that I was trying to put together a Lego(R) equivilant to the meccano magazine and wanted to include a pages on Lego(R) (...) (24 years ago, 4-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: A request for information.
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(...) I found this description in Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story, by Paul Aurdant. I am not directly quoting it... During the quarter century between A. D. 1016 and 1042, England was occupied by the Danes, that is Denmark had successfully (...) (24 years ago, 4-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | A request for information.
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Does any reader of this group have a simple history of Football(Soccer)? I mean the actual game not the Lego range. Thanks Alex (24 years ago, 4-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: New newsgroup lugnet.sports for Football/Soccer
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"Kerry Raymond" <kerry@dstc.edu.au> wrote in message news:FyrArs.IA9@lugnet.com... (...) Hence, also, the popularity of cricket, a game which _definitely_ needs a lot of space to avoid the window-smashing deal. :) david drew (24 years ago, 4-Aug-00, to lugnet.loc.au, lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: New newsgroup lugnet.sports for Football/Soccer
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I remember reading a history of soccer that attributed the popularity of the game to the fact that it could be played on any patch of waste ground or street without the risk of injury, unlike other sports which required the use of a proper playing (...) (24 years ago, 4-Aug-00, to lugnet.loc.au, lugnet.sports)
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| | Re: New newsgroup lugnet.sports for Football/Soccer
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With Rugby, League and AFL (1), the ball is in the players hands for most of the time. So I don't see how it can be called Football. Call me picky but I use the term football or "footie" to mean exactly that: Game played with the foot. Bear in mind (...) (24 years ago, 4-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports, lugnet.loc.au)
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| | (canceled)
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| | Re: New newsgroup lugnet.sports for Football/Soccer
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"Casper van Nimwegen" <neverroads@soneramail.nl> wrote in message news:Fyr5yx.H6t@lugnet.com... (...) There are many sports which feature contact between the foot and the ball. In Australia, the popular foot-and-ball sports are historically rugby (...) (24 years ago, 4-Aug-00, to lugnet.sports, lugnet.loc.au)
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