The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

Football is football, unless it’s fútbol

Rafiu Abdulazez tries to keep the ball from a defender during the indoor soccer class. Photo by || Terri M. Venesio || venesit@imail.losrios.edu ||
Rafiu Abdulazez tries to keep the ball from a defender during the indoor soccer class. Photo by || Terri M. Venesio || [email protected] ||

When a game of soccer begins to be played indoors, the stadium and all its surroundings cease to exist, and instead, the field turns into the interior of a pinball machine. There are no out of bounds and the soccer ball never stops.

It bounces off people, walls and ceiling rafters and the end of the game is like that of pinball—when the ball ceases to move. “GOOOALLL” is shouted, conflicting emotions echo nonstop—shaking the building of its dust and signaling the end of one match and swift start of the next.

Every Tuesday and Thursday night, this heart-pumping and pulse-throbbing phenomenon is witnessed in City College’s South Gym in soccer coach Jang-Ha Oh’s indoor soccer class, TMACT 300.

According to Oh, indoor soccer has several differences in comparison to its outdoor counterpart. The match is reduced to 12 players, six on each team, because of smaller space. Instead of a field of emerald-tinged grass, the playing surface is a hard, honeywood floor. The soccer ball is converted from a black-and-white checkered pattern into an enlarged tennis ball. Playing time is reduced to five minutes to accommodate 40-plus students. Oh also states that the game can go on, even during the rainy season because it’s indoors.The main difference is the pace of the game.

“The game is faster-paced, with the players going from offense to defense, defense to offense in a short matter of time, and the changes are quick,” Oh says. “They have to run more and all team members, the six players, have to work hard together to get more playing time. If not, then the entire team has to sit out and wait till their turn comes again.”
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Vivian Lozano, a right forward for the City College soccer team, says she enrolled in the class to sharpen skills she obtained while playing outdoor soccer.

“You have to use the same skills, the same techniques, the same everything as outdoor but you have to be much more alert, and you have to play the game faster, think faster, pass faster, everything faster because you can’t keep the ball with you too long due to the compact space and the nature of the game,” Lozano says. “In this class everyone, beginners and experienced people, learn from each other and it’s a team effort, just like outdoor soccer.”

Brian Reynaga, theater arts major, is taking this class for the second time and says he enjoys the differences.
“This class is great exercise, and it gets you in shape faster,” Reynaga says.

TMACT 300 is offered only during spring and summer semesters because in fall, Oh coaches City College’s women’s soccer team. Oh says the class is popular. He had to turn away 20 students this semester.

“Hopefully we can offer daytime classes in the future so that those that can’t come at night can come during the day and more people can participate in this sport,” Oh says.

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