Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (2024)

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (1)

FC Zenit Saint Petersburg fans Singing an Anthem - By GAndy (Own work) [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons

The extent to which different supporters approach football matches in different ways is genuinely quite fascinating. In England the crowd tends to be relatively quite for periods of the game, only getting excited when they’re given reason to by what’s taking place on the football pitch in front of them. As the game reaches its crescendo the supporters may become more active, especially if it’s an important game such as a cup final, but general speaking the noise emanating from the stands ebbs and flows with the action taking place on the turf.

If you head to the continent, however, you’ll experience an entirely different approach to supporting the team. More often than not you’ll find that the crowd in matches in leagues such as the Bundesliga creates almost constant noise, often led from the front by a particularly boisterous supporter with a loud speaker. This constant level of noise might suggest to someone that doesn’t know much about football that the crowd is always behind the team, but wouldn’t that just become white noise to the players after a time? Where English fans will almost certainly give the players they love an extra boost in their legs because of the noise, European players must get slightly bored of the noise.

How, then, might clubs encourage their supporters to get behind the team in a more structured and organised manner? What method could they use to give the players a genuine boost before a ball is kicked? The obvious answer to that question is by introducing an anthem, a specific song that the crowd sings or cheers to in order to generate an atmosphere, even if it is something of a false one. Here we’ll have a look at some of the most famous anthems in football, including how they came about in the first place and which clubs play said anthems before a match.

Liverpool / Celtic - You’ll Never Walk Alone

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (2)

You'll Never Walk Alone Gate Sign At Anfield - By cchana from London, UK (You'll Never Walk Alone) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Arguably the most famous anthem in all of football, ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ is associated most clearly with Liverpool Football Club. Scottish football fans might well cough and point to Celtic, but it was the Merseyside club that first began to sing the song before matches. The origin of the use of the song from the musical cabaret is a genuinely fascinating one, beginning back in the 1960s when the public address system inside Anfield used to be used to play the top ten songs in the charts. Liverpool supporters got into the habit of singing the number one song of the day, leading to a brilliant video of the Kop singing Beatles songs.

Thanks to The Beatles, Liverpool became a hotbed for British music in the 1960s and Merseybeat was the sound that swept a nation. Gerry & The Pacemakers had formed in 1959 and enjoyed number one hits in 1963 with ‘How Do You Do It?’ And ‘I Like It’, they released ‘You'll Never Walk Alone’ in October of the same year. That also reached number one and resulted in Liverpool supporters on the Kop singing it for the four weeks it remained there. Before it had even hit number one in the charts, Gerry Marsden, the group’s lead singer, had presented a copy of it to Bill Shankly, the then Liverpool manager, on the club’s pre-season tour earlier in the year. Shankly had loved the song and local journalists had declared it to be the ‘new song of Liverpool FC’.

In 1965 Bill Shankly appeared on the BBC radio program Desert Island Discs, choosing the song as one of the hits he’d be allowed to have were he deserted on a desert island. That cemented the number as a Liverpool anthem, with the club’s appearance in the FA Cup final of that year being one of the first occasions that television cameras caught supporters singing it during a match. Liverpool beat Leeds United 2-1, lifting the trophy for the first time in the club’s history. Perhaps that’s why Reds fans have had an affinity with the club ever since? Other clubs have taken the song on as their own in the intervening years, with the most obvious examples of that being the aforementioned Celtic and the Bundesliga side Borussia Dortmund.

Everton - Z-Cars

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (3)

Everton Fan - By Александр Осипов from Ukraine (Фанаты Эвертона / Everton F.C. fans) [CC BY-SA 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Given that we’re on Merseyside, it makes sense to nip across Stanley Park and pop into Goodison, the home of Liverpool’s rivals Everton. The Blue half of the city doesn’t quite have a raucous anthem in the mould of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’, which is sung with such vociferousness by the Anfield Kop that it would make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up, but they do have their own tune that is played as the players make their way out onto the pitch. Based on a traditional old folk song named ‘Johnny Todd’, ‘The Theme From Z-Cars’ was, as the name suggests, the title theme from the 1960s TV show ‘Z-Cars’.

The song reached number eight in the charts in 1962 and was soon adopted by Everton supporters on account of the fact that the TV show was filmed near to the city of Liverpool. At least that’s one theory. The truth is that no one is quite sure why Everton’s players started coming on to the pitch to ‘The Theme From Z-Cars’, with one theory being that one of the TV show’s cast members was an Everton fan and he went to watch the Toffees with some of the cast, so the club played the song over the tannoy in honour of their appearance at Goodison Park. Research carried out by the Everton Heritage Society believes that the playing of the song first began at the start of the 1962-1963 season, a title winning on the for Blues.

Whatever the origins of its playing, it has been blasted out over the PA system at Goodison Park before every home game pretty much ever since, with a few notable exceptions. These include when the club attempted to swap it for the theme from the sci-fi movie ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’. Everton aren’t the only club that come out to the song from the 1960s police drama, of course. Watford adopted the tune in the 1960s because their then manager, Bill McGarry, declared it to be his favourite TV show. Sunderland played it for a time when the club was located at Roker Park, whilst Workington A.F.C.play it because their manager in the 1960s, Ken Furphy, was an Evertonian.

West Ham United - I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (4)

I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles Music Cover - By illustration by S. Turner [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

West Ham United have a unique start to their match day experience, playing the song ‘I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles’ whilst artificial bubbles are blown onto the pitch as the players run onto the turf. The song has been popular in America ever since it debuted in 1919, which is a fact that those of us who can only imagine sung with a co*ckney accent might struggle to understand. Introduced by the club’s former manager Charlie Paynter in the 1920s, the story as to why he brought it to the club is perhaps the most convoluted of all the anthems we’re talking about in this article.

One of West Ham’s players, Billy J. Murray, also played for the local Park School and was believed to have a resemblance to the ‘Bubbles’ character from a painting by Millais that was used in a well-known Pears Soap commercial of the time. Whenever Park School played well, the headmaster would sing ‘I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles’ but with some amended lyrics. The headmaster was friends with Paynter and most likely sang the tune in front of him when Murray was a trialist for the London club. They gave him the nickname ‘Bubbles’ and the song began to be sang by supporters before the club played any of their big matches.

Perhaps for somewhat obvious reasons, the song has never been adopted by any other British football clubs. It has been sung at some opportune moments, however, such as when West Ham held Manchester United to a draw on the final day of the 1994-1995 Premier League season, meaning that Blackburn Rovers won the title despite losing to Liverpool. Their players could be heard singing ‘I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles’ in their dressing room inside Anfield, something that was copied by Arsenal supporters in 2006 when the Hammers beat fellow Londoners Tottenham Hotspur, thereby allowing the Gunners to claim a Champions League spot at their rivals’s expense.

Leeds United - Marching On Together

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (5)

Marching on Together, newsagents shop sigb on Elland Road in Leeds - By Mtaylor848 (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Officially called ‘Leeds! Leeds! Leeds!’ But know as ‘Marching on Together’, this anthem is played before every home game that Leeds United play, as well as at the start of the second-half. If the link between West Ham United and ‘I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles’ is somewhat convoluted then it’s fair to say that Leeds’s use of this tune is the exact opposite. Les Reed and Barry Mason came up with the original composition back in 1972 as the B-side to the football club’s official song ahead of the 1972 FA Cup Final, imaginatively called ‘Leeds United’.

The official song never really caught on, but supporters really took to the B-side that featured vocals by some of the club’s players and fans. The song peaked at number ten in the charts, staying in the UK Singles Chat for three months in total. Bizarrely, the song peaked at number ten when it was digitally remastered and re-released ahead of the club’s promotion back to the Championship in 2010. Though no other association football clubs use the song because of its city specific lyrics, other Leeds-based sports teams like the Leeds Rhinos Rugby League side do. The only difference is the removal of the ‘United, United, United’ lyrics from the song.

Manchester City - Blue Moon

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (6)

Actual Blue Moon in the Sky - By PumpkinSky (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Not to be confused with Rodgers and Hammerstein who composed ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’, ‘Blue Moon’ was a composition written by the prolific song-writing duo of Rodgers and Hart. It has been a remarkably popular song to cover over the years, with hit versions from the likes of Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra and Rod Stewart making it into the charts at one point or another. Originally the song of choice for Crewe Alexandra, Manchester City fans took it on as their own theme at the start of the 1989-1990 season when it was common for pop songs to be adopted by football supporters on the terraces.

With yet another link to Anfield, the first time City fans were heard singing it came at the end of the first match of the 1989-1990 campaign when the club’s supporters were kept in after the end of the game and did it to entertain themselves. Since then it was adopted officially by the club, with Manchester City’s public address system blasting out different versions of the song before kick-off throughout the season. Given the fact that City achieved little-to-no success prior to being bought by the multibillionaire Sheikh Mansour and the accompanying lack of support before they started to win stuff, rival supporters will perhaps allow themselves a slight chuckle at the opening lyrics of the song:

Blue moon, You saw me standing alone, Without a dream in my heart, Without a love of my own.

Why Do Football Supporters Sing Anthems?

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (7)

Liverpool fans singing YNWA before the kick-off - By md.faisalzaman from Worcester, MA [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Given the nature of the fact that anthems have become so popular and common at football matches, it’s a fair question to ask why that is the case. In some instances it is surely because of little more than tradition. After all, can supporters really get excited by the theme song from a cop show that hasn’t been on the television for the best part of fifty years? Do young fans of Everton or Watford even understand what Z-Cars was, let alone why the club plays the theme from it before their football matches?

There are other instances, of course, when the song is mostly for the purposes of giving the players a lift. I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles’ might seem ridiculous to non-West Ham supporters, but for the players the combination of the fans’s voices singing the club’s song and the tradition of actually blowing bubbles onto the pitch must be a fun sight to behold. It might not get them as pumped up as the likes of ‘Marching On Together’ does for Leeds United’s players, but there’ll still be something about it that prepares them mentally for the match.

The reason ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ is such an enduringly popular song with all but Liverpool, Celtic and Dortmund’s most fierce rivals is that it is an anthem in the true meaning of the word. For Liverpool fans in particular, the lyrics of the song have come to represent an attitude that they talk with them everywhere. The Hillsborough Disaster was a moment that changed football forever, with the club’s song become a mantra as much as anything else. Supporters have tried to live by the words of Oscar Hammerstein II, ensuring that they walk through a storm with their heads held high.

Where the future lies for football anthems remains to be seen. Not every club has one, with the likes of Chelsea attempting to falsely force something upon their supporters before games but failing to get the idea to take off. Will more clubs begin to adopt anthems as the years pass, should something occur organically? Or are we now in a position where the clubs that have anthems have them and those that don’t, don’t? Only time will tell.

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them (2024)

FAQs

Football Anthems, Most Famous Songs and Why Fans Sing Them? ›

Arguably the most famous anthem in all of football, 'You'll Never Walk Alone' is associated most clearly with Liverpool Football Club. Scottish football fans might well cough and point to Celtic, but it was the Merseyside club that first began to sing the song before matches.

What is the most popular football anthem? ›

Arguably the most famous anthem in all of football, 'You'll Never Walk Alone' is associated most clearly with Liverpool Football Club. Scottish football fans might well cough and point to Celtic, but it was the Merseyside club that first began to sing the song before matches.

What do football fans sing? ›

The chorus and the name is “Allez Allez Allez,” accompanied by much hopping and waving of scarves, and the lyrics vary from club to club.

Why do people sing at football? ›

The chants may give encouragement to the team, for example, "Come on you [name of team]", "Vamos [name of team]", "Allez [name of team]". They may be expression of confidence and optimism, suggesting that their team will win a game, the league, be promoted, or win a major cup tie at venues such as Wembley.

What songs are football chants based on? ›

The 10 best pop songs chanted at football matches
  • Mrs Robinson by Simon & Garfunkel. ...
  • Sloop John B - The Beach Boys. ...
  • Blue Moon by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. ...
  • Glad All Over by The Dave Clark Five. ...
  • Just Can't Get Enough by Depeche Mode. ...
  • You'll Never Walk Alone by Gerry and the Pacemakers.
Apr 23, 2016

What is the song played at most football games? ›

1. “The Final Countdown” by Europe. This song is an all-time classic. It has been played at multiple sports events and its intro is unmistakable, widely recognized by football fans everywhere.

What is the oldest football anthem? ›

"On The Ball, City" (sometimes abbreviated 'OTBC' in writing) is a football chant sung by fans of Norwich City F.C. It has been described as the world's oldest football chant still in use today.

What do they sing before sporting events? ›

The national anthem is either played or sung prior to any athletic event in the U.S. - ranging from the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, NCAA, all other professional leagues and usually including most high school-level sports as well.

Why do football fans sing celery? ›

Others insist the eccentric and wonderfully crude chant – 'Celery! Celery! If she don't cum, I'll tickle her bum, with a lump of celery' – derives from a pre-season friendly at Gillingham where the vegetable had sprung up over the pitch during the summer.

What do football fans shout at goal kicks? ›

Goalkeepers are frequently on the receiving end of several derogatory chants during games, particularly when they take goal kicks. Football fans usually shout, “You s**t b*****d!” or “You're s**t! Ahhh!” when a goalkeeper kicks the ball.

Who has the most vocal football fans? ›

So it comes as no surprise that Napoli fans are some of the loudest in the world. Visitors to the city of Naples usually remark how the entire city seems to shake when there is a match going on at the Stadio San Paolo, such is the fanatic support for the club. That's how loud they usually are in Naples.

What are some good chants for football? ›

General Football Chants
  • V-I-C-T-O-R-Y, that's how we do the warrior cry. ...
  • We're the best, we can't be beat. ...
  • Dedicated, motivated, we will not be underrated. ...
  • When our players hit the ground, the other team is going down!
  • It's on, it's on, like a bad dress at the prom.

What are common chants? ›

The Beginner's Guide to Common Chants
  • Aum. The Primal Shabda. ...
  • Lokah Samastha. A Chant for Wholeness. ...
  • Gayatri. Being Illuminated by Sacred Sound. ...
  • Om Namah Shivaaya. Om Namah Shivaaya, Namah Shivaaya, Nama Shivaaya. ...
  • Bija Mantras. Seed Mantras.

Do all NFL teams have a song? ›

For the NFL, unlike college football, not every team has a traditional fight song, or rouser that has been with the team since its inception. A classic marching band tune that brings the fans to their feet in a single entity of support.

What is a chant song called? ›

Chant, also known as plainsong or plainchant, is a type of musical speech often used in religious practice.

What are good pump up songs for sports? ›

45 Best Pump Up Songs of All Time for Sports
  • “Sirius” by Alan Parsons Project.
  • “Howlin' for You” by The Black Keys.
  • “List of Demands” by Saul Williams.
  • “Crazy Train” by Ozzy Osbourne.
  • “Stronger” by Kanye West.
  • “Sleep Now in the Fire” by Rage Against the Machine.
  • “Back in Black” by AC/DC.
  • “Party Up (Up in Here)” by DMX.

What is the most played song? ›

As of April 2023, a total of 400+ songs have surpassed one billion streams on Spotify.
...
100 most-streamed songs.
Rank1
Song"Blinding Lights"
Streams (billions)3.546
Artist(s)The Weeknd
Release date29 November 2019
89 more columns

What is the most popular anthem? ›

8 Best National Anthems of the World
  • 11. The Star Spangled Banner (USA) Orlando Philharminic Orchestra.
  • 22. La Marseillaise (FRANCE) Orlando Philharminic Orchestra.
  • 33. Independence March (TURKEY) ...
  • 44. Oh-Canada! ( ...
  • 55. Hatikvoh (ISRAEL) ...
  • 66. Patriotic Song (RUSSIA) ...
  • 77. Marcha Real (SPAIN) ...
  • 88. National Anthem (CHINA)

What are the top 20 national anthems? ›

Top 20 Greatest National Anthems of All Time
  • #8: “Brazilian National Anthem” ...
  • #7: "The Star-Spangled Banner" ...
  • #6: "Il Canto Degli Italiani" Italy. ...
  • #5: "Deutschlandlied" Germany. ...
  • #4: “State Anthem of the Russian Federation” Russia. ...
  • #3: "O Canada" Canada. ...
  • #2: "God Save the King" The United Kingdom. ...
  • #1: "La Marseillaise" France.

What was the first official anthem? ›

Oldest national anthem

The Wilhelmus was officially adopted as the national anthem in 1932, but it was written between 1569 and 1572. This makes it the oldest national anthem in the world.

What was the first anthem song? ›

The words and tune are anonymous, and may date back to the seventeenth century. 'God Save The King' was a patriotic song first publicly performed in London in 1745, which came to be known as the National Anthem at the beginning of the nineteenth century.

Who sang the first Super Bowl national anthem? ›

Charley Pride was the first singer to do the honors on his own. Until Super Bowl VIII, the National Anthem was handled by marching bands, choirs, or Doc Severinson.

Is singing a sport yes or no? ›

Singing, just like sport, involves physical exertion and skill. It is an individual as well as a team effort.

What is the pregame before a football game called? ›

Tailgating before college and professional football games is an American tradition.

Why do athletes listen to music before games? ›

Many athletes use music in diverse ways in order to achieve a certain level of focus and concentration before a game or competition as well. Music enables them to put aside all other outside distractions in order to concentrate and envision what they want to accomplish during the game.

What not to say to a football fan? ›

10 Things you should never say to a football fan
  • It's just a game. No Mary, it's most definitely not just a game. ...
  • Soccer. ...
  • It's only a loss, it's not the end of the world. ...
  • International Break is coming up. ...
  • It's ok, they will win next time. ...
  • What's an offside? ...
  • What's the big deal? ...
  • Football is coming home.

Why do football fans sing it's coming home? ›

The song rests in some ways on the modern origins of the game. The Football Association, the first official governing body for the sport, was established in England in 1863 and many English fans believe the country is therefore the natural home of football.

Why do NFL fans wear paper bags? ›

Since alcohol sometimes just isn't enough, fans resort to other options in order to show their embarrassment for the team—wearing brown paper bags over their faces. The routine has become popular since New Orleans Saints fans in the '80s began doing it, and many fanbases have followed suit.

What can't you shout in football? ›

', 'Jack's! ' and the not-so-secret world of football's code names. Football's laws dictate that players are not allowed to shout anything that “verbally distracts an opponent during play or at a restart” and leads to an advantage being gained.

What are crazy football fans called? ›

Ultras are a type of association football fans who are renowned for their fanatical support. The term originated in Italy, but is used worldwide to describe predominantly organised fans of association football teams.

What do fans chant after a goal kick? ›

The word is slang for "fa*g" or "man whor*" or "coward." ... Every single time the opposing goalie had a goal kick they chanted ["puto"].

Which NFL team has the loudest fanbase? ›

How loud is it at Arrowhead Stadium? In 2014, Arrowhead Stadium set a Guinness World Record for its stadium noise against the New England Patriots. The fans were so loud that they registered the sound at 142.2 decibels. That's louder than a jet plane taking off.

Who has the loudest fans in the Championship? ›

Pride Park's South Stand, situated directly next to the away followings, is arguably one of the loudest in the country at times, whether their side are with or without the lead. The club has a wide range of supporters groups available, covering fans from a diverse set of backgrounds.

What is the loudest football fans ever recorded? ›

TÜRK TELEKOM ARENA - Galatasaray

If you want to know what the loudest stadium in the world is then there's only one place to start. The Türk Telekom Arena featured in the Guinness Book of World Records for creating the loudest noise ever recorded in a football ground, with supporters hitting 131.76 decibels.

What is a popular football saying? ›

Motivational Football Quotes For Coaches and Players
  • “The only place that “success” comes before “work” is in the dictionary.” ...
  • “You can learn a line from a win and a book from a defeat.” ...
  • “When you win, nothing hurts.” ...
  • “Anyone can support a team that is winning – it takes no courage. ...
  • “Don't give up at half time.
Feb 5, 2020

What are some football famous sayings? ›

Top Football Quotes From NFL Players and Coaches
  • “The dictionary is the only place that success comes before work.” — Vince Lombardi.
  • “What's that? ...
  • “You play to win the game. ...
  • “They are who we thought they were. ...
  • “There is no defense against a perfect pass. ...
  • “I love me some me!” —
Oct 7, 2022

What is the oldest football anthem in the world? ›

"On The Ball, City" (sometimes abbreviated 'OTBC' in writing) is a football chant sung by fans of Norwich City F.C. It has been described as the world's oldest football chant still in use today.

What is the biggest anthem? ›

The "Himno Nacional de Uruguay" (English: "National Anthem of Uruguay"), also known by its incipit "Orientales, la Patria o la Tumba" (English: "Easterners, the Country or the Tomb"), is the longest national anthem in terms of duration with 105 bars of music.

What is the most national anthem in the world? ›

Greece has the longest national anthem in the world. It has 158 stanzas, written by the poet Dionysios Solomos.

What is the hardest anthem to sing? ›

"The Star-Spangled Banner" was originally a poem of Francis Scott Key's called "Defense of Fort McHenry." However, its melody was borrowed from a rowdy and sexually explicit British drinking song. It is also widely regarded as one of the most difficult national anthems to sing.

Which anthem is played first? ›

What is the order when playing the National Anthems of other countries with the Star-Spangled Banner? Answer: Accepted practice and common sense calls for the visitor or guest to be honored first followed by the host when the National Anthems of various nations are played.

What is the shortest anthem in the world in time? ›

As mentioned, the Japanese national anthem lyrics are the world's oldest as well as the shortest, with a length of only 32 characters. The lyrics are originally from the Japanese poem 和歌 Waka of the ancient anthology 古今和歌集 Kokin Wakashū from the 10th century.

Who sang national anthem for the first time? ›

In 1911, the session held by Indian National Congress, in Calcutta, on 27th December, became the first location where the song was sung publicly – and Tagore sang it himself. On February 28th, 1919, Tagore wrote down an English interpretation of the full Bengali song, and titled it 'The Morning Song of India'.

Who sang the anthem the best? ›

Here are the top 10 national anthem performances:
  • Lady Gaga (2016) ...
  • Luther Vandross (1997) ...
  • Carrie Underwood (2010) ...
  • Kelly Clarkson (2012) ...
  • Jennifer Hudson (2009) ...
  • Beyoncé (2004) ...
  • Aretha Franklin and Aaron Neville (2006) ...
  • Whitney Houston (1991)
Feb 15, 2023

How many anthems has us had? ›

While “The Star-Spangled Banner” has been the official national anthem since 1931, there have been other patriotic songs with more popularity (and easier to sing) over the years. And all—including “The Star-Spangled Banner—have generated their share of controversy.

How many anthems does America have? ›

Context. The U.S. has two official pieces of music. The Star-Spangled Banner has been the official national anthem since 1931, while The Stars and Stripes Forever has been the official national march since 1987. There is no official national hymn, a genre of music typically noted for its religious connotations.

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