Tag
Slang
Slang
38 definitions
When a reply gets more likes than the original post, usually because someone's being mocked or corrected. In football Twitter, getting ratioed means you posted a bad take and the responses are more popular than your opinion. Can also be used as a verb - "ratio this" - to invite people to prove a point wrong by liking the response.
When a Twitter account posted that Bruno Fernandes was better than Kevin De Bruyne, the replies disagreeing got ten times more likes than the original tweet - a classic ratio that became evidence the opinion was unpopular.
Robbie
Jan 20, 2026
Understanding of football beyond surface-level takes. If someone has good ball knowledge, they understand tactics, context, and nuance. If they don't, they just look at goals and trophies. Often used to dismiss someone else's opinion - "you have zero ball knowledge" - implying they don't really understand the game. Can be gatekeeping, but also a genuine way to credit someone who gets it.
When someone argues a defensive midfielder is bad because they don't score goals, the response is usually "zero ball knowledge" - they're missing that the player's job isn't to score, but to protect the defense and circulate possession.
Robbie
Jan 20, 2026
A player with serious skill and confidence. The term came from basketball but crossed over into football through street culture and social media. Calling someone a baller means they've got technique, they're not afraid to try things, and they look good doing it. It's a compliment about style as much as ability.
When Neymar pulls off a rainbow flick or Vinícius Jr. destroys a full-back one-on-one, fans call them ballers. It's not just about the end result - it's about the flair and swagger they bring to the pitch.
Robbie
Jan 20, 2026
The storyline the media and fans create around a player, team, or competition. Some narratives are lazy clichés that get repeated without evidence. Others capture real patterns. "Messi can't do it on a cold night in Stoke" was a narrative, so was "Liverpool always bottle it" before 2019. Narratives shape how achievements get perceived - sometimes unfairly.
The "Harry Kane has no trophies" narrative defined how people discussed him for years - never mind his golden boots and goal records, the lack of silverware was brought up constantly and affected how his career was valued.
Robbie
Jan 19, 2026
A mocking nickname for teams that score most of their goals from corners, free kicks, and throw-ins rather than open play. It implies they can't break teams down through actual football and have to rely on set pieces to get results. Sometimes it's fair criticism, sometimes it's just cope from fans whose team just lost to a header from a corner.
Arsenal got called Set Piece FC during the 2024-25 season after scoring loads of goals from corners and free kicks. Fans of other clubs used it as an insult, but Arsenal supporters just leaned into it since the points counted the same.
Robbie
Jan 17, 2026