
Soccer generates different and varied emotions both in the players themselves and in the team fans. We have identified and classified what we consider to be the six most common emotions in games. Those six emotions are euphoria, frustration, sadness, madness, joy, and passion.
Topbets.com.ng briefly explains each emotion, as we understand it in football, the reaction it generates in the human body, and an example in which each emotion is reflected.
Below we explain how we understand what each emotion feels in situations related to football:
Euphoria in soccer is felt in situations similar to those in which happiness is felt, although the euphoria is more intense and profound. But euphoria is an emotion with a shorter duration than happiness; usually, it is limited to moments after the event. The most common situations are when the fan encourages scores of an important goal or when a title is won.
Frustration in football occurs when the fan sees his team achieve neither the established objectives nor what they expect the team to be capable of. Frustration among soccer fans is a common state because soccer is a competition, which implicitly implies winning or losing. Therefore it can be said that, although not always, it is an emotion that goes hand in hand with defeat.

This emotion is experienced by all the people of one of the two teams that face each other; that is, it is an emotion experienced by both the players and the entire coaching staff, and the fans. When the team wins a game or achieves its goals at the end of the season, be it a title, maintain the category, or promote, joy is usually one of the emotions felt by people linked to that club.
While the people related to a team experience joy, the people of the defeated team experience sadness. As we have said before, this can be for different reasons. It could be for losing a game or for not achieving the goals set at the end of the season.
Passion is also an emotion that is closely linked to football. This is an emotion that is more related to the fans, although there are also a few players who are passionate about the colors they defend (for example, Francesco Totti). The countries with which the parties are most passionate could be both Argentina and England