Archive for the 'Sport' Category

Malaysian groups criticise plans for Chelsea’s summer visit

Malaysian Muslim groups have called for protests when Chelsea football club visits in July because the coach, Avram Grant, and a player are Israeli.

An alliance of 21 Muslim groups is angry the Malaysian authorities have given permission for the Israelis to visit the country with the London club.

Malaysia has no diplomatic relations with Israel, and the Malay Muslim majority is strongly pro-Palestinian.

Malaysian citizens are banned by their government from visiting Israel.

Source.

Dravid reaches 10,000 runs

Well done to Rahul Dravid for becoming only the sixth batsman in the history of the game to reach Test 10,000 runs.

No Competition For Old Men

Copyrighted UEFA
Cesc Fabregas scores in the 84th minute against AC Milan at the San Siro

AC Milan 0 – 2 Arsenal (agg 0-2)

Texas businessman is trying to sell Twenty20 cricket to America

It’s not rounders baseball, that’s for sure.

Football pundits and commentators in the English media line up to find excuses for horror tackle on Eduardo

I am not at all surprised that Martin Taylor’s horror tackle on Eduardo (warning graphic content), during Birmingham City’s fortunate 2-2 draw with Arsenal, is being minimised or even dismissed by numerous football pundits in the media. Alan Hansen provided a good example of this attitude with his comments on Match of the Day. (Admittedly, I have little respect for Hansen whom I consider to be one of the biggest fools on television.)

Instead, sections of the media have decided the most worrying aspects of Saturday’s game were Arsene Wenger’s post-match rant calling for Taylor to be ‘banned for life’ (despite the remarks being clear hyperbole and Wenger withdrawing the comments), or William Gallas’ petulant behaviour after the game, when he kicked an advertising hoarding and sat in the centre of the pitch in a foul mood.

As Peter Gill of Football365 noted, what has been totally glossed over, apart from the horrific tackle by Martin Taylor, are the appalling comments from Alex McLeish, Steve Bruce, Stephen Kelly, James McFadden, Liam Ridgewell and Sebastian Larsson, who have all sought to excuse Taylor’s attack on Eduardo. Kelly and McLeish were particular disgraceful in their comments, calling Martin Taylor’s red card ‘harsh’. Harsh? Perhaps they haven’t seen the images of the tackle up close? Or perhaps this just shows the extent to which the game has become ‘lawless’ and these people — all professional sportsmen or managers — ought to look up the laws of the game.

The television commentary was just as bad, if not worse. Sky anchorman Richard Keys was more concerned with Gallas’ emotional outburst and the fact that Arsenal had dropped points, rather then mention the assault by Taylor on Eduardo. As the Guardian’s minute-by-minute text commentator noted:

It’s quite revealing that [Richard Keys] has slipped into more of a sanctimonious funk over Gallas’s minor tantrum than he did about the horror tackle which could easily have ended a talented young player’s career, but that’s the way it seems to be.

Then there was Sky pundit (and former Arsenal player) David Platt shockingly dismissing the incident and even suggesting that Taylor’s hack at Eduardo didn’t even merit a yellow card! Match of the Day and Score on the BBC weren’t much better, with (ex-Sp*rs) player and BBC reporter Garth Crooks (backed by Gavin Peacock) suggesting Eduardo was a ‘victim of his own pace and skill’. I don’t have words to describe how absurd such comments are.

But Crooks’ deranged comments ought to help lead us to the real point of discussion. It’s not about Taylor’s malicious intent (or lack thereof), or his superb off-field character (and much credit should go to Taylor for trying to visit Eduardo in hospital). I actually agree that Taylor did not intend to break Eduardo’s leg, or even to injure him seriously. The point is, or should be, about an attitude in the English game which seeks to justify vicious assaults in the delusion that ‘getting stuck in’ to the opposition is ‘part of the game’. Take another look at the attempted tackle by the Birmingham City defender: Taylor is clearly showing his studs to Eduardo’s shins. This certainly suggests that the Birmingham City player was out to ‘rough up’ Eduardo. While most of the time such challenges do not result in serious injuries, it was only was a matter of time before something like this would happen. Such reckless challanges can end a career or even result in lost limbs. As Patrick Barclay, who appears to have broken ranks with the media coverage, points out:

More than three years ago, I wrote that the refereeing regime headed by Keith Hackett, himself a former official at England’s top level, was too permissive and that dangerous tackles were being inadequately punished in the interests of “managing the game” so that dismissals were kept to a minimum. As soon as this season started, it became evident that the tendency towards violence was escalating. Moreover, some of the worst challenges were not being punished – one by Reading’s Stephen Hunt on Gelson Fernandes of Manchester City springs to mind – and eventually the referees had little alternative but to get tougher on tackles deemed “out of control” and therefore reckless.

There is also a mild and unstated xenophobia at work here. The English sports press have often glossed over the duplicity of English football players, especially the stellar names, because of the myth that only foreigners cheat and dive and British (and specifically English) footballers are an ‘honest’ bunch. Afterall, who can forget Neil Lennon’s vicious assault on Alan Shearer’s boot with his head? Or Michael Owen’s guidance on ‘simulation’ (otherwise known as diving to con the referee into awarding a penalty)? Or how about Gary Naysmith’s cowardly act of deliberately lying in the way of a Steven Gerrard slide tackle?

The hope is that Eduardo makes a full recovery from this injury, and the incident opens the eyes of anyone attached to the game: players, managers, fans and journalists, but most especially the authorities who run the game.

Minnow’s win Rumbelows Milk Coca-Cola Carling Cup Sponsored by Littlewoods

I think it’s good for football that these small clubs get a chance to prevail on the big stage once in a while.

Egypt retain the African Cup of Nations

Congratulations to Egypt for retaining the African Cup of Nations last night. They beat Cameroon by a single goal, coming in the 77th minute. Mohammad Zidan’s pass was converted by Mohamed Aboutraika. Egypt have now won the competition a record six times.

Were you a fan of the old football simulation, Championship Manager?

If so, you might remember Nii Lamptey:

Even Pelé himself said it. Nii Odartey Lamptey, player of the tournament ahead of Alessandro Del Piero and other future stars in the Under-17 World Cup of 1991, would be ‘the next Pele’. The world’s most famous footballer had first seen him play in the Under-16 finals in 1989 and after two sightings gave his verdict: ‘Lamptey is my natural successor.’

With 38 senior caps for Ghana by the age of 21, a sensational first season in Europe after making his debut aged 15, and an even better season as top scorer for PSV Eindhoven while still a teenager, Lamptey looked as though he might prove Pelé right. It was not to be, though, and surely Pelé would never have said any such thing had he known of the horrors the boy had already suffered in his childhood. And nobody could have predicted that, far from becoming a world-class superstar, Lamptey would suffer personal tragedy as he was shunted from country to country, continent to continent, in his unfulfilled career. Only now, at the age of 33 and with new goals in his life, is Lamptey prepared to talk about the pain and sorrow he has endured.

(Although, as we were to find out, Pelé was a rubbish pundit: he predicted Colombia to win USA 94 and suggested Nicky Butt was player of the tournament in 2002.)

Sympathize with Gaza

Source.

The Average Man

Yes, we lost a Test. Yes, the umpiring was horrendous. Yes, the charges against Harbhajan Singh might not hold up in a court of law. But do we have to go overboard like this? One television channel dragged out Harbhajan’s mother, that expert on racial slurs and leg-before appeals, to share her thoughts with us.

How do we drop so quickly into us-and-them mode? The media paranoia feeds itself. If one channel demands an apology from Australia, another displays greater patriotism by asking for the Test result to be nullified. Pundits push themselves to the head of a gathering trend. Or, if they are [Navjot] Sidhu, suggest that Indian bowlers should kick the umpires as they approach the wicket to bowl. If this is what a Test player feels, what of the regular effigy-burners and professional naysayers?

That mythical creature, the Average Man, wants the team to return home, we are told. Politicians speak for the Man in the Street (who is there because politicians, in their rush to defend the millionaires abroad, have omitted to build a house for him).

“This is not about cricket,” Sidhu thunders, “This is about national honour.” The President-elect of the ICC, Sharad Pawar, is upset. This is not something trivial like farmers committing suicide, which he can ignore in his other avatar as the Minister of Agriculture. This is the real thing. The BCCI runs the ICC and the media run the BCCI.

Source.


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