Discrimination occurs in many sports, not just in football. Despite great progress in the UK, especially in fighting racism, there is still discrimination that must be fought whenever it surfaces. Nevertheless, even though great strides have been made there is no resource where people can easily and quickly access in depth information on discrimination in sport in Britain.We intend to fill that void.
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12

Jul

2010

All Aboard the Spain Train PDF Print E-mail
Written by Edward Hunt   

Spain won a titanic and sometimes ugly game against Holland in controversial circumstances in Soccer City and take home international football’s most coveted prize.  Though the match itself was a tense, edgy affair, it was fitting and deserved that the side who actually sought to play football, rather than fight, were victorious.  In the end, a single goal from Andres Iniesta in the dying minutes of extra time proved decisive in a game with considerably more yellow cards than goal attempts. 
 
As was expected, Spain’s superior possession play saw them dominate the opening stages, and they created three good chances in the opening quarter of an hour.  Xavi floated in a free kick from the right and Sergio Ramos powered a free header at goal from fifteen yards, but it was well saved by Martin Stekelenburg.  Ramos turned provider a couple of minutes later, bursting down the left side of the Dutch defence but brainlessly lashing the ball across the six yard box when there were Spanish attackers to pick out.  John Heitinga put the ball behind, and from the short corner Spain worked a crossing opportunity for Alonso.  His deep, pacy cross was met with a far post left-footed volley from star man David Villa, but he could only find the side netting. 
 
The Dutch came into the game, pressing Spain higher up the pitch and interrupting their passing flow with some hefty tackles.  The most unsurprising moment of the night came when Mark Van Bommel was booked for a tackle from behind on Iniesta, though the Spanish weren’t beyond the odd foul themselves, with both Ramos and Carlos Puyol getting yellow carded in the opening quarter of the game. 
 
Not long after, the key moment of the first half came when both Xabi Alonso and Nigel De Jong challenged for a dropping ball.  Alonso won the ball comfortably with a header, but De Jong’s raised foot caught him full in the chest, studs up and straight-legged.  Had De Jong been trying to assault Alonso then he probably couldn’t have made such a good job of it, but the only Englishman in the final, Howard Webb, saw it as only worthy of a booking.  It was almost universally condemned as a straight red card offence, and though this was accurate, the exaggerations that the Dutch ‘were lucky not to be down to 8 or 9 men at half-time’ were not.  Other than De Jong, the bookings meted out were fair and proportionate. 
 
The Dutch contrived to create two good chances shortly before the break.  The first from a corner knocked along the ground to the edge of the box.  No one in a Spain shirt was anywhere near Van Bommel, and his pass found an unmarked Joris Mathijsen.  However, the Hamburger SV defender showed why he’s a centre back and not a centreforward, managing to almost completely miss the ball with his effort.  Minutes later, Robin Van Persie laid the ball off for Arjen Robben, who cut inside and hammered the ball towards Iker Casillas’ near post, but the Real Madrid keeper was equal to it.  They went in at halftime with the scoreline 0-0, and with half a dozen players in the referee’s book. 
 
Spain sclaffed a similar chance to Mathijsen’s early in the second period.  A Xavi corner was met by Puyol, who flicked the ball towards the back post but Joan Capdevila fluffed his lines, mis-kicking with his right foot from three yards out.  The game livened up, with both teams creating openings but lacking a clinical finishing edge.  This didn’t stop Heitinga from getting his name in the book for a needless late foul on Villa, nor did it stop Iniesta from doing his best to get a yellow card for a challenge on Wesley Sneijder. 
 
Some minutes later, Sneijder was the creator of what turned out to be Holland’s best chance of victory.  He slipped a ball through and behind the high Spanish backline that was misjudged by Gerard Pique and allowed Robben to bear down on goal.  He waited and waited, Casillas waited and waited and though the keeper went the wrong way he still managed to stretch out a foot and divert Robben’s finish past the post.  It was an outstanding save, and kept Spain in the hunt. 
 
Jesus Navas, on for the ineffective Pedro, then whipped in a cross from the right side.  Heitinga made a total hash of intercepting the ball, and it fell to the waiting David Villa.  He looked certain to score but Heitinga made an amazing recovery and like Casillas threw out a foot to turn the shot wide.  With less than fifteen minutes to go Spain created another opportunity, when a Xavi corner was met, six yards from goal, by Sergio Ramos.  Though he had a free header and the whole goal to aim at he somehow missed completely. 
 
Five minutes later, Arjen Robben again burst through the middle of the Spain defence and appeared to be held back by Puyol.  Unexpectedly, the Bayern Munich winger stayed on his feet, allowing Casillas to come off his line and smother the ball.  Though Robben then chose to fall over, before sprinting over to Howard Webb to appeal, nothing was given.  Had Robben gone down then the likelihood would have been a Dutch free kick on the edge of the Spain box, and Puyol watching the rest of the game from the dugout.  It was a moment of bizarre honesty from Robben, ruined by his subsequent efforts to persuade Webb of his error.  There was still time for Sneijder to slip a neat pass through to Van Persie, who was flagged for offside but obstinately rounded the keeper and shot anyway.  The ball came back off the post, and though Van Persie had already been booked, the referee showed a little leniency in giving him a final warning.  The 90 minutes finished 0-0 and for the fifth time the World Cup final went to extra time. 
 
After only two minutes there was further controversy, after Xavi’s attempted a shot in the box, which ended in a tangle with Heitinga.  The referee gave a corner, which replays showed was the right decision, as Xavi had actually kicked Heitinga on his way to making the shot.  Shades of Fabregas and Puyol in the Champions’ League a couple of months back, though this time the referee saw sense.  Iniesta then found a pass to send Fabregas, on in place of Alonso, scampering towards goal.  The Arsenal captain looked for all the world like he would score, but Stekelenburg blocked well, and Fabregas shot more or less straight at him.  Mathijsen found space well from a Holland corner, but like Ramos could only direct his header over the bar.  Navas used his pace and trickery to fashion a shooting opportunity for himself, but Giovanni Van Bronckhorst managed to divert it wide. 
 
The second half of extra time saw a red card and the game’s only goal.  Iniesta played a one-two and was heading towards the box with the return pass.  Heitinga put a hand on his shoulder, and though there was minimal contact Iniesta went down, Webb bought into it and showed Heitinga his second yellow card.  Relative to De Jong’s martial arts it was soft, though on balance a red card was inevitable given the way the Dutch approached the game. 
 
Spain were the better side in extra time, and made their advantage matter with less than five minutes to go.  Substitute Fernando Torres crossed for Iniesta, but the ball was intercepted.  Fabregas was first to the loose ball, and couldn’t fail to pick out Iniesta.  The Barca playmaker took a touch, which spooned up in the air, but was unerring in his volley to the far post.  Stekelenburg did well to get half a hand to the shot, but couldn’t keep it out.  The Dutch were flattened, beaten by a side who stuck to a style and tactic and had the patience to see it through.  Though they might not be everyone’s cup of tea in terms of entertainment, Spain are a special side who certainly deserved their victory on the night.  Though the final game wasn’t a brilliant spectacle, it was a great end to what has been an impressive first World Cup on the African continent. 

 

08

Jul

2010

Positive Discrimination: - Allocation (Part Six) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Satish Sekar   
Positive Discrimination:

 

The current system of allocation of World Cup places  does no favours to Africa. It took forty years for the continent to be given an automatic slot at the World Cup finals. Previously Africa had to compete in the World Group for one place. The two most successful confederations, Europe and South America, received the bulk of places from the beginning. They still do. CONCACAF did well out of it too even though their performance did not justify it.

 

Rewarding performance now assumes an equal playing field, but it never has been equal to start with and remains unequal. It was based on positive discrimination for the most powerful confederations and remains so. Europe and South America have done well out of it, creating a playing field that was and remains far from equal. Small wonder they share all the titles between them.

 

Both confederations have a monopoly of success built on an unfair system. They have had the opportunity to build experience of the World Cup and benefit from an allocation of places that all but excluded the rest of the world for four decades.

Read more...
 

08

Jul

2010

A Legend’s Perspective: - Allocation (Part Five) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Satish Sekar   
A Legend’s Perspective:

 

The World Cup ends this weekend. For the first time in its history it will have a European winner that triumphed outside of Europe. It could have been an African winner or finalist – semi-finalist at worst if Uruguay’s Luis Suárez’ cheating had not won an undeserved reward. The Black Stars were robbed of their chance to make history, but Africa lost as well.

 

“We have not got past the quarter-final stage,” Zambian and African legend Kalusha Bwalya told us exclusively. “It would be good if we can get to the semis and maybe in the final. We’ve seen the rotation system is not going to come back, so it’s now or never to make a good impression in 2010.”

 

Ghana had the opportunity to achieve that, but was robbed by the actions of the cheat. Africa as a whole has paid the price too. Everything depends on performance. Africa had to do well. “Our confederation can be much stronger if our performance at the World Cup is much better and I think that is the way that FIFA is looking at it,” said Bwalya. “I still feel that we need one or two more places in these modern times, so our teams can perform.”

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08

Jul

2010

Blatant Cheating: - Allocation (Part Four) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Satish Sekar   

Blatant Cheating:

 

Last night a whole continent and anyone who dislikes cheats fervently supported the Dutch in their World Cup semi-final against Uruguay. Thankfully Bert van Marwijk’s team spared Africa the disgusting sight of having its World Cup disgraced by the most blatant cheat in this World Cup getting to play in Africa’s World Cup final. A thrashing would have been nice, but 3-2 would have to suffice. Giovanni van Bronckhorst, Wesley Sneijder and Arjen Robben scored the goals the whole of Africa cheered.

 

Most players would have done it. Ghana had the chance to score the penalty and go through. So what? A blatant piece of cheating by Luis Suárez was rewarded as the Rennes striker Asamoah Gyan struck his last gasp penalty against the cross-bar and over. The cheat was sent off, but stayed to watch the penalty and ran off celebrating. Uruguay broke African hearts in the penalty-shoot out by eliminating the last African side in the competition. No African side had come closer to getting past a quarter-final.

 

Suárez is a cheat – no ifs nor buts. His cheating took advantage of rules that do not punish it adequately. So what would I do if I was in Suárez’ position with the only chance of robbing another country of its just deserts of qualifying for the semi-final? Simple – the rules should never have allowed me or anyone else to be in that position.

 

FIFA clamped down on feigning injury, punished a referee for not giving a goal that should have been – Frank Lampard’s against Germany – apologised to England and did u-turn on the issue of technology. They apologised for showing a replay at the ground of an Argentinian goal that should have been ruled out for offside against Mexico and ordered a clampdown on the issue of players trying to get players booked.

 

All worthy causes you may think, but none were as obvious as what Suárez did, nor had a greater effect. The hopes of a whole continent drained away as the advantage shifted to Uruguay with Gyan’s missed penalty. His success in the shoot-out that followed meant nothing to him. He was inconsolable as Ghana crashed out – taking Africa’s hopes with them. So what has FIFA said about it. Suárez serves a one match ban and could have disgraced the final with his presence had Uruguay beaten Holland.

 

Read more...
 

05

Jul

2010

End of the Road for Ghana PDF Print E-mail
Written by Edward Hunt   
Once again the quarter-finals proved to be a glass ceiling for African national football teams as Ghana went out to Uruguay on penalties.  What was perhaps the most absorbing match played at this World Cup ended in such dramatic fashion that it will go down in football folklore.  The game began with Ghana on the back foot, struggling to string passes together and surrendering territory to Uruguay.  The South Americans have looked a potent outfit in this tournament but struggled to break down Ghana’s defence, their best chances coming from set pieces.  An early corner came off John Mensah towards his own goal, seeing Richard Kingson make a point blank save that he may have known nothing about.  The best chance of the half came when Isaac Vorsah was rolled by Luis Suarez, whose volley was beaten up and over the bar by the Ghana keeper.  Vorsah also spurned Ghana’s first proper opening, his header from a corner not matching his tremendous run and leap. 
 
Ghana got better as the game went on, Anthony Annan in particular.  During the opening stages he gave away possession with some hurried and inaccurate passing, but he grew into the game.  By the end the ‘new Essien’ was stamping his authority all over its face.  He was involved as Ghana broke down the right, a low cross seeing Asamoah Gyan drive his finish just past the post.  As per usual, Ghana were creating chances but proving anything but clinical when it came to finishing.  As the half drew to a close, Sulley Muntari was allowed to turn and set himself in acres of space, albeit nearly 40 yards from goal.  He thrashed the Jabulani goalward and it took a wicked swerve and beat Fernando Muslera, putting Ghana into the lead with the last kick of the first half.
  
 
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