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Current Articles
Dynamic Club

Nice Ambitions (Part One)

The Visionary Part Two

Nice Ambitions (Part Two)

In The Red

European Gongs 2010

El Grande Atlético

Wasted Opportunities cost Nice

Visionary

A Sense of Injustice

A Marriage of Necessity

China’s Olympic Legacy (Part One)

China’s Olympic Legacy (Part Two)

The Fast Bowlers’ Union (Part One)

Eradicating Apartheid from Football? (Part One)

Eradicating Apartheid from Football (Part Two)

Eradicating Apartheid from Football (Part Three)

Hail The Greatest

Redressing A Wrong (Part Two)

Disappointed! (Part One)

Redressing A Wrong (Part One)

The Spirit of Cricket (Part One)

Spirit of Cricket (Part Two)

Forgotten Pioneer

World Cup Legacy – Africa’s Tournament

Redemption

The Record Breaker (Part Seven)

Withdrawal of Privilege and Descent:

Development Paths (Part Six)

The Record Breaker (Part Five)

Development Paths (Part Five)

The Record Breaker (Part Four)

African Mentality Ruins World Cup

Spain win battle of the poorly balanced

Development Paths (Part Four)

Development Paths (Part Three)

Development Paths (Part One)

Development Paths (Part Two)

Wimbledon Wonders

A Tale of Two Atrocities

Class and Sport

The Record Breaker (Part Two)

The Record Breaker (Part Three)

The African Countries have disappointed us!

The Record Breaker (Part One)

Aussie Legends Support Development

Tits out for the lads Diego

Hosts barely holding on

A Little Lackluster - World Cup Flavoured Football

Honours Even at Soccer City
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Football - The New African Slave Trade
By Colin King

slave shipIn the global game of football there are currently only two black managers in the English game, three black managers across Europe and a tradition in which African national teams employ white European managers. In the last World Cup in 2006 in Germany, out of the thirty-two National Teams, only two countries had a manager of African or Caribbean origins. Throughout the infra-structure of the sport, in organisations like FIFA and UEFA, positions of influence in governance: marketing and administration, the sports management culture is predominantly white, male and European. Whilst at the playing and performance level, players of African and Caribbean origins represent twenty-five percent of the labour. This polarisation of management and playing along racial lines represents a legacy of the global colonial structures of slavery and the neo-colonial age.
Read More...



UK vs World Women's football
By Mark Metcalf

scot boxx header clashEngland take the field in this months Women’s World Cup, having qualified for the second time.
The Finals - kicked off in Shanghai on September 10, with the opener between Germany and Argentina. England face Japan the following day. They then move on to compete against Germany and Argentina in two subsequent group matches. If they can finish in either of the top two places they would then have a quarter final place and the chance to compete for the last four. Good luck to them; and all the other teams in the competition, which is being broadcast from China by the BBC – football is the biggest female sport in the country, but even the women travelling to play for their country have to combine playing with other jobs to make ends meet. And it’s not as if women haven’t being playing for football for sometime – as we shall see.
Read More...



Baseball the Early Years
By John Little

paigeFew would argue that baseball has become America's national sport, especially from spring time through to the World Series October climax.
Although the exact origin of baseball is still in doubt, the first time it was mentioned in print was in the English author, John Newbery's 1744 tome, A Little Pretty Pocket-Book. Less than half a century later the game leapt from the pages to the field of play. In 1791 a decree banning the playing of the game within eight yards of the town hall was passed. Thanks to the contribution of Alexander Joy Cartwright (1820-1892), the game developed structure. An early New Yorker, he went on to invent the modern baseball field in 1845. Cartwright and the members of his New York Knickerbockers Base Ball Club, devised the first rules and regulations for the modern game of baseball.
Read More...



Zero Tolerance
By Satish Sekar

ghana supporters“ ... racism in football is obviously not as old as the scourge of racism in society in general, but neither is it as recent as the current worrying situation may lead some to believe,” says a spokesperson for FIFA. “FIFA has been actively fighting the problem for a long time, but recent events have given the need for concerted action an added urgency.”
Read More...



Unworkable Good Intentions
By Satish Sekar

fifa logo“If any player, assoc' or club official or spectator perpetrates any kind of discriminatory or contemptuous act as described by par. 1 and/or 2 of this article, three points will automatically be deducted from the team concerned, if identifiable, after the first offence. In the case of a second offence, six points will automatically be deducted, and for a further offence, the team will be relegated. In the case of matches without points, the team concerned, if identifiable, will be disqualified.” : Paragraph 4 of Article 55 of FIFA’s amended Disciplinary Code.
Read More...



The Mark of Zoro
By Satish Sekar

marc zoro“Marc Zoro’s decision to stop the game and protest against racism signalled a new confidence black players had found in challenging racism. Enough was enough,” said Kick It Out spokesperson Leon Mann. “His actions were also extremely timely, because, at the time he was being abused, racism in football was being discussed at very senior levels in the European Parliament and by FIFA ahead of the World Cup.”
Read More...



No Truck With Racism
By Satish Sekar

hands together“I don’t think – certainly within the SFA – that there are any grounds for punishing Motherwell Football Club, because there is nothing that they could have done to avoid this incident taking place and when it did, by all accounts it was dealt with very swiftly,” says Andy Mitchell, Head of Communications of the SFA. “How it was dealt with is still open to dispute. I wasn’t there so I can’t really give you too much background, but there are issues like should the perpetrators have been arrested, or ejected from the stadium immediately, so in that respect procedures must be improved in dealing with the individuals concerned and calling them to account.”
Read More...



After The Fire
By Satish Sekar

HEADER OF BALL“Racism is a problem that is and was present in society, not only in football, and that must be tackled first and foremost at national and local level,” says a FIFA spokesperson.
Read More...



War By Other Means - Under Etna's Shadow
By Satish Sekar

mount etna erupting“Sicily does not have a problem with racism,” says Evelyn Trochidis – Media and Communications Officer of Calcio Catania. “There is no racism here.”
Read More...



War by Other Means - Himera to the Ultras
By Satish Sekar

flag“Fans of Palermo, Catania and Messina like to fight each other,” says Palermo resident and teacher Sonia, “but don’t fight fans of other teams.”
Read More...
empower-sport magazine

Solid Foundations

by Satish Sekar
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Heartbreaking:

The Netherlands remain without a victory in their inaugural CB40 campaign. Pete Borren’s side have one point from three matches, but that does not begin to tell the story. They have lost twice in the final over and had one match rained off. It is a different sensation from their greatest triumph a year ago when a thrilling last-ball finish enabled the Dutch to claim the scalp of the recently crowned Twenty/20 champions England in the previous World Cup.

“It’s been an encouraging start,” new Dutch captain Pete Borren told us in London. “We’ll be looking to knock off a few counties and see where we end up. I’m not really sure at this stage. It’s pretty early at this stage, where we’ll end up, but we’ll have a good crack anyway.”

They took Yorkshire to the final over before losing by four wickets thanks in part to an unbeaten 83 from the in form South African Jacques Rudolph. “We pushed Yorkshire,” Borren says proudly; “there’s no doubt about that. It did get down to three balls to go. Perhaps they were always going to hit the 8-ball but the game could have gone either way going to the last over.”

They were denied the opportunity against Middlesex as a downpour led to the match being abandoned, but not before Owais Shah and Gareth Berg hit half-centuries – unbeaten in Shah’s case. “Obviously, in this competition we’ll be looking to beat a few county teams,” said Borren.” I don’t think we’re too far off that level and the more we play together and against this opposition the more we can see that we’re going to be a competitive side and I think most of the counties will pay us some respect.”

 

Narrowest Defeat:

They’ll certainly not be taken lightly. They want to prove that their victory over England was no fluke and that their failure to build on that by not qualifying for the recent World Cup in the West Indies was just an aberration. Yorkshire found them a difficult proposition and they really should have claimed their first scalp at the weekend in Amstelveen.

 

Needing just six from the final over Chris Wright limited the Dutch to four and a heartbreaking one-run defeat to Essex. Nevertheless there were positives. Piet Seelaar took 3 for 31. Eric Swaarczynski, 75, and Bas Zuiderent, 56, put on 103 for the fourth wicket, but when they lost their wickets the innings lost impetus and Essex took advantage despite the best efforts of Borren and Mudassar Bukhari in the lower order.

 

Preparation:

The Dutch have been hampered by far from ideal conditions to prepare. “It’s pretty difficult coming into this competition not having had a game since March,” says Borren, who points out that their opponents have been playing non stop cricket. “It’s difficult for us, but these are the things that we have to deal with and we’re pretty positive. It’s a big bonus for us playing in this competition. It’s a real opportunity for us.”

 

They wasted a great chance to clinch their first victory against Essex, but there is a long term plan. “Building up for the World Cup, this is a huge competition for us,” Borren told us.” In the past we obviously have the World Cricket League where we play all the other Associate games in the one day competition, which is good for us, but we have struggled for good quality match play, so we go into big games without having many games under our belt.”

The Dutch need quality opposition to achieve their potential. “We’ve got the World Cricket League coming up and one against Bangladesh which is big for us,” says Borren. “It’s an opportunity to play a match against a full member and knock them off. Hopefully then we get onto the Reliance ranking tables, so playing this cricket and having week in week out matches together as a team – competitive matches of good standard – is invaluable really for us.”

So would playing in other English tournaments help? “I think the forty over competition is probably about right for us,” said Borren. “To be honest twelve games is enough for us. We’ve also got our own schedule which is pretty busy leading up to the World Cup next year, so probably the forty over competition is realistically the limit for us. This competition is a huge bonus for us playing in this standard of cricket.”

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