Category Archives: Blog

A noble game

Next to a felled British hero, there is nothing quite like a great British escape. Arsenal was comprehensively outclassed by Barca for the whole of the first half and much of the second, and yet managed to force an equaliser with one penalty that most of Catalonia believed a major miscarriage of justice. Sitting where I was behind the Arsenal goal, it was impossible to tell, and the replays on the giant screen at the Emirates stadium didn’t help. Was it merely coincidental that all they showed was Cesc Fabregas …

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Dogs at Play

So poor Diego has been bitten by his dog. Reading this morning’s Sun frontpage headline ‘Hand of God’  brought back memories of the Falklands War and that infamous ‘GOTCHA’, the day when the Argentine battleship Belgrano went down, with hundreds of young conscripts on board, after being torpedoed by a British submarine. Today’s Sun story had an element of cruel  jingoistic reprise,  but lacked the killer punch. The dog in question was an oriental Shar Pei  not an English Bulldog. And yet Sun readers were still given a study in …

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Football is a noble game –or isn’t it?

So what do you get in football for £240m? You get a group of individuals playing for themselves rather than each other, who disintegrate when resisted by more humble teams with a basic sense of solidarity, and a stadium abandoned by a mercenary fan base who can only too clearly see when they have a got bad deal. That was the sad story of the Real Madrid players on Wednesday night as they tumbled out of the Champions League at the Bernabeu stadium having fallen to the magnificent Lyon musketeers. …

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South Africa World Cup

Few events in 2010 have the potential to go down in history as one of the achievements of the year while as likely to end in tears, as the football World Cup in South Africa. Arguably the world’s so-called ‘beautiful’ game -founded by colonising Europeans and with a global activity today dominated by the influence of multi-national sponsors, media giants and the hold that richer nations have on the lucrative transfer market-has taken much too long to reach this degree of ownership by the developing world. This is the first …

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